In the UK, roughly 93% of men and 87% of women drink
alcohol. Minimal alcohol consumption can of course be pleasurable, socially
enjoyable, and associated with health benefits (reduction in deaths from
coronary artery disease). There is a tendency to view most people as normal
drinkers and a subset as vulnerable to the development of alcohol problems. In
fact on a population level, increasing the overall alcohol consumption (e.g. by
reducing the real price of alcohol) tends to increase the total number of problem
drinkers.
Alcohol consumption in the community is roughly normally
distributed with a long ‘tail’ to the right. The distinction between normal and
heavy drinking is arbitrary. On both a population and individual level,
increased consumption is associated with increased risk of harm of all kinds.
However, the fact that normal drinkers heavily outnumber heavy drinkers means
that, despite their lower rates of problems, greater numbers of alcohol-related
problems occur in normal rather than heavy drinkers. This gives rise to the
so-called ‘prevention paradox’—that to significantly reduce overall alcohol
related morbidity we must look to reduce problems in normal rather than heavy
drinkers. This applies more to problems such as drink driving and drink-related
trauma rather than to medical complications of heavy use such as liver
cirrhosis.
The term ‘alcoholic’ is often used by patients themselves
and is the preferred term of Alcoholics Anonymous. It has unfortunately
acquired a pejorative meaning to the general public, and images of the ‘down
and out’ or ‘skid row’ alcoholic, drinking strong drink from brown paper bags,
have damaged this word’s use in clinical contexts. It is not used in DSM-IV or
ICD-10 where the preference is to make the diagnosis of alcohol dependence or
harmful use (abuse in DSM-IV).
A history of alcohol use
Alcohol has been used in all societies throughout recorded
history, with documentary evidence of brewing and wine making as early as
3000 BC. The intoxicating effects of alcohol were most probably discovered
independently in many cultures around the time of the evolution of agriculture,
possibly on noting fermentation in fruit. Ancient peoples produced alcoholic
beverages from a wide variety of materials including fruits, berries, honey,
corn, barley, wheat, sugar cane, and potatoes. The use of alcohol by
individuals has been variously regarded, from complete tolerance through to
outright prohibition.
Alcohol has always had a place in the lifestyles and formal
rituals of many peoples around the world. It was used as an intoxicant in
religious rituals, as a celebration, as a gift, as a greeting, and to mark
births and deaths. For almost as long as alcohol use is recorded there are
recorded attempts at control on its use by the authorities. In AD 92
the Roman emperor Domitian attempted to restrict wine production and its
distribution and sale. Similar restrictions were attempted at various times by
other leaders, sometimes accompanied by moral disapproval of drinking or
drunkenness in particular. In medieval Britain, ale was a staple part of the
diet and was consumed in huge quantities, while drunkenness, particularly among
the clergy, was frowned upon by the Christian churches. Consumption of wine,
however, continued to play a role in Christian worship. After initially
preaching moderation, Mohammed later forbade the use of alcohol to followers of
his religion, possibly as a way of differentiating his converts from the
Christians around them.
The process of natural fermentation of alcohol by yeasts can
produce beverages of up to 13% proof: above this concentration the yeast dies.
Stronger concentrations of alcohol are produced by the process of distillation
which was discovered in the Middle East in 1000 AD. Public consumption of
distilled liquor became prevalent in the eighteenth century and the
accompanying social problems together with the conservative attitudes of the
emerging Protestant clergy led to a developing moral disapproval of alcohol
consumption.
In the mid-eighteenth century, as part of a continuing
military and trade dispute with France, the British government imposed heavy
taxes on French wine imports and encouraged the distillation of cheap domestic
spirits—in particular, gin. This change in the drinking practice in the general
population from lowto high-strength alcohol produced significant alcohol-related
problems in the general public, immortalized in the lithographs of the ‘gin
palaces’ by George Cruikshank. In an effort to control the problem the
government passed laws to restrict the time and place at which alcohol could be
sold and began to levy increasing taxes on distilled spirits. This had the
positive effect of reducing consumption but the negative effect of introducing
a government interest in continuing consumption. The late eighteenth-century
writings of Benjamin Rush describe habitual drunkenness as a ‘disease of the
mind’.
Eighteenth-century America saw the development of an
increasingly widespread temperance movement (those signing a pledge ‘TA’ for
total abstinence becoming known as teetotallers). The temperance movement
lobbied for a complete ban on alcohol consumption, and succeeded in 1921
following the passing of the 18th amendment to the US Constitution which
provided for prohibition. The period of 11 years until the repeal of
prohibition in the 21st amendment did indeed see a reduction in social problems
and mortality; however, its unpopularity, widespread flouting of the law, and
the flourishing of illegal activity in gangsterism led to its repeal.
Today, in most Western countries, alcohol use is widely
tolerated and socially accepted. Interestingly, moral disapproval of drinking
during pregnancy and drinking while driving a motor vehicle has resulted in
substantial decreases in these activities. Despite improvement in these limited
areas, most Western countries have seen an increase in absolute consumption and
alcohol-related medical harm compounded by an increasing passion for drug
misuse.
Alcohol as a drug
Preparations The active ingredient in alcoholic
drinks is ethyl alcohol which makes up a variable percentage of the volume. The
flavour of drinks comes from ‘congeners’—the additional organic substances
derived from the brewing materials.
Pattern of use Of all drugs, alcohol has the
widest range of patterns of use, ranging from yearly light consumption to
continuous consumption throughout the waking hours.
Drug actions The effects of alcohol on the CNS
were traditionally described as being due to non-specific effects on neuronal
cell wall fluidity and permeability. It is now believed that in addition to
these general effects there are neurotransmitter-specific effects, including:
enhancement of GABA-A transmission (anxiolytic effects), release of dopamine in
the mesolimbic system (euphoriant and ‘reward’ effects), and inhibition of
NMDA-mediated glutaminergic transmission (amnesic effects). Ethyl alcohol is
oxidized by alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) to acetaldehyde, which in turn is
oxidized by acetaldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) to carbon dioxide and water. 98%
of alcohol metabolism takes place in the liver. Approximately 1 unit (or 8g) of
alcohol can be metabolized per hour. Illicitly brewed alcohol may contain
methanol, which is broken down to formaldehyde, which has marked toxic effects
on the retina.
Acute effects Alcohol is absorbed rapidly from
mouth, stomach, and small intestine, and from a single consumption maximum
blood levels are obtained in 760min. Absorption is slowed by the presence
of food in the stomach and is speeded up by taking effervescent drinks. Alcohol
is hydrophilic and is widely distributed throughout the body organs including
the brain, placenta, lungs, and kidneys. Blood alcohol concentration (BAC) is
consistent throughout the body with the exception of fat and can be estimated
from breath samples. In normal drinkers BAC correlates with the subjective and
the observable CNS effects of alcohol. Heavy drinkers may have a high BAC with
limited outward signs of intoxication due to the development of tolerance.
Because of their different body fat distribution, women will have a higher BAC
than men following the same oral intake. Initial symptoms of alcohol
intoxication are subjective elevation of mood, increased socialization, and
disinhibition. Continuing consumption, intended to prolong these effects, can
lead to lability of mood, impaired judgement, aggressiveness, slurred speech,
unsteady gait, and ataxia.
Societal factors The prevalence of
alcohol-related harm increases with the mean population consumption. This mean
consumption is increased by increased availability of alcohol, increased
societal tolerance of drinking, decreased restrictions on the sale of alcohol,
and a decreased ‘real price’ of alcohol. Price is the most influential factor in
demand, the real price of a pint of beer or bottle of whisky having dropped
considerably since the war. Where societies forbid all alcohol consumption
(e.g. prohibition America, Islamic counties), there is a decrease in
alcohol-related problems but an increase in the level of personality
abnormality in those who continue to drink.
Risk factors Heavy drinking is more common in
men, in lower socioeconomic groups, in those with lower educational levels, and
in the young. Some professions are also associated with heavy drinking and
drink-related harm. These include drinks industry workers (easy availability
and effect of heavy drinkers seeking out jobs here); travelling salesmen
(boredom, periods away from home, acceptance of drinking on the job); doctors
(stress, freedom from direct supervision, reluctance to seek help with
incipient problems).
Genetics First-degree relatives of alcoholics
have double the risk of alcohol problems themselves. Significantly higher rates
in identical compared with fraternal twins (although not 100% concordance).
Children of alcoholics have increased risk of development of alcohol problems
themselves even when adopted into families without alcohol problems. A
metabolically relatively inactive form of ALDH is common in Southeast Asian
people, leading to accumulation of acetaldehyde and an unpleasant ‘flushing’
reaction in affected individuals who take alcohol. This may account for the
significantly lower rate of alcohol problems found in affected individuals. No
causative genes for alcoholism have been identified and it is expected that it
will show polygenic inheritance. Problem drinkers contain a significant subgroup
of individuals with dissocial personality traits which predisposes to
alcoholism, and is itself heritable.
Medical complications Acute toxicity occurs at
levels over 300mg% (see b p. 566), with clouding of consciousness and
coma, risk of aspiration, hypoglycaemia, and acute renal failure. Associated
with a wide range of chronic medical problems
Psychiatric complications Harmful use and
dependent use (b p. 566) distinguished by the presence of withdrawals on
abstinence; withdrawals may be complicated by seizures and development of an
acute confusional state—delirium tremens (b p. 558); acute alcohol-induced
amnesia; alcoholic hallucinosis (b p. 568); alcohol-induced delusional
disorder (b p. 568); Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome (b p. 572);
pathological jealousy (b p. 569); alcohol-related cognitive impairment and
alcoholic dementia (b p. 568); alcohol misuse is also associated with
development of, or exacerbation of, anxiety/depressive symptoms and with
deliberate self-harm and suicidal behaviour.
Interventions Advice and ‘brief interventions’
regarding safer drinking patterns in those with ‘at risk’ or harmful use (b p.
566); strategies towards encouraging and maintaining abstinence in those with
dependency and those with established medical or psychiatric damage; medically
managed detoxification (b p. 560); psychological and pharmacological
support of abstinence or changed drinking pattern (b pp. 562–5).
Screening for alcohol problems
Diseases related to alcohol abuse are common, significant,
and amenable to improvement by early detection and intervention. Screening is
therefore indicated. There are low rates of detection in primary care and hospital
settings, which may be improved by increased vigilance, increased awareness of
alcohol problems, awareness of routes of referral, asking routine
alcohol-screening questions (e.g. CAGE—see Box 15.1), paying special attention
to at-risk groups. Many patients give reasonably accurate drinking histories if
asked, although some may underestimate consumption. A combination of clinical
history, screening measure, and a biomarker is the optimal approach to
detection.
Disorders suggesting underlying alcohol abuse Hepatitis;
cryptogenic (i.e. medically unexplained) cirrhosis; seizures—particularly late
onset; gastritis; anaemia; unexplained raised MCV or deranged LFTs;
cardiomyopathy; accidents, particularly repeated and poorly explained; TB; head
injury; hypertension persisting despite apparently adequate treatment;
treatment resistance in other psychiatric conditions; impotence in men.
Breath testing Blood alcohol concentration (BAC)
measures recent alcohol consumption, in mg alcohol per 100mL blood (mg%).
Correlates well with breath alcohol measured by breathalyser (see Table 15.1).
Useful in assessing recent drinking (e.g. in supervised detox regimes) and as
an objective measure of intoxication (e.g. in A&E). Discrepancy between
high BAC and lack of apparent intoxication suggests tolerance. This measurement
is dependent on adequate technique, and reasonable co-operation from the
patient.
Blood tests Elevated red cell mean corpuscular
volume (MCV), gamma glutamyl transferase (G-GT), and carbohydrate-deficient
transferrin (CDT) are markers for excess alcohol consumption. They are best
used to monitor consumption in patients at follow-up. Not sensitive/specific
enough for routine screening purposes.
- MCV Sensitivity
20–50%, specificity 55–100%. Remains raised for 3–6 months due to 120-day
lifespan of RBC. False positive in B12 and folate deficiency.
- G-GT Sensitivity
20–90%, specificity 55–100%. Raised for 2–3wks. Other LFTs are less specific
for alcoholic-related liver damage. False positive in liver diseases of
other cause, obesity, diabetes, smoking, and medication (e.g.
anticonvulsants), and may remain raised in chronic alcoholic liver disease
despite abstinence.
- CDT Sensitivity
70%, specificity 95%. Increased levels in response to heavy drinking (7–10
days), 2–3wks to return to normal, can be used to monitor relapse. More
expensive than G-GT and not available in all areas.
Urinary tests Urinary ethyl glucoronide (an
alcohol metabolite) has been proposed as a measure of alcohol intake, being
sensitive to ingestion of 1 or 2 drinks, remaining elevated for several days.
It has still to be used routinely, though has been used in forensic settings.
Hair testing Testing of hair for ethyl
glucoronide or fatty acid ethyl esters has been proposed as a method for
detecting alcohol use over prior months, though requires further research and
validation.
Assessment of the patient with alcohol
problems
Patients with a primary alcohol problem, or where it is
thought that alcohol consumption is a contributory factor in their
presentation, should have a more detailed assessment of their alcohol use, in
addition to standard psychiatric history and MSE.
Lifetime pattern of alcohol consumption Age at
first alcoholic drink. Age when began to drink regularly. Age when first drinking
most weekends. Age when first drinking most days. When did they first begin to
drink more than their peers? When (if ever) did they first feel they had an
alcohol problem? Pattern of drinking throughout life until present— describe
periods of abstinence and more heavy drinking and the reasons for these
(including environmental/psychosocial stressors).
Current alcohol consumption Describe a current
day’s drinking. When is the first drink taken? What types of drink are taken and
in what setting? What is the total number and volume of drinks taken in a day?
Some patients find it hard to describe a typical day or easy to overrationalize
recent heavy consumption. Ask them to describe the previous day’s drinking,
then the day before that, etc., until a pattern emerges. Describe a typical and
a ‘heavy’ day’s drinking.
Signs of dependence Do they experience
withdrawals in the morning or when unable to obtain alcohol? Have they ever
drunk more alcohol as way of relieving withdrawals? Are they having to drink
more to get the same intoxicating effect? Do they no longer get ‘drunk’ at all?
Do they find it difficult to stop drinking once started? Have they tried and
failed to give up, and if so why? Do they have episodes of ‘lost’
memory/‘blackouts’?
Physical/mental health Have they been told of
any physical health problems due to drinking? Have they previously been told to
stop drinking by a doctor? Any previous or current psychiatric diagnoses?
Problems related to alcohol Have they missed
days at work, or had warnings about poor performance, or lost a job as a result
of alcohol? Are there relationship difficulties or a relationship breakdown due
to drinking? Are there financial problems? Have they been in trouble with the police
or do they have outstanding charges against them?
Previous treatment attempts Describe the nature
and type of previous treatments. Describe the subsequent return to drinking.
Describe any periods of abstinence since the development of the drinking
problem. How were they maintained and what ended them?
Family history Drinking problems in parents and
extended family. Quality of relationships in past and present. Childhood
environment.
Attitude to referral Why have they attended the
appointment today? Do they feel they have an alcohol problem and if so will
they accept help for it? What sort of help do they want and are there types of
treatment
they will not accept? What stage of change are they at
(pre-contemplative, contemplative, decision, action)?
Patient goals What (if anything) do they want to
change about their drinking? What pattern of drinking do they aspire to?
Physical examination Note general condition;
evidence of withdrawals including tremor in hands or protruded tongue; degree
of facial capilliarization; stigmata of liver disease (palpable liver edge,
jaundice, spider naevi, ascites, palmar erythema); evidence of peripheral neuropathy;
ataxia of gait; breath alcohol reading.
Blood testing FBC, LFTs, other blood tests as
indicated on history/ examination.
Cognitive testing Although not generally
indicated until 4wks of abstinence, it is helpful to get a feel for the
patient’s level of cognition, especially if there is a suggestion they may be
experiencing delirium, or have significant alcohol-related brain damage.
There are a variety of situations where the doctor will be
called on to give ‘safe drinking’ advice: individuals whose histories reveal
evolving risky drinking patterns; patients with comorbid psychiatric illness;
and individuals with alcohol problems who are attempting controlled drinking
rather than abstinence.
There is a wide variety of types of alcoholic drink, each of
a different ‘strength’, (i.e. percentage alcohol by volume; see Table 15.2). It
is the amount of alcohol taken, rather than the type of drink, which
contributes to physical/mental health effects—avoiding spirits or other drinks
perceived as ‘strong’ will not protect from health risks if the absolute amount
of alcohol is above safe limits.
Sensible drinking Men should drink no more than
21 and women no more than 14 units/wk of alcohol. There should be at least two
nondrinking days per week. The amounts should be spread over several days, not
drunk all at once. Amounts should not be ‘saved up’ from a light week and drunk
on top of the following week’s allowance. The amounts quoted are not ‘safe’
amounts, but represent levels of drinking not associated with significant risks
to health. In some situations (e.g. driving, operating machinery) the ‘safe
amount’ is zero. Some individuals (e.g. previously alcohol-dependent, chronic
medical conditions, pregnant) should not drink at all.
Brief interventions for hazardous and harmful
drinking
Low intensity, short interventions, based predominantly at
primary care level, to reduce hazardous drinking. Techniques include presenting
patients with screening results, identifying risks, giving medical advice,
assessing the patient’s goals/commitment and working collaboratively to support
the patient.
Techniques of controlled drinking Patients who
are seeking advice about avoiding potential alcohol problems and those
individuals who are seeking to change from ‘at-risk’ or harmful drinking
patterns to controlled
drinking patterns may find a selection of the following
strategies helpful:
- Set a
weekly and daily alcohol limit and keep to it.
- Do not
drink alone.
- Do not
drink with individuals who drink heavily themselves.
- Pace
drinking, matching the consumption of a light or slow drinker.
- Don’t
buy rounds.
- Alternate
soft and alcoholic drinks. Drink with a meal.
- Rehearse
what to say if offered a drink that you don’t want.
- Plan
alternative, enjoyable non-drinking activities to replace drinking periods
(e.g. cinema, sports).
Patients presenting with alcohol problems often display
marked ambivalence about whether there is even a problem, let alone about the
need for change. This reflects both the perceived positive as well as negative
roles alcohol plays in their lives and the memory of previous failure or
difficulties in attempting change. The aim in counselling such patients is to
guide them in making their own decision towards change, or if change is not
likely or possible now, to guide them towards harm reduction and considering
the possibility of future change.
Motivational interviewing This is a technique
aimed at enabling a patient to move through the stages of change (b p.
544) to the point where action can be contemplated. It is based on the
principle that: ‘people believe what they hear themselves say’. The interviewer
aims to aid the patient in explaining why they should change their behaviour
and how this will be achieved.
- Therapist
does not take a directive or prescriptive role but expresses interest and
concern for the patient’s problems and explores the consequences of their
behaviour.
- Uses
open-ended questions, reflective listening and summarizing with
identification of discrepancy between individual statements.
- Aids
the assessment of the pros and cons of current behaviour, avoiding
confrontation or direct challenge.
- Emphasizes
patient’s own perceptions of degree of risk rather than telling them about
risks which they may not believe.
- Encourages
personal responsibility and patient’s choice of treatment options.
Planning interventions The initial assessment
interview forms the beginning of intervention. Its aims are to gather and
impart information, promote the possibility of positive action, and to plan
treatment. The ongoing therapeutic relationship aims to maintain purpose,
monitor progress, aid self-monitoring and self-awareness. The process of
planning treatment should proceed along the following lines:
- Make
diagnosis (alcohol dependence, harmful, or at-risk use).
- Assess
stage of change (b p. 544).
- Decide
with patient the goal of intervention:
- Continue
current drinking pattern In some patients there will be no need
for change at all. In others there will be a clear history of alcohol
problems but the patient presents as ‘pre-contemplative’
regarding change. In these cases give harm-reduction advice
and ‘leave the door open’ to further assessment and help rather than alienating
the patient.
- Change
to safer drinking pattern Many individuals will be able to modify
risky or harmful drinking patterns given appropriate advice and help
(perhaps monitored by a ‘drinking diary’, which is later reviewed).
- Attempt
abstinence from alcohol In some individuals the only safe course
is to aim to abstain from alcohol completely.
- For
abstinence in a dependent drinker, consider the need for and setting of
detox (b p. 560).
- Abstinence
vs. controlled drinking The decision to try for controlled
drinking rather than abstinence is one for individual patient choice. The
doctor should offer suitable advice.
- Factors
suggesting possibility of success of controlled drinking: previous
prolonged periods of controlled drinking, alcohol misuse primarily in
context of other mental disorder which has responded to treatment,
otherwise stable lifestyle, absence of drinking problem in family and
friends.
- Factors
against controlled drinking: previously alcoholdependent,
previous failure at controlled drinking, comorbid mental illness, comorbid
drug use, established organ damage, risk of job loss/ marriage loss.
- Relapse Alcohol
misuse is a chronic illness and many patients will ‘fall off the wagon’
several times before achieving long-standing change. The possibility of
relapse should be anticipated with the patient and appropriate strategies
should be in place to deal with it (e.g. early review).
- Causes
of relapse: ambivalent motivation, insufficient support, novel
events, over-confidence, mental illness, environmental stressors.
- Counselling
families The family of a patient with alcohol problems may
contact you directly to ask for advice regarding their relative.
- Patient’s
relatives sometimes request that their relative be detained in hospital
‘to stop them drinking’. The Mental Health Acts in the UK specifically do
not allow detention of patients solely for reason of drug or alcohol
dependency.
- Aim to
encourage and reward moves by the drinker to achieve change in their
drinking pattern, while avoiding rewarding and hence reinforcing drinking,
but avoiding confrontation or ultimatums.
- Sometimes
continued family involvement, despite their best intentions, serves only
to support the drinker in their chosen lifestyle. In this case the family
may have to be aided to step back (AA call this ‘disengaging with love’).
- Prognostic
factors There is 73.6-fold excess mortality cf. age-matched
controls. Of 100 45-yr-old patients at 20yrs follow-up: 40% dead, 30%
abstinent, 30% problem drinking. Positive factors Motivated to
change; supportive family or relationship; in employment; treatable
comorbid illness (e.g. anxiety disorder, social phobia); accepting of
appropriate treatment goal; AA involvement. Negative factors Ambivalent
about change; unstable accommodation or homeless; drinking embedded into
lifestyle (e.g. limited pursuits outside alcohol, all friends are
drinkers); repeated treatment failures; cognitive impairment.
Detoxification (detox) is the medical management of
withdrawal symptoms in a patient with substance dependence. Alcohol detox
involves: psychological support; medication to relieve withdrawal symptoms (usually
via a reducing BDZ regime); observation for development of features of
complicated withdrawal; nutritional supplementation; and integration with
follow-up. Detox may be carried out as inpatient or, with support, in the
community. The need to medically manage the complications of alcohol withdrawal
can also arise in an unplanned fashion (e.g. in an alcohol-dependent patient in
police custody or following emergency surgery). Most of the problems of alcohol
use are related to inability to maintain abstinence, rather than to the initial
problems of withdrawal.
Detox procedure
- Decide
on setting.
- Assess
need for BDZ-reducing regime.
- Consider
need for other medications.
- Provide
verbal and written advice.
- Inform
GP of the plans.
- Give
the patient a contact in case of emergency.
- Decide
on explicit follow-up after detox.
Setting
Outpatient detox
- Treatment
of choice for most uncomplicated alcohol-dependent patients, with
comparable completion rates to inpatient detoxification and comparable
percentage remaining abstinent at 6mths.
- Where
there are doubts about compliance or concerns about drinking ‘on top of’
the prescribed drug, the patient should be seen daily in
the morning and breathalysed before dispensing that day’s
and the following
morning’s supply of the drug.
Indications for inpatient detox
- Past
history of complicated withdrawals (seizures or delirium).
- Current
symptoms of confusion or delirium.
- Comorbid
mental/physical illness, polydrug misuse, or suicide risk.
- Symptoms
of Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome (b p. 572).
- Severe
nausea/vomiting; severe malnutrition.
- Lack
of stable home environment.
In planning treatment in alcohol problems, attention should
be focused not only on achieving, but also on maintaining change. Many patients
find the initial change (e.g. moving to abstinence or controlled drinking) surprisingly
easy, but find it difficult to maintain change in the longer term. Alcohol misuse
is a chronic illness characterized by relapse and in dependent drinkers there
is the tendency for dependent drinking patterns to recur rapidly on abstinence.
For this reason, maintenance interventions should support change, and in every
patient, relapse should be anticipated and strategies to deal with it should be
in place.
Individual counselling In addition to monitoring
agreed change, individual counselling can address the following:
- Social
skills training (e.g. ‘saying no’).
- Problem-solving
skills.
- Relaxation
training.
- Anger
management.
- Cognitive
restructuring.
- Relapse
prevention.
In selected patients there may be a role for more formal
psychotherapies.
Group support Variety of group methods both
within the health service and in the voluntary sector. Variable local
provision. Most widespread and best known is AA (see Box 15.2).
Residential abstinence In selected patients,
time in a residential facility may offer a period of abstinence which is
unachievable ‘outside’, allowing interventions in physical and mental health
and a chance to plan social change to permit continued abstinence on discharge.
A variety of facilities exist, usually outside health care provision; some
offer detoxification, while others will only accept patients following detox.
Most residential rehabilitation centres will utilize group therapies, and
follow the ‘12-step’ approach, advocated by Alcoholics Anonymous (b p.
563). Residential rehabilitation is used in patients where home environment is
unsupportive of abstinence and there has been failure of previous treatment
options.
Advice to all patients regarding relapse Returning
to drinking is the most common outcome in patients (and some consider relapse
as pathognomonic of addiction). The stages of change model (b p. 544)
considers relapse to be at the beginning of a further process of change, but
with increased knowledge as to future strategies to combat relapse. A relapse
can be motivated by over-confidence or forgetting gains. A ‘slip’ does not mean
a full-blown relapse is inevitable and all patients should have strategies to
deal with relapse discussed and agreed ‘ahead of time’.
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is the best known and the most
widespread of the voluntary self-help organizations for problem drinkers. It
was founded in 1935 in the USA by Bill Wilson and Dr Bob Smith, themselves both
problem drinkers. Currently there are 73 000 groups in the UK and 788 000
groups worldwide. Associated organizations are Al-Anon (for relatives of
problem drinkers); Al-Ateen (for teenage children of problem drinkers); and
Narcotics Anonymous (NA) (for addicts of illicit drugs).
AA views alcoholism as a lifelong, incurable disease whose
symptoms can be arrested by lifelong abstinence. Many other groups will use a
variant of the AA model ‘12-step’ programme. AA is a useful and effective
intervention in many problem drinkers and all patients should be informed about
AA and encouraged to consider attendance.
An AA meeting will generally follow a standard routine:
there will be 10–20 people in each group, only first names are used; a rotating
chairman will introduce himself with ‘my name is X, and I am an alcoholic’,
then will read the AA preamble; a number of speakers are called from the floor
who give an account of their stories and recovery if possible, leading to
general discussion; the meeting ends with a prayer and is followed by informal
discussions and contact between new members and sponsors who may offer
emotional and practical support and perhaps a phone number. Open meetings are
held where friends, family, and interested professionals can attend. Closed
meetings are for AA members only. (See Useful resources for AA
contacts in the UK and Ireland b p. 1014.)
The ‘12 steps’
- We
admitted we were powerless over alcohol—that our lives had become
unmanageable.
- Came
to believe that a power higher than ourselves could restore us to sanity.
- Made a
decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we
understood him.
- Made a
searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.
- Admitted
to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our
wrongs.
- Were
entirely ready to have God remove these defects of character.
- Humbly
asked Him to remove our shortcomings.
- Made a
list of the persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to
them all.
- Made
direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would
injure them or others.
- Continued
to take personal inventory, and when we were wrong promptly to admit it.
- Sought
through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as
we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the
power to carry that out.
- Having
had a spiritual awakening as a result of these steps, we tried to carry
this message to alcoholics and to practise these principles in our
affairs.
Last Updated: 10 Dec 2024