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GLASGOW COUNCIL on ALCOHOL Tackling the misuse of alcohol

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Title: GLASGOW COUNCIL on ALCOHOL Tackling the misuse of alcohol


1
GLASGOW COUNCIL on ALCOHOLTackling the misuse of
alcohol
  • COCAINE AND ALCOHOL
  • THE HIDDEN MIXER
  • 9TH OCTOBER 2006
  • Alex Meikle

2
GLASGOW COUNCIL on ALCOHOLTackling the misuse of
alcohol
  • PREVALENCE LEVELS IN SCOTLAND
  • No of people in Scotland with problematic drug
    misuse levels in Scotland 55,000
  • No of people in Scotland estimated to be alcohol
    dependent 276,213 (Source Alcohol Concern 2003)

3
GLASGOW COUNCIL on ALCOHOLTackling the misuse of
alcohol
  • THE TIERS
  • Tier 1 Services General public, prevention,
    education and awareness
  • Tier 2 Services - People experiencing moderate
    to severe alcohol problems e.g. local councils on
    alcohol
  • Tier 3 Services - People with severe alcohol
    problems requiring specialist help e.g. CAT
    Community Rehab
  • Tier 4 Services People with acute alcohol
    problems requiring residential care or
    hospitalisation

4
GLASGOW COUNCIL ON ALCOHOL
  • GCA is composed of five key components, which
    are
  • Prevention and education work
  • The counselling services including the Alcohol
    Counselling Centre (ACC), Homelessness, Community
    Counselling and Young Peoples counselling
    service
  • Training (both internally and externally)
  • Groupwork i.e. the ACE Programme
  • East End Community Alcohol Support Service

5
WHAT GCA DOES . . . . . . . . THE MANTRA!!!
  • ADDS VALUE TO ADDICTION SERVICES WITHIN GREATER
    GLASGOW BY
  • Keep people at Tier 2, prevent them from
    relapsing to Tiers 3 or 4 and eventually move
    them to Tier 1
  • Assess for, signpost and fast-track for people
    who need them into Tiers 3 and 4 services
  • Provide throughcare service for people coming out
    of Tiers 3 and 4 services

6
GLASGOW COUNCIL ON ALCOHOL
  • Cocaine use in Scotland is the third highest in
    Europe (UN report July 2006)
  • 1.4 of 15-64 year olds use this drug.
  • Scottish Drugs Misuse Database (2006) reports 8
    of all presentations to addiction services in
    Scotland are using cocaine compared to 5 in
    2000/01
  • Alcohol use has remained steady at 13 in 2004/05
    compared to 12 in 2000/01

7
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • One study in US estimates that 75 of cocaine
    users use alcohol both independently and while
    using cocaine
  • Harm from using both is greater than using either
    separately
  • Treatment outcomes are different for simultaneous
    use
  • Therefore, extremely important to identify
    simultaneous use

8
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • Combined bio-chemical effects
  • Alcohol leads to 30 increase in blood levels of
    cocaine if taken at the same time or just before
  • Liver combines cocaine and alcohol to produce
    Cocaethylene which increases dopamine release and
    can lead to sudden cardiac death

9
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • Combined psychiatric effects
  • More euphoric and rewarding leading to an
    increased high
  • Decrease in alcohol sedation or cognitive
    impairment
  • Increase in interpersonal and physical violence
  • Increase in sexual risk behaviours
  • Increase in impulsive decision making and
    decrease impact on memory and learning

10
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • Consequences
  • The bio-chemical effects and the psychiatric
    effects combine with potentially disastrous
    consequences
  • More Bangs for your bucks
  • Less apparent effects of alcohol I can handle
    this better
  • Two substances which in themselves lead to
    volatility in individuals have this factor
    significantly enhanced
  • More impulsive behaviour
  • Greater chance of heart failure and sudden death
  • Treatment is more complicated as there are
    contra-effects i.e. withdrawl can be accompanied
    by intoxication

11
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • Conventional Scottish Treatment Characteristics
    for Service Users
  • Opiate/Injecting/Alcohol users
  • Poor
  • Unemployed
  • Depressant users
  • From Deprived backgrounds (Dep Cats 6-7)
  • Strong association with physical and mental
    health issues as well as issues such as abuse
  • Addiction as manifestation of deeper issues
    therefore treatment is necessarily holistic

12
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • Treatment Characteristics for alcohol and cocaine
    users
  • Polydrug users with no one substance in
    ascendancy
  • Educated/Aspirational/Affluent
  • Employed
  • Stimulant user and risk taker with alcohol
    exacerbating the stimulant
  • Classless from all backgrounds (Dep Cats 1-7)
  • No necessary casual connection to other issues
  • Addiction as hedonism related to lifestyle,
    culture, availability, leisure clashing with
    pressures of work and status

13
CONSEQUENCES
  • BUT COMBINATION OF ALCOHOL AND COCAINE CAN LEAD
    TO
  • Spiral into unemployment
  • Poverty
  • Abuse
  • Collapse of self-esteem
  • Debt
  • Criminal record
  • Poor health
  • Paranoia/anxiety/mental health issues

14
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • Case Study 1
  • 37 year old male, employed
  • Consumes 32-35 units in one session
  • Started taking cocaine to last the pace and keep
    awake
  • Cocaine stopped him feeling depressed and
    worrying about money problems that had arisen
    over past two years
  • Wished the weekend could last forever
  • Got arrested best thing ever happened to him
  • Rude awakening abstinent from alcohol and
    cocaine for last five months

15
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • Case Study 2
  • 32 year old male, employed, homeowner
  • Strongly into image, appearance, suntan lounge
  • Will spend between 300 -600 per weekend on
    cocaine and alcohol
  • After work on Fridays all day drinking
    supplemented by cocaine taken in pubs and clubs
  • Will consume 116 units of alcohol over 1 weekend
    (up to 52 units in one day) and 2-3 grams of
    cocaine
  • Dont think youre drunk, think youre cool
  • End up involved in fighting including broken
    teeth and black eyes, totally counter to cool
    image trying to project
  • On Sundays will drink to unwind but end up
    using cocaine again
  • Inevitably having problems with work Tired,
    depressed and paranoid
  • Now being given alcohol counselling allied to
    motivational interviewing, stress management and
    anger management

16
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • Case Study 3
  • 20 year old male from deprived area, unemployed
  • Drank heavily along with frequent use of cocaine
  • Motivating factor in taking cocaine along with
    alcohol was boredom the combination of the two
    gave him a greater buzz
  • Made him feel happy and upbeat about his life
  • Began having seizures, which stopped immediately
    he ceased using cocaine
  • Still drinking, but not as heavily
  • Receiving counselling

17
ALCOHOL AND COCAINE
  • Conclusions
  • These two substances in combination are
    potentially lethal within a relatively short
    period of time
  • It is imperative that assessment and screening
    picks up dependency on both the conventional
    assessment of one primary drug and several
    subsidiary drugs is not appropriate here this is
    Co-dependency
  • The client group will not normally have the
    typical characteristics associated currently with
    presentation at addiction services
  • Use of these two substances would appear to be
    increasing
  • They are used normally as part of a lifestyle and
    not as a response to deep underlying causes
  • Other problems e.g. criminal record, abuse,
    unemployment follow on from the use of the
    substances and not the other way around
  • Addiction workers have to be empowered and
    trained to deal with both substances
  • Addiction services have a major role in secondary
    prevention work in preventing alcohol and cocaine
    use from causing the individual to spiral further
    into chaos and more resources are needed to do
    this
  • Location and opening hours of services will have
    to be considered
  • More research has to be carried out into the
    combined effects of both and to treat them as
    their joint use increases
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