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November 15, 2010

Resilience


What Is Resilience?

Resilience is the ability to:
Bounce back
Take on difficult challenges and still find meaning in life
Respond positively to difficult situations
Rise above adversity
Cope when things look bleak
Tap into hope
Transform unfavorable situations into wisdom, insight, and compassion
Endure

Resilience refers to the ability of an individual, family, organization, or community to cope with adversity and adapt to challenges or change. It is an ongoing process that requires time and effort and engages people in taking a number of steps to enhance their response to adverse circumstances. Resilience implies that after an event, a person or community may not only be able to cope and recover, but also change to reflect different priorities arising from the experience and prepare for the next stressful situation.

Resilience is the most important defense people have against stress.
It is important to build and foster resilience to be ready for future challenges.
Resilience will enable the development of a reservoir of internal resources to draw upon during stressful situations.
Research (Aguirre, 2007; American Psychological Association, 2006; Bonanno, 2004) has shown that resilience is ordinary, not extraordinary, and that people regularly demonstrate being resilient.

Resilience is not a trait that people either have or do not have.
Resilience involves behaviors, thoughts, and actions that can be learned and developed in anyone.
Resilience is tremendously influenced by a person's environment.
Resilience changes over time. It fluctuates depending on how much a person nurtures internal resources or coping strategies. Some people are more resilient in work life, while others exhibit more resilience in their personal relationships. People can build resilience and promote the foundations of resilience in any aspect of life they choose.

What Is Individual or Personal Resilience?
Individual resilience is a person's ability to positively cope after failures, setbacks, and losses. Developing resilience is a personal journey. Individuals do not react the same way to traumatic or stressful life events. An approach to building resilience that works for one person might not work for another. People use varying strategies to build their resilience. Because resilience can be learned, it can be strengthened. Personal resilience is related to many factors including individual health and well-being, individual aspects, life history and experience, and social support.

Individual Health and Well-Being Individual Aspects Life History and Experience Social Support These are factors with which a person is born.

Personality
Ethnicity
Cultural background
Economic background

These are past events and relationships that influence how people approach current stressors:
Family history
Previous physical health
Previous mental health
Trauma history
Past social experiences
Past cultural experiences

These are support systems provided by family, friends, and members of the community, work, or school environments:
Feeling connected to others
A sense of security
Feeling connected to resources
(Adapted from Simon, Murphy, & Smith, 2008)


Along with the factors listed above, there are several attributes that have been correlated with building and promoting resilience.

The American Psychological Association reports the following attributes regarding resilience:
The capacity to make and carry out realistic plans
Communication and problem-solving skills
A positive or optimistic view of life
Confidence in personal strengths and abilities
The capacity to manage strong feelings, emotions, and impulses

What Is Family Resilience?
Family resilience is the coping process in the family as a functional unit. Crisis events and persistent stressors affect the whole family, posing risks not only for individual dysfunction, but also for relational conflict and family breakdown. Family processes mediate the impact of stress for all of its members and relationships, and the protective processes in place foster resilience by buffering stress and facilitating adaptation to current and future events. Following are the three key factors in family resilience (Wilson & Ferch, 2005):

Family belief systems foster resilience by making meaning in adversity, creating a sense of coherence, and providing a positive outlook.
Family organization promotes resilience by facilitating flexibility, capacity to adapt, connectedness and cohesion, emotional and structural bonding, and accessibility to resources.
Family communication enhances resilience by engaging clear communication, open and emotional expressions, trust and collaborative problem solving, and conflict management.

What Is Organizational Resilience?
Organizational resilience is the ability and capacity of a workplace to withstand potential significant economic times, systemic risk, or systemic disruptions by adapting, recovering, or resisting being affected and resuming core operations or continuing to provide an acceptable level of functioning and structure.

A resilient workforce and organization is important during major decisions or business changes.
Companies and organizations, like individuals, need to be able to rebound from potentially disastrous changes.
The challenge for the incorporation of resilience into a workplace is to identify what enhances the ability of an organization to rebound effectively.
Measuring workplace resilience involves identifying and evaluating the following:
Past and present mitigative mechanisms and practices that increase safety
Past and present mitigative mechanisms and practices that decrease error
Necessary redundancy in systems
Planning and programming that demonstrate collective mindfulness
Anticipation of potential trouble and solutions to potential problems

What Is Community Resilience?
Community resilience is the individual and collective capacity to respond to adversity and change. It is a community that takes intentional action to enhance the personal and collective capacity of its citizens and institutions to respond to and influence the course of social and economic change. For a community to be resilient, its members must put into practice early and effective actions so that they can respond to change. When responding to stressful events, a resilient community will be able to strengthen community bonds, resources, and the capacity to cope. Systems involved with building and maintaining community resilience must work together.
mental health and social work ceus

How Does Culture Influence Resilience?
Cultural resilience refers to a culture’s capacity to maintain and develop cultural identity and critical cultural knowledge and practices. Along with an entire culture fostering resilience, the interaction of culture and resilience for an individual also is important. An individual’s culture will have an impact on how the person communicates feelings and copes with adversity. Cultural parameters are often embedded deep in an individual. A person’s cultural background may influence one deeply in how one responds to different stressors. Assimilation could be a factor in cultural resilience, as it could be a positive way for a person to manage his/her environment. However, assimilation could create conflict between generations, so it could be seen as positive or negative depending on the individual and culture. Because of this, coping strategies are going to be different. With growing cultural diversity, the public has greater access to a number of different approaches to building resilience. It is something that can be built using approaches that make sense within each culture and tailored to each individual.

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What Factors Promote Resilience?
Resilience involves the modification of a person's response to a potentially risky situation. People who are resilient are able to maintain high self-esteem and self-efficacy in spite of the challenges they face. By fostering resilience, people are building psychological defenses against stress. The more resources and defenses available during a time of struggle, the better able to cope and bounce back from adverse circumstances people will be. A person’s ability to regain a sense of normalcy or define a new normalcy after adverse circumstances will be partially based on the resources available to him/her. Resilience building can begin at any time. Following is information regarding applicable ways to implement resilience practices, as well as situations that could inhibit resilience, situations that enhance resilience, and people who help facilitate the growth of resilience.

Resilience


Demonstrating Resilience Vulnerability Factors Inhibiting Resilience Protective Factors Enhancing Resilience Facilitators of Resilience
Individual Resilience
The ability for an individual to cope with adversity and change
Optimism
Flexibility
Self-confidence
Competence
Insightfulness
Perseverance
Perspective
Self-control
Sociability
Poor social skills
Poor problem solving
Lack of empathy
Family violence
Abuse or neglect
Divorce or partner breakup
Death or loss
Lack of social support
Social competence
Problem-solving skills
Good coping skills
Empathy
Secure or stable family
Supportive relationships
Intellectual abilities
Self-efficacy
Communication skills

Individuals
Parents
Grandparents
Caregivers
Children
Adolescents
Friends
Partners
Spouses
Teachers
Faith Community

Organizational Resilience
The ability for a business or industry, including its employees, to cope with adversity and change
Proactive employees
Clear mission, goals, and values
Encourages opportunities to influence change
Clear communication
Nonjudgmental
Emphasizes learning
Rewards high performance
Unclear Expectations
Conflicted expectations
Threat to job security
Lack of personal control
Hostile atmosphere
Defensive atmosphere
Unethical environment
Lack of communication

Open communication
Supportive colleagues
Clear responsibilities
Ethical environment
Sense of control
Job security
Supportive management
Connectedness among departments
Recognition

Employers
Managers
Directors
Employees
Employee assistance programs
Other businesses

Community Resilience
The ability for an individual and the collective community to respond to adversity and change.
Connectedness
Commitment to community
Shared values
Structure, roles, and responsibilities exist throughout community
Supportive
Good communication
Resource sharing
Volunteerism
Responsive organizations
Strong schools

Lack of support services
Social discrimination
Cultural discrimination
Norms tolerating violence
Deviant peer group
Low socioeconomic status
Crime rate
Community disorganization
Civil rivalry
Access to Support services
Community networking
Strong cultural identity
Strong social support systems
Norms against violence
Identification as a community
Cohesive community leadership
Community leaders
Faith-based organizations
Volunteers
Nonprofit organizations
Churches/houses of worship
Support services staff
Teachers
Youth groups
Boy/Girl Scouts
Planned social networking events

(Adapted from Kelly, 2007)
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How Is Personal Resilience Built?
Developing resilience is a personal journey. People do not react the same way to traumatic events. Some ways to build resilience include the following actions:

Making connections with others
Looking for opportunities for self-discovery
Nurturing a positive view of self
Accepting that change is a part of living
Taking decisive actions
Learning from the past
The ability to be flexible is a great skill to obtain and facilitates resilience growth. Getting help when it is needed is crucial to building resilience. It is important to try to obtain information on resilience from books or other publications, self-help or support groups, and online resources like the ones found in this resource collection.

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What Can Be Done to Promote Family Resilience?
Developing family resilience, like individual resilience, is different for every family. The important idea to keep in mind is that an underlying stronghold of family resilience is cohesion, a sense of belonging, and communication. It is important for a family to feel that when their world is unstable they have each other. This sense of bonding and trust is what fuels a family's ability to be resilient. Families that learn how to cope with challenges and meet individual needs are more resilient to stress and crisis. Healthy families solve problems with cooperation, creative brainstorming, openness to others, and emphasis on the role of social support and connectedness (versus isolation) in family resiliency. Resilience is exercised when family members demonstrate behaviors such as confidence, hard work, cooperation, and forgiveness. These are factors that help families withstand stressors throughout the family life cycle.

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How Is Community Resilience Fostered?
Fostering community resilience will greatly depend on the community itself and involves the community working as a whole toward preparedness. It is the capacity for the collective to take preemptive action toward preparedness. Community resilience involves the following factors:

Connection and caring
Collective resources
Critical analysis of the community
Skill building for community members
Prevention, preparedness, and response to stressful events
Resilience is exercised when community members demonstrate behaviors such as confidence, hard work, cooperation, and resourcefulness, and support of those who have needs during particular events. These are factors that help communities withstand challenging circumstances. There are other tips about how to foster community resilience in this resource collection.

Developing resilience is a personal journey. All people do not react the same to traumatic and stressful life events. An approach to building resilience that works for one person might not work for another. People use varying strategies. Resilience involves maintaining flexibility and balance in life during stressful circumstances and traumatic events. Being resilient does not mean that a person does not experience difficulty or distress. Emotional pain and sadness are common in people who have suffered major adversity or trauma in their lives. Stress can be dealt with proactively by building resilience to prepare for stressful circumstances, while learning how to recognize symptoms of stress. Fostering resilience or the ability to bounce back from a stressful situation is a proactive mechanism to managing stress.

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References
Aguirre, B. (2007). Dialectics of vulnerability and resilience. Georgetown Journal of Poverty Law and Policy, 14(39), 1–18.

American Psychological Association. (2006). The road to resilience. Retrieved March 20, 2009, from " target="_blank">http://www.apahelpcenter.org/featuredtopics/feature.php?id=6.

Bonanno, G. (2004). Loss, trauma, and human resilience: Have we underestimated the human capacity to thrive after extremely aversive events? American Psychologist, 59, 20–28.

Kelly, S. (2007). Personal and community resilience: Building it and sustaining it. Retrieved March 23, 2009, from the University of California Los Angeles Bureau for Behavioral Health and Health Facilities at " target="_blank">http://www.wvdhhr.org/healthprep/common/resiliency.ppt#256.

Simon, J., Murphy, J., & Smith, S. (2008). Building resilience: Appreciate the little things in life. British Journal of Social Work, 38, 218–235.

Wilson, S., & Ferch, S. (2005). Enhancing resilience in the workplace through the practice of caring relationships. Organization Development Journal, 23(4), 45–60.

OxyContin® Abuse and Addiction Continuing Education CEUs


The media have issued numerous reports about the apparent increase in OxyContin® abuse and addiction. Some of these reports include the following:

• In Madison, Wisconsin, a task force reported a dramatic increase in OxyContin cases since 2003. Most OxyContin making its way onto the streets of Madison and nearby communities was believed to have been stolen from local pharmacies.1
• The police chief in Billerica, Massachusetts, reported a “dramatic increase in OxyContin abuse.”2
• The distribution of OxyContin in Virginia was reported to be well above the national average. In the counties of far southwest Virginia, where the hard physical labor of coal mining and farming leads to a higher incidence of injuries, OxyContin prescriptions were generally 500 percent above the national average.3
• Sixty-nine percent of police chiefs and sheriffs said they have witnessed an increase in the abuse of painkillers such as OxyContin. The areas most affected are eastern Kentucky, New Orleans, southern Maine, Philadelphia, southwestern Pennsylvania, southwestern Virginia, Cincinnati, and Phoenix.4

These reports may reflect some of your experiences: We know many of you are treating clients addicted to OxyContin.

OxyContin has been heralded as a miracle drug that allows patients with chronic pain to resume a normal life. It has also been called pharmaceutical heroin and is thought to have been responsible for a number of deaths and robberies in areas where its abuse has been reported. Patients who legitimately use OxyContin fear that the continuing controversy will mean tighter restrictions on the medication. Those who abuse OxyContin reportedly go to great lengths—legal or illegal—to obtain the powerful drug.

At the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT), we are not interested in fueling the controversy about the use or abuse of OxyContin. As the Federal Government’s focal point for addiction treatment information, CSAT is instead interested in helping professionals on the front line of substance abuse treatment by providing you with the facts about OxyContin, its use and abuse, and how to treat individuals who present at your treatment facility with OxyContin concerns. Perhaps these individuals are taking medically prescribed OxyContin to manage pain and are concerned about their physical dependence on the medication. Perhaps you are faced with a young adult who thought that OxyContin was a “safe” recreational drug because, after all, doctors prescribe it. Possibly changes in the availability or quality of illicit opioid drugs in your community have led to abuse of and addiction to OxyContin.

Whatever the reason, OxyContin is being abused, and people are becoming addicted. And in many instances, these people are young adults unaware of the dangers of OxyContin. Many of these individuals mix OxyContin with alcohol and drugs, and the result is all too often tragic.

Abuse of prescription drugs is not a new phenomenon. You have undoubtedly heard about abuse of Percocet®, hydrocodone, and a host of other medications. What sets OxyContin abuse apart is the potency of the drug. Treatment providers in affected areas say that they were unprepared for the speed with which an OxyContin “epidemic” developed in their communities.

We at CSAT want to make sure that you are prepared if OxyContin abuse becomes a problem in your community. This revised issue of the original Substance Abuse Treatment Advisory on OxyContin will help prepare you by

• Answering frequently asked questions about OxyContin
• Providing you with general information about semisynthetic opioids and their addiction potential
• Summarizing evidence-based protocols for treatment
• Providing you with resources for further information

For more information about OxyContin abuse and treatment, see our resource boxes and end of this document. Feel free to copy the information in the Substance Abuse Treatment Advisory and share it with colleagues so that they, too, can have the most current information about this critically important topic.

OxyContin® Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is OxyContin?

A: OxyContin is a semisynthetic opioid analgesic prescribed for chronic or long-lasting pain. The medication’s active ingredient is oxycodone, which is also found in drugs like Percodan® and Tylox®. However, OxyContin contains between 10 and 80 milligrams (mg) of oxycodone in a timed-release tablet. Painkillers such as Tylox contain 5 mg of oxycodone and often require repeated doses to bring about pain relief because they lack the timed-release formulation.

Q: How is OxyContin used?

A: OxyContin, also referred to as “Oxy,” “O.C.,” and “Oxycotton” on the street, is legitimately prescribed as a timed-release tablet, providing as many as 12 hours of relief from chronic pain. It is often prescribed for cancer patients or those with chronic, long-lasting back pain. The benefit of the medication to people who suffer from chronic pain is that they generally need to take the pill only twice a day, whereas a dosage of another medication would require more frequent use to control the pain. The goal of chronic pain treatment is to decrease pain and improve function.

Q: How is OxyContin abused?

A: People who abuse OxyContin either crush the tablet and ingest or snort it or dilute it in water and inject it. Crushing or diluting the tablet disarms the timed-release action of the medication and causes a quick, powerful high. Those who abuse OxyContin have compared this feeling to the euphoria they experience when taking heroin. In fact, in some areas, the use of heroin is overshadowed by the abuse of OxyContin.

Purdue Pharma, OxyContin’s manufacturer, has taken steps to reduce the potential for abuse of OxyContin and other pain medications. Its Web site lists the following initiatives: funding educational programs to teach healthcare professionals how to assess and treat patients suffering from pain, providing prescribers with tamper-proof prescription pads, developing and distributing more than 1 million brochures to pharmacists and healthcare professionals to help educate them about medication diversion, working with healthcare and law enforcement officials to address prescription drug abuse, and endorsing the development of State and national prescription drug monitoring programs to detect diversion. In addition, the company is attempting to research and develop other pain management products that will be more resistant to abuse and diversion. The company estimates that it will take significant time for such products to be brought to market. For more information, visit Purdue Pharma’s Web site at www.purduepharma.com or call the company at 203–588–8069.

Q: How does OxyContin abuse differ from abuse of other pain prescriptions?

A: Abuse of prescription pain medications is not new. Two primary factors, however, set OxyContin abuse apart from other prescription drug abuse. First, OxyContin is a powerful drug that contains a much larger amount of the active ingredient, oxycodone, than other prescription pain relievers. By crushing the tablet and either ingesting or snorting it, or by injecting diluted OxyContin, people who abuse the opioid feel its powerful effects in a short time, rather than over a 12-hour span. Second, great profits can be made in the illegal sale of OxyContin. A 40-mg pill costs approximately $4 by prescription, yet it may sell for $20 to $40 on the street, depending on the area of the country in which the drug is sold.5

OxyContin can be comparatively inexpensive if it is legitimately prescribed and if its cost is covered by insurance. However, the National Drug Intelligence Center reports that people who abuse OxyContin may use heroin if their insurance will no longer pay for their OxyContin prescription because heroin is less expensive than OxyContin that is purchased illegally.6

Q: Why are so many crimes reportedly associated with OxyContin abuse?

A: Many reports of OxyContin abuse have occurred in rural areas that have housed labor-intensive industries, such as logging or coal mining. These industries are often located in economically depressed areas, as well. Therefore, people for whom the drug may have been legitimately prescribed may be tempted to sell their prescriptions for profit. Substance abuse treatment providers say that the addiction is so strong that people will go to great lengths to get the drug, including robbing pharmacies and writing false prescriptions.

Q: What is the likelihood that a person for whom OxyContin is prescribed will become addicted?

A: Most people who take OxyContin as prescribed do not become addicted. The National Institute on Drug Abuse reports: “Long-term use [of opioids] can lead to physical dependence—the body adapts to the presence of the substance and withdrawal symptoms occur if use is reduced abruptly. This can also include tolerance, which means that higher doses of a medication must be taken to obtain the same initial effects. . . . Studies have shown that properly managed medical use of opioid analgesic compounds is safe and rarely causes addiction. Taken exactly as prescribed, opioids can be used to manage pain effectively.”7

One review found, “A multitude of studies indicate that the rate of opioid addiction in populations of chronic pain sufferers is similar to the rate of opioid addiction within the general population, falling in the range of 1 to 2 percent or less.”8

In short, most individuals who are prescribed OxyContin, or any other opioid, will not become addicted, although they may become dependent on the drug and will need to be withdrawn by a qualified physician. Individuals who are taking the drug as prescribed should continue to do so, as long as they and their physician agree that taking the drug is a medically appropriate way for them to manage pain.

Q: How can I determine whether a person who uses OxyContin is dependent on rather than addicted to OxyContin?

A: When pain patients take an opioid analgesic as directed, or to the point where their pain is adequately controlled, it is not abuse or addiction. Abuse occurs when patients take more than is needed for pain control, especially if they take it to get high. Patients who take their medication in a manner that grossly differs from a physician’s directions are probably abusing that drug.

If a patient continues to seek excessive pain medication after pain management is achieved, the patient may be addicted. Addiction is characterized by the repeated, compulsive use of a substance despite adverse social, psychological, and/or physical consequences. Addiction is often (but not always) accompanied by physical dependence, withdrawal syndrome, and tolerance. Physical dependence is defined as a physiologic state of adaptation to a substance. The absence of this substance produces symptoms and signs of withdrawal. Withdrawal syndrome is often characterized by overactivity of the physiological functions that were suppressed by the drug and/or depression of the functions that were stimulated by the drug. Opioids often cause sleepiness, calmness, and constipation, so opioid withdrawal often includes insomnia, anxiety, and diarrhea.

Pain patients, however, may sometimes develop a physical dependence during treatment with opioids. This is not an addiction. A gradual decrease of the medication dose over time, as the pain is resolving, brings the former pain patient to a drug-free state without any craving for repeated doses of the drug. This is the difference between the patient treated for pain who was formerly dependent and has now been withdrawn from medication and the patient who is opioid addicted: The patient addicted to diverted pharmaceutical opioids continues to have a severe and uncontrollable craving that almost always leads to eventual relapse in the absence of adequate treatment. This uncontrollable craving for another “rush” of the drug differentiates the patient who is “detoxified” but opioid addicted from the former pain patient. Theoretically, a person who abuses opioids might develop a physical dependence but obtain treatment in the first few months of abuse, before becoming addicted. In this case, supervised withdrawal (detoxification) followed by a few months of abstinence-oriented treatment might be sufficient for the patient who is not addicted who abuses opioids. If, however, this patient subsequently relapses to opioid abuse, then that behavior would support a diagnosis of opioid addiction. If the patient has several relapses to opioid abuse, he or she will require long-term treatment for the opioid addiction. (See the section titled Treatment and Detoxification Protocols to learn more about treatment options.)

Q: I work at a facility that does not use medication-assisted treatment. What treatment should I provide to individuals addicted to or dependent on OxyContin?

A: The majority of U.S. treatment facilities do not offer medication-assisted treatment. However, because of the strength of OxyContin and its powerful addiction potential, medical complications may be increased by quickly withdrawing individuals from the drug. Premature withdrawal may cause individuals to seek heroin, and the quality of that heroin will not be known. In addition, these individuals, if injecting heroin, may also expose themselves to HIV and hepatitis. Most people addicted to OxyContin need medication-assisted treatment. Even if individuals have been taking OxyContin legitimately to manage pain, they should not stop taking the drug all at once. Instead, their dosages should be tapered down until medication is no longer needed. If you work in a drug-free or abstinence-based treatment facility, it is important to refer patients to facilities where they can receive appropriate treatment. (See SAMHSA Resources.)

Treatment and Detoxification Protocols

OxyContin® is a powerful drug that contains a much larger amount of the active ingredient, oxycodone, than other prescription opioid pain relievers. Whereas most people who take OxyContin as prescribed do not become addicted, those who abuse their pain medication or obtain it illegally may find themselves becoming rapidly dependent on, if not addicted to, the drug.

Two types of treatment have been documented as most effective for opioid addiction. One is a long-term, residential, therapeutic community type of treatment, and the other is long-term, medication-assisted outpatient treatment. Clinical trials using medications to treat opioid addiction have generally included subjects addicted to diverted pharmaceutical opioids as well as to illicit heroin. Therefore, there is no medical reason to suppose that the patient addicted to diverted pharmaceutical opioids is any less likely to benefit from medication-assisted treatment than the patient addicted to heroin.

Some patients who are opioid addicted who have very good social supports may occasionally be able to benefit from antagonist treatment with naltrexone. This treatment works best if the patient is highly motivated to participate in treatment and has undergone adequate detoxification from the opioid of abuse. Most patients who are opioid addicted in outpatient therapy, however, do best with medication that is either an agonist or a partial agonist. Methadone is the agonist medication most commonly prescribed for opioid addiction treatment in this country. Buprenorphine is the only partial agonist approved by the Food and Drug Administration for opioid addiction treatment.

The guidelines for treating OxyContin addiction or dependence are basically no different than the guidelines the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) uses for treating addiction to or dependence on any opioid. However, because OxyContin contains higher dose levels of opioid than are typically found in other oxycodone-containing pain medications, higher dosages of methadone or buprenorphine may be needed to appropriately treat patients who abuse OxyContin.

Methadone or buprenorphine may be used for OxyContin addiction treatment or, for that matter, treatment for addiction to any other opioid, including the semisynthetic opioids. Medication-assisted treatment for prescription opioid abuse is not a new treatment approach. For instance, in 2002, Alaska estimated that 15,000 people abused prescription opioids in the State and that most patients receiving methadone were not addicted to heroin. In addition, a significant percentage of patients in publicly supported methadone programs were not being treated for heroin addiction but for abuse of semisynthetic opioids (e.g., hydrocodone). The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) Drug Abuse Warning Network emergency room data show that both oxycodone and hydrocodone mentions increased dramatically in the United States between 1995 and 2002.9 And when Arkansas opened its first methadone maintenance clinic in December 1993, the vast majority of its clients were not admitted for heroin addiction but for semisynthetic opioid abuse. These individuals had been traveling to other States for treatment because methadone treatment was not available near their homes.

Using the criteria above describing the difference between addiction to and dependence on OxyContin, you may be able to determine whether a patient requires treatment for opioid addiction. If this is the case, methadone or buprenorphine may be used for withdrawal. For certain patient populations, including those with many treatment failures, methadone or buprenorphine is the treatment of choice.10

“As substance abuse treatment professionals, we have the responsibility for learning as much as we can about OxyContin and then providing appropriate treatment for people addicted to it. Appropriate treatment will nearly always involve prescribing methadone, buprenorphine, or, in some cases, naltrexone,” says H. Westley Clark, M.D., J.D., Director of CSAT. “Programs that do not offer medication-assisted treatment will need to refer patients who are addicted to OxyContin to programs that do,” he adds.

It is important to assess an individual’s eligibility for medication-assisted treatment with methadone or buprenorphine to determine whether he or she is eligible for this type of treatment and whether it would be appropriate. The assessment may take place in a hospital emergency department, central intake unit, or similar place. Final assessment of an individual’s eligibility for medication-assisted treatment must be completed by treatment program staff. The preliminary assessment should include the following areas:11

• Determining the need for emergency care
• Diagnosing the presence and severity of opioid dependence
• Determining the extent of alcohol and drug abuse
• Screening for co-occurring medical and psychiatric conditions
• Evaluating an individual’s living situation, family and social problems, and legal problems

“. . . we have the responsibility for learning as much as we can about OxyContin, and then providing appropriate treatment for people who are addicted to it.”

H. Westley Clark, M.D., J.D., M.P.H., CAS, FASAM
Director, CSAT

Treatment Improvement Protocols (TIPs) and Collateral Products Addressing Opioid Addiction Treatment

TIP 40 Clinical Guidelines for the Use of Buprenorphine in the Treatment of Opioid Addiction BKD500

Quick Guide for Physicians Based on TIP 40: Clinical Guidelines for the Use of Buprenorphine in the Treatment of Opioid Addiction QGPT40

KAP Keys for Physicians Based on TIP 40: Clinical Guidelines for the Use of Buprenorphine in the Treatment of Opioid Addiction KAPT40

TIP 43 Medication-Assisted Treatment for Opioid Addiction in Opioid Treatment Programs BKD524

Quick Guide for Clinicians Based on TIP 43: Medication-Assisted Treatment for Opioid Addiction in Opioid Treatment Programs QGCT43

KAP Keys for Clinicians Based on TIP 43: Medication-Assisted Treatment for Opioid Addiction in Opioid Treatment Programs KAPT43

SAMHSA Resources

To find a substance abuse treatment facility near you, visit the Substance Abuse Treatment Facility Locator at www.findtreatment.samhsa.gov. Call the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Substance Abuse Treatment Hotline at 800–662–HELP for substance abuse treatment referral information.

For More Information About Treatment for Opioid Addiction

Sign up for SAMHSA’s Information Mailing System (SIMS) to receive information about the following topics:

• Grant announcements
• Funding opportunities such as competitive contract announcements
• Prevention materials and publications
• Treatment- and provider-oriented materials and publications
• Research findings and reports
• Announcements of available research data sets
• Policy announcements and materials

To sign up for this free service, use one of the following methods to contact SIMS:

Web: http://sims.health.org
Mail: SAMHSA’s National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information (NCADI)
Attn: Mailing List Manager
P.O. Box 2345
Rockville, MD 20847–2345
Phone: 800–729–6686
Fax: 301–468–6433
Attn: Mailing List Manager

Three Ways To Obtain Free Copies of All CSAT Products:

1. Call SAMHSA’s NCADI at 800–729–6686; TDD (hearing impaired) 800–487–4889
2. Visit NCADI’s Web site, www.ncadi.samhsa.gov
3. Access TIPs on line at www.kap.samhsa.gov


Substance Abuse Treatment Advisory

Substance Abuse Treatment Advisory—published on an as-needed basis for treatment providers—was written and produced under contract number 270-04-7049 by the Knowledge Application Program (KAP), a Joint Venture of JBS International, Inc., and The CDM Group, Inc., for the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The content of this publication does not necessarily reflect the views or policies of SAMHSA or HHS.

Public Domain Notice: All material in this report is in the public domain and may be reproduced or copied without permission; citation of the source is appreciated. However, this publication may not be reproduced or distributed for a fee without the specific, written authorization of the Office of Communications, SAMHSA, HHS.

Electronic Access and Copies of Publication: This publication can be accessed electronically through the Internet at www.kap.samhsa.gov. Additional free print copies can be ordered from SAMHSA’s National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information at 800–729–6686.

Recommended Citation: Center for Substance Abuse Treatment. “OxyContin®: Prescription Drug Abuse—2006 Revision.” Substance Abuse Treatment Advisory, Volume 5, Issue 1. Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, April 2006.

DHHS Publication No. (SMA) 06-4138
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Printed 2006

Notes

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9. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Emergency Department Trends From the Drug Abuse Warning Network: Final Estimates 1995–2002. DAWN Series D-24. DHHS Publication No. (SMA) 03-3780. Rockville, MD: SAMHSA, 2003. dawninfo.samhsa.gov/old_dawn/pubs_94_02/edpubs/2002final [accessed March 2, 2006].
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11. Center for Substance Abuse Treatment. Initial screening, admission procedures, and assessment techniques. In: Medication-Assisted Treatment for Opioid Addiction in Opioid Treatment Programs. Treatment Improvement Protocol (TIP) Series 43. DHHS Publication No. (SMA) 05-4048. Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 2005, pp. 43–61.
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