Use of Illicit Psychoactive Substances
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Transcript Use of Illicit Psychoactive Substances
The Opioid Replacement
Therapies Review:
Dr Kennedy Roberts
Lead Researcher, ORT Review
Scottish Prison Service College
Polmont 20th. March 2015
The Opioid Replacement
Therapies Review:
….one year on
Dr Brian Kidd
Chair
Drug Strategy Delivery Commission
and
Dr Kennedy Roberts
Lead Researcher, ORT Review
•Methadone- evidence
based
•Suboxone/bup. Evidence
based but dissenters
Not reviewed but
currently important
•Prescribed opioids mainly
for pain
•Abuse of OTC opioids
Plan
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Why was it done?
What did we do?
What did we find?
What does it mean?
What has happened
in a year?
Why was the ORT
review
undertaken?
Progress 1994-1999
- Drug issues
(harm reduction)
“on the map”
- Creation of delivery
system (DATs)
Progress: 1999-2008
- Consolidation and
investment
- Strategic thinking
(e.g. STRADA)
- Delivery system
improvements
Progress from 2008
- Recovery focus
- Outcomes
- Delivery reform
2011 584 deaths
Drivers for review
• Reports of loss of political consensus
• Progress towards delivering recovery
remains elusive despite clear strategy
• Increase in drug deaths continuing
– Methadone implicated in many
• Ongoing negative media reports on
balance, quality of services
Methodology:
how was the ORT
review delivered?
Methodology
• Agreed remit with Minister & Chief Medical
Officer for Scotland
• Lead researchers employed: Dr Kennedy
Roberts and Dr Charles Lind
• Representative Steering Group – drawn from
DSDC and National Drug Death Forum
• Secretariat from Scottish Government
• Aim to deliver “spring 2013”
Remit
Methodology
• A review of the research evidence base on ORT
(focus on methadone)
• Validated review group conclusions with an
international panel of expert reviewers
• Gathered views of Scottish academics on strengths
and weaknesses of the evidence-base in Scotland
• Examined the delivery system in Scotland
– Took evidence from a wide range of stakeholders
• NB Accessibility to the review was paramount
Stakeholders
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Scottish academics
Written and verbal evidence from all ADPs
Relevant government agencies
Politicians
National representative organisations
Health & social care professionals
Residential detox and rehabilitation providers
Those advocating particular therapies/approaches
National and local events
Main findings
5 key themes
• The strong evidence for ORT with methadone – but
the need for quality assurance
• The lack of progress in delivery of recovery outcomes
• The apparent lack of local accountability and postADP integration of the delivery system
• The link with social exclusion and health inequalities
– and need to make this drive access to more generic
services & solutions
• The need for valid information, evaluation and
research
ORT with methadone
• Strong evidence base for effectiveness at
reducing drug-related harms
• Strongest evidence-base for relatively shortterm outcomes (<1year)
• Longer term cohort studies show long-term
protective effect (30+ years)
• Poor evidence base for delivery of “recovery”
with ORT (Bell 2012; Best et al 2010)
• Quality standards and processes essential
Accountability of the delivery system
• The whole system
• How held to account and by what
mechanism?
• Information deficiencies – local and national
• Quality and effectiveness of local partnerships
– Organisational v partnership issues
– Specialist or generalist responses
• Lack of institutional memory
Social exclusion & health inequalities
• Problem substance use a key driver of the “Glasgow
effect” (eg SDF/SAADAT 2007)
– Prevalence mirrors areas of deprivation
– Drug deaths rates mirror areas of deprivation
– Scottish research shows clearly the health impacts
effecting this long term substance users
– Data on social exclusion echoes this
• Need for generic service elements to “own” this
problem and for prioritisation processes to
acknowledge and respond to this anomaly
Information, evaluation & research
Information systems
• Long standing failure to deliver meaningful
national information systems
• Variable local responses
Programme of research for Scotland
• Repeated calls – but limited action to date
• Uniqueness of Scottish dimension – UK
research impact limited
• Opportunity for real, planned change
Recommendations
ORT in Scotland
Delivery of recovery outcomes
Accountability of the delivery system
Social exclusion & health inequalities
Information, evaluation & research
Mechanism for Change
In conclusion
In conclusion
Why was it done?
To address criticisms and concerns regarding
treatment
What did we do?
We comprehensively reviewed the literature.
We took evidence/opinion from a wide range
of Scottish stakeholders
We validated our conclusions via
international experts
In conclusion
What did we find?
We reiterated the link with social
exclusion and health inequalities
We set out the evidence for ORT
We found little evidence of a strong
commitment to recovery at local level
We found the delivery system (from
ADP to DSDC) unable to demonstrate
effectiveness – lack of valid information
In conclusion
What does it mean?
This situation must change
Institutional memory
Consistent action should follow the
evidence-base
Evidence base must develop
Focus on accountability and on
delivering measurable outcomes
Real progress?
…Not as much as hoped… yet