HRD programs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

HRD programs

Description:

In-effective in reducing different types of psychoactive substance use ... Minimum sentencing for Marijuana users. Drug Free School Zones. Employment Drug Testing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:45
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: emr81
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: HRD programs


1
HRD programs
  • Emran M Razaghi, MD, MPH

2
Definitions
  • Psychoactive substance
  • when taken in or administered into one's system
  • affects mental processes, e.g. cognition or
    affect
  • does not necessarily imply dependence-producing

3
Definitions
  • Abuse
  • a maladaptive pattern of use
  • continued use despite knowledge of having a
    persistent or recurrent social, occupational,
    psychological or physical problem
  • use in situations in which it is physically
    hazardous
  • non-medical or unsanctioned patterns of use

4
Normality
  • As
  • Health
  • Average
  • Utopia
  • Process

5
A disease?
  • DSM-IV definitions
  • Substance use
  • Substance abuse
  • Substance dependence

6
Definitions
  • Dependence syndrome
  • a cluster of physiological, behavioral, and
    cognitive phenomena
  • use of a substance takes on a much higher
    priority
  • the desire (often strong) to take the
    psychoactive drugs
  • after a period of abstinence, a more rapid
    reappearance of other features of the syndrome
    occurs

7
Definitions
  • Harmful use (ICD-10)
  • a pattern of psychoactive substance use
  • causing damage to health
  • physical (e.g. hepatitis following injection of
    drugs)
  • mental (e.g. depressive episodes secondary to
    heavy alcohol intake)
  • commonly with adverse social consequences

8
Definitions
  • Hazardous use
  • a pattern of substance use
  • with increased the risk of harmful consequences
    for the user
  • with patterns of use that are of public health
    significance despite the absence of any current
    disorder in the individual user

9
Epidemiology
  • The global burden
  • 2 billion alcohol users, 1.3 billion smokers and
    185 million drug users
  • tobacco, alcohol and illicit drugs contributed
    12.4 of all deaths worldwide in the year 2000
  • total years of life lost 8.9
  • proportion of DALY on males in the developed
    countries 33.4 of all DALYs

10
Epidemiology
11
Epidemiology
12
Epidemiology
13
Epidemiology
14
What people think (WHO)
  • Drug dependence is simply a failure of will or of
    strength of character

15
What people think (WHO)
  • People who have drug dependence can easily move
    back to occasional use

16
What people think (WHO)
  • It's not worthwhile to invest in treatment for
    individuals who have drug dependence - it is a
    waste of public funds

17
What people think (WHO)
  • There is already enough research for policy
    making on drug and alcohol related problems,
    there is no need for more

18
What people think (WHO)
  • All that is needed to cure dependence is
    treatment centers - once you are in, you are cured

19
Prevention
20
Prevention
21
Prevention
  • Regulation of the physical and economic
    availability of alcohol
  • Lowering the age of availability, decreasing its
    cost, or increasing the number of outlets
    increase its consumption
  • Increasing the cost quite effective in reducing
    problems associated with alcohol

22
Prevention
  • Regulation of the physical and economic
    availability of illicit psychoactive substances
  • Affect the shape of the market, the purity of the
    substances available and their price
  • No permanent effect on eradication of drugs

23
Prevention
  • Mass media
  • In-effective in reducing different types of
    psychoactive substance use
  • Community-based interventions
  • Changes observed in such areas as acceptance of
    health orientated policies and increased
    knowledge
  • For such changes tobe sustained requires that
    they be institutionalized

24
Prevention
  • School-based interventions
  • produce change if
  • provided at a developmentally appropriate time
  • provided during the period students experience
    initial exposure to psychoactive substances
  • local prevalence data used
  • complementary general health/life skills added
  • psychoactive substance use education is best
    integrated within a well-founded health
    curriculum
  • programs with primarily following abstinence goal
    fail to produce behavioral effects

25
Treatment
  • Philosophies
  • Social control
  • Abstinence
  • Harm reduction

26
Treatment
  • DSM-IV course specifiers
  • Early full remission
  • Early partial remission
  • Sustained full remission
  • Sustained partial remission
  • On agonist therapy
  • In a controlled environment

27
Treatment
  • Short term objectives
  • Keep the patient in treatment
  • Eliminate illegal use
  • Eliminate asocial behavior

28
Treatment
  • Long term objectives
  • Acquire resistance skills
  • Acquire social skills
  • Acquire capacity for maturity

29
Drug Control Strategies
30
Enforcement Examples
  • Minimum sentencing for Marijuana users
  • Drug Free School Zones
  • Employment Drug Testing
  • Sport Drug Testing
  • Country Boarder Enforcement
  • The War on Drugs

31
What Is Harm Reduction?
  • Refers to an emphasis on reducing the negative
    consequences of using a substance rather than on
    reducing the quantity or frequency of its
    consumption.
  • Programs may encourage lighter consumption, but
    the focus is on reducing the harmful consequences
    that may ensue from substance abuse.

32
Harm Reduction Examples
  • Needle Exchange Programs (NEP)
  • Dance Safe
  • Safe Crack Kits

33
Lets debate
  • What do you think is a more effective deterrent
    harm reduction programs or enforcement?
  • What programs do you know that make drug use more
    safe, if any?
  • Do you agree with the drug laws that are in
    place, why or why not?
  • Do you find value in programs that make drug use
    safe?
  • Do you or your close friends use drugs?

34
Harm reduction or harm maintenance?
  • What people are saying?

35
Rationale for harm reduction
  • Humanitarian rationale
  • Public health rationale
  • Human rights rationale

36
Risk environment for IDUs
  • The law
  • Management of the law enforcement
  • KAP of frontline officers
  • KAP of HRD service providers
  • Attitudes and experiences of IDUs

37
Ecological approach
  • How
  • Social factors
  • Political factors
  • economic factors
  • Features of the physical environment
  • Personal characteristics
  • determine health.

38
HRD in the 21st century
  • Coverage
  • Innovation
  • Sustainability
  • The role of social capital

39
HRD, deciding for scale up?
  • Recognize national HIV problem
  • Recognize need for harm reduction
  • Plan implementation
  • Ensure sustainability

40
CQI
41
Rationale for harm reduction
  • Humanitarian rationale
  • Public health rationale
  • Human rights rationale

42
Thank you!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com