Transcript adtru

National Alcohol Policy and Programs
in Australia
John B Saunders MD, FRACP
Professor of Alcohol and Drug Studies, University of Queensland,
Director, Alcohol and Drug Service, Royal Brisbane
and Women’s Hospital, Queensland Health,
Co-Director, WHO Collaborating Centre on Substance Misuse and
Mental Health; Member, Australian National Council on Drugs
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The Spectrum of Use and Misuse
Dependence
Hazardous/Risky/
Harmful Use
Non-Hazardous
(Low Risk) Use
Abstinence
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Substance Use in the Australian General
Population: Findings from the Recent
National Drug Strategy Household Surveys
Lifetime Use
% Change
1993
1995
1998
2001
1998-2001
Alcohol
Tobacco
88.0
-
87.8
-
89.6
50.8
90.4
49.4
+ 1%
- 3%
Cannabis
Heroin
Amphetamines
Cocaine
34.7
1.7
5.4
2.5
31.1
1.4
5.8
3.4
39.3
2.2
8.8
4.3
33.1
1.6
8.9
4.4
- 16%
- 27%
+ 1%
+ 2%
Any illicit drug
Injected illicit drugs
38.9
1.9
39.3
1.3
46.0
2.1
37.7
1.8
- 18%
- 14%
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Prevalence of Alcohol Use and
Misuse
• 90% of adults drink alcohol, at least occasionally
• 20% of men and 8 - 10% of women drink
hazardously
• 10% of men and 2% of women experience
significant alcohol-related harm
• 6% of men and 2-3% of women have alcohol
dependence (515,000 in Australia)
• Alcohol intake doubled from 1945 to 1977 since
when it has declined by 10%.
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Prevalence of Alcohol Use and
Misuse
• Alcohol misuse is the attributed cause of approx
4,500 deaths per annum (5% of all deaths).
• Alcohol misuse accounts for 10% of premature
years of life lost
• However, lives saved from moderate
consumption amount to 3,500 per annum
• The cost of alcohol-related problems to the
national economy exceeds $6 000 million per
annum.
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Impact of Alcohol Misuse
• 20 - 40% of hospital inpatients have an
underlying alcohol problem; in 5 - 20% it is the
cause of underlying condition
• 15 - 20 % of general practice patients have an
underlying alcohol problem
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Responses to Alcohol Misuse
• Primary prevention
• Secondary prevention (Brief and early
interventions)
• Tertiary intervention (Treatment and
rehabilitation)
• Harm reduction
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Primary Prevention - Alcohol
1. Legislation on minimum drinking ages
2. Random breath testing of motor vehicle drivers
3. Labelling of alcoholic beverages
4. Controls on alcohol availability
5. Media campaigns
6. School-based educational programs
7. Alcohol policies in public places and the
workplace
8. Role modelling by adults
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Random breath testing of motor
vehicle drivers
• Introduced into Australia in 1982
• Progressively extended to Australian states
• National blood alcohol limit of 50mg/100ml fro
drivers (lower limits for young drivers)
• Random breath testing of all motor vehicle drivers
• Has reduced motor vehicle deaths by 40%
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Random breath testing of motor
vehicle drivers
• Truly random
• Also provisions for testing on suspicion
• Compulsory to provide a breath sample
• Breath testing is frequent
• High intensity of testing
• Systematic
• Vigorously enforced
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Random breath testing of motor
vehicle drivers
• Has reduced motor vehicle deaths by 40%
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Labelling of alcoholic beverages
The alcohol beverage insert is developing a
national, industry-wide approach to the labelling
of alcoholic beverages, with
- standard drink information
- graphics to depict the number of standard
drinks in the beverage
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Brief Intervention for
Hazardous Alcohol Use
• A brief therapy, comprising advice and strategies
to reduce risky/hazardous alcohol use
• Typically takes 5 minutes, though may be
extended as appropriate to 2 - 3 sessions
• Results in reduction in hazardous alcohol use by
35-40%
• Can prevent long-term alcohol-related harm
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Responses to Hazardous Alcohol Use
- Brief Intervention
• A flexible form of therapy, comprising advice and strategies
to reduce risky/hazardous substance use
• Ranges from 5 minutes to 2 - 3 session of up to 30 - 60
minutes
• Typically offered proactively or opportunistically, following
identification of hazardous use (through screening or a
clinical consultation)
• Usually offered to people whose substance use is
risky/hazardous, rather than dependent
• Advice is usually to reduce use rather than abstinence
• Aims to prevent exacerbation of substance use related
harm
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Audit
Select from the answers below and place the number that corresponds with your answer in the box
1. How often do you have a drink containing alcohol?
Score
4 4 or more
times a week
o
4 10 or more
o
4 Daily or almost daily
o
4. How often during the last year have you found that you were not able to stop drinking once you had started?
0 Never
1 Less than monthly
2 Monthly
3 Weekly
4 Daily or almost daily
o
5. How often during the last year have you failed to do what was normally expected from you because of drinking?
0 Never
1 Less than monthly
2 Monthly
3 Weekly
4 Daily or almost daily
o
6. How often during the last year have you needed a first drink in the morning to get yourself going after a heavy
drinking session?
0 Never
1 Less than monthly
2 Monthly
3 Weekly
4 Daily or almost daily
o
7. How often during the last year have you had a feeling of guilt or remorse after drinking?
0 Never
1 Less than monthly
2 Monthly
3 Weekly
o
0 Never
1 or less
2 2 to 4
3 2 to 3
times a month
times a week
2. How many standard drinks do you have on a typical day when you are drinking?
0 1 or 2
1 2 to 4
2 5 or 6
3 7, 8 or 9
3. How often do you have six or more drinks in one occasion?
0 Never
1 Less than monthly
2 Monthly
3 Weekly
4 Daily or almost daily
8. How often during the lst year have you been unable to remember what happened the night before because you had been
drinking?
o
0 Never
1 Less than monthly
2 Monthly
3 Weekly
4 Daily or almost daily
9. Have you or someone else been injured as a result of your drinking?
o
0 No
2 Yes, but not in the
4 Yes, during the last
last year
year
10. Has a relative, a friend, a doctor or another health worker been concerned about your drinking or suggested you cut down?
o
0 No
2 Yes, but not in the
4 Yes, during the last
last year
year
RECORD TOTAL OF SPECIFIC ITEMS HERE
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o
Decision Tree
Offer AUDIT questionnaire
Review AUDIT score
Non-hazardous
range
•
Feedback,
or no further
action
Hazardous or
harmful range
•
•
Feedback
Brief intervention
Alcohol dependent
range
•
•
•
•
Feedback
Referral to specialist
Need for detoxification?
Pharmacotherapy
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Treatment of Alcohol
Dependence
1. Information and advice
2. Detoxification
3. Pharmacotherapies
4. Psychological therapies (eg CBT)
5. Treatment of physical and psychiatric comorbidity
6. Residential programs
7. Self-help groups
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Pharmacotherapies for Alcohol
Dependence
• Naltrexone
• Acamprosate
• Disulfiram
• Ondansetron
• Buspirone (for alcohol dependence and comorbid
social anxiety)
• SSRIs (for underlying or residual depression)
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Pharmacotherapies for Alcohol
Dependence
• Naltrexone and acamprosate are subsidised by the
Federal Government - monthly cost reduced from
$250 to $28 ($4 for health care card holders)
• Treatment can be indefinite
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Treatments for Alcohol Misuse:
Looking to the Future
• Correspondence-based, CD-ROM and Internet
therapies
• Combined CBT/motivational therapy and
pharmacotherapy
• Combined pharmacotherapies
 Acamprosate and naltrexone
 Acamprosate and disulfiram
 Naltrexone and ondansetron
• Depot preparations
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Harm Reduction
• Addition of thiamine to bread and prescription of
thiamine to prevent alcohol-related brain
damage (Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome) has
reduced the incidence of this by >50%
• Hostels for homeless people with alcohol
dependence
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The Australian National Alcohol
Strategy 2005 - 2009
Key Issues
• The cultural place and availability of alcohol in
Australia
• Improving safety and public amenity
• Responding to intoxication
• Reducing negative health outcomes
• Responding to higher risk groups
• Developing partnerships
• Seeking effective policies and programs
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