Summary
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Comprehensive
assessment is a key component in effective treatment of opiate users.
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Methadone
is a controlled drug with high dependency potential and a low lethal
dose, therefore it should only be prescribed where there is certain
knowledge of recent opiate use and where there is a care plan which
includes clear treatment goals.
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If
there is any doubt at all in the mind of a prescriber as to the wisdom
of prescribing it is important to remember that there is almost certainly
more risk in mis-prescribing than in not prescribing.
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Specialist
advice and assessment is usually available to non-specialist services.
Introduction
Assessment of
opiate use is not an exact science. The outcome of an assessment will
depend on the interpretation by the assessor of the:
- Client's description
of their feelings
- History the client
gives
- The amount, type,
route of administration and frequency of drugs the client says they
are using
- Objective signs
of use (injection marks, urinalysis etc.)
- Signs of intoxication/withdrawal.
The assessment will
be affected by:
- Who is assessing
- The type of agency
in which the assessment is taking place
- The services available
- The degree of specialist
knowledge the assessor has.
The objectives of
an assessment for the suitability of methadone treatment are the same
whatever the setting, namely to determine:
- Is the person an
opiate user?
- Have they been
previously notified to the Home Office?
- Are they already
receiving methadone treatment from another prescriber?
- Is methadone an
appropriate treatment?
and to give the client
an understanding of:
- The treatment options
available
- The difference
between the experience of heroin and methadone.
Subsequent sections
look at the issues of determining the length of treatment and starting
methadone dose.
The headings below
cover the core components of a good initial assessment (see checklist
below) and describe some of the tools that can be used to help decide
on treatment goals and, later, to measure their effectiveness.
Assessment
length and setting
People who are
requesting help with their opiate problems are usually assessed either:
- In the community
- As a day patient
of a drug service or hospital unit
- As a hospital/drug
unit in-patient over a few days.
Community
assessments
The
majority of assessments are done in the community. Most community assessments
are done over one or more one-hour sessions with the client. They do not
usually require the client to be observed withdrawing from opiates or
be supervised taking a 'test dose' of methadone.
Day
patient and in-patient assessments
In-patient
and day assessments are more expensive and require specialist staff but
they can be more objective because they give the opportunity for the client
to be assessed:
- Very closely
- Over a long period
of time
- By a multidisciplinary
team
- Experiencing withdrawal
symptoms
- Following the administration
of methadone.
They also allow more
time to develop a therapeutic relationship, give health education information
and to discuss issues such as injecting practice and HIV.
This type of assessment
may be indicated when:
- There is some doubt
about the level of opiate use
- The person is requesting
a high dose of methadone
- There are complicating
factors such as heavy poly drug use or medical problems.
Setting
the scene
It is important
to give the client an understanding of the purpose of the assessment process
right from the outset. Most initial community assessments are one hour
long.
It is important that
the client knows at the start:
- How long the interview
is likely to last
- How it will be
structured
- The purpose of
any notes you take
- Your policies on
confidentiality
- What the treatment
options might be.
This will help the
client disclose the information you need to make the assessment and will
prevent them from having unrealistic expectations of what you are able
to do at the end of the assessment.
Why
are you doing the assessment?
Explain
that the key functions of the assessment are to get:
- A clear picture
of the problems besetting the user
and to ensure that
your response:
- Is appropriate/helpful
- Will not make them
dependent on a larger dose of methadone than necessary.
Will
I get a methadone prescription?
This is
usually the client's overriding concern and it may manifest itself as
anxiety, anger or behaviours such as threatening to commit suicide or
break the law to obtain supplies, etc. Sometimes clients will say that
if they do not get a prescription it will be the worker's/doctor's responsibility
if they go out and overdose or break into a pharmacy etc. to obtain supplies.
However the drug use and associated behaviour is the responsibility of
the client - not you. Clarity about the framework within which you are
both working will minimise these behaviours because it will be clear that
they will not increase the likelihood of the outcome the client wants.
It is useful to tell the client that it is your intention to help them
as best you can, and that if methadone is to be prescribed you would want
it to be enough so that it will be of some help to them. If you are not
the prescriber it is important to explain what your relationship with
the prescriber is and what role your assessment plays in the prescribing
decision.
A client who knows
that you are willing to prescribe or arrange a methadone prescription,
if you think it is the right thing to do, is much more likely to relax
and co-operate. It is therefore important to advise the client of the
timescale of response to a request for prescribing.
Never allow yourself
to be pressurised into a course of action you are unhappy about and make
it clear that you retain the right to make a clinical judgement to refuse
to commence or to withdraw treatment if there is evidence that it is not
therapeutic.
Honesty
Try to reassure
the client that you are not going to halve all their reports of their
recent drug use so there is no need for them to double everything. This
may come as a big surprise and, of course, they may not entirely believe
you so exaggeration may still be a feature of the history you are given.
It is still important
to try and establish an honest, trusting relationship with the client
while looking at a range of indicators and asking questions about recent
drug use in a number of ways.
Confidentiality
Clients
need to know that you do not have a hot-line to the local police station,
their parents, etc. If people are going to give informed consent to the
passing on of personal information they need to know exactly what confidentiality
means to you and your agency.
It is a good idea
to do this at both the beginning and the end of the interview - at the
beginning in broad terms and at the end you can discuss in detail what
information needs to be passed on, to whom and how that is going to be
done.
There is further discussion
about confidentiality in Section 10: Practical
issues in methadone prescribing.
Using
a standard assessment format
Each agency
should have its own written assessment format. This allows you to make
sure that:
- You do not miss
anything
- All clients get
the same assessment, regardless of who carries it out
- You have a written
record of what you did and why you did it.
The checklist below
can be used as a basis for an assessment.
The Home Office and/or
local database notification forms can be used to give a swift documented
record of an individual's current drug use - but they are no substitute
for a prepared assessment process and format.
A number of assessment
and diagnosis tools have been developed over the years. These include:
- Leeds Dependence
Questionnaire81
- The Substance Abuse
Assessment Questionnaire82
- The Severity of
Opiate Dependence Questionnaire (SODQ)83
- The Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association, 4th
edition.84
These tools, when
skilfully applied, provide very accurate, standardised formats for assessing
the level of dependence. They are not all very worker or client 'friendly'.
Unless workers are familiar with the format the gains made in having standard
information are lost in a more impersonal interaction. However some, such
as the Leeds Dependence Questionnaire, are quick, easy and reliable tools.
Methadone
assessment checklist
General information
- Assessor
- Assessment date
- Urine speciment
taken for drug screen (yes/no)
- Name
- Date of birth
- Age
- Address
- Telephone number
(and correspondence address/telephone number if different)
- General practitioner
- Who referred the
client to your agency
- Other agencies
involved with the client, e.g. social services, probation, etc
- Current legal situation
- outstanding prosecution, etc
Drug-using history
- Curent drug(s)
used
- Amount(s) currently
used
- Primary drug
- Other drugs
- Alcohol use - units
per day and week
- Pattern of use
- History of injecting
- Age of first use
- Drug used
- History and pattern
- Periods of abstinence/causes
of relapse
Personal history
- Life history
- Employment history
- Mental health history
- Physical health
history
Current situation
- Events leading
to referral
- Motivation to attend
- Current family
situation
- Client's summary
of problems
- Client's hypothesis
of reasons for drug/alcohol use and service/help requested
- Overall impression
- Conclusion
Going
through the assessment checklist
An assessment
of someone requesting a methadone prescription should cover the following
areas:
- General information
- Drug-using history
- Life history
- Current physical,
social and psychological situations
- Reasons for seeking
help
- Conclusions.
This section goes
through the assessment checklist above outlining the information you need
and how it can be gathered under the headings, which are not just straightforward
questions.
There may appear to
be a lot of questions. This is partly because drug users are not always
forthcoming about all aspects of their life. This is not surprising -
many have had unfortunate experiences at the hands of health and other
helping professionals. So if you do not ask you may not find out - until
it is too late!
General
information
Clients will
often present with high levels of anxiety. The taking of basic information
can help relax and engage them in the assessment process.
Other
agencies involved
Knowledge
of which other agencies are involved can both help you understand the
complexity of the client's problems and plan with the client what liaison,
if any, you are going to have with those agencies.
Current
legal situation
Fear of
a custodial sentence is often a motivator for seeking help, which needs
to be identified early on in the care plan as it can dictate the time
frame within which you are working. It is therefore important to get details
of any:
- Charges faced
- Pending court cases
- Probation orders.
Drug-using
history
Current
drug(s) used
Opiate users
often use a combination of other drugs alongside their heroin use. They
may not consider their benzodiazepine use significant or relevant enough
to disclose unless asked directly about it. It is also important to ask
if they are receiving any other prescribed medication.
Primary
drug used
This is
important, particularly in the case of opiate use/assessment for methadone
prescribing. Obviously if you are thinking of methadone prescribing you
need to be sure that it is the right thing to do. There is little point
in giving methadone to someone who is:
- Not dependent on
opiates
- Using mainly non-opiate
drugs such as amphetamine, cocaine or alcohol.
Establishing
current levels of opiate use
Current
opiate use is a key area to assess correctly because if a decision is
taken to prescribe methadone the dose will, to a large extent, be determined
by the amount of opiates the client is thought to be taking. This is discussed
further in Section 9: Getting the starting dose right.
In a system that relies
largely on judgements based upon what people say, there are several factors
that can complicate the assessment. Clients often:
- Presume that decisions
on the amount of methadone they receive will be based on their current
opiate consumption
- Think their account
will be believed to be exaggerated and therefore exaggerate accordingly
to compensate
- Represent current
levels of use according to the amount they use on 'good' days.
For this reason the
current levels of opiate use need to be returned to several times, and
in several ways, during the course of the assessment. A model for doing
this in 4 'phases' during the assessment is outlined below.
During the course
of the assessment - as the client becomes more relaxed - go through the
following points in groups such as the ones suggested below. In these
lists the word heroin can be substituted with the person's opiate(s) of
choice.
Phase 1
- How much heroin
do you take a day?
- How much did you
take yesterday?
- How much, on average,
do you take in a week?
- How much have you
had so far today?
Phase 2
- How many days a
week do you take heroin?
- How do you feel
after you've taken heroin?
- How long after
you've taken some does it take before you feel rough again?
- What withdrawal
symptoms are you experiencing now?
- What do the withdrawals
feel like?
Phase 3
- How much do you
buy at a time?
- How much do you
pay per gram?
- How much is your
habit costing you a day?
- How much did you
take on the day you had most last week?
- How many days in
the last week did you have any opiates?
Phase 4
- How much do you
spend a week on heroin?
- How much heroin
can you get by with on your worst days?
- How often do you
score in a day?
- When was the last
time you had an opiate free day?
- Have there been
times when you have stopped all opiate use for more than 3 days?
It will be difficult
for someone who is not an opiate user to answer all the above questions
consistently and accurately. If your client is an opiate user the pattern
of their answers will usually give you a good idea of the level of their
opiate use because it is difficult without preparation to consistently
lie across such a broad range of questions.
Alcohol
use
A minority
of people presenting for methadone treatment have significant alcohol
problems. For some the main attraction of methadone is its ability to
potentiate the action of alcohol.
Where this may be
the case treatment aims need to be clearly specified.
The interplay between
opiate and alcohol use needs to be clearly understood by both the worker
and client - and disproportionate attention to opiates (and inappropriate
methadone prescribing) need to be avoided.
For many opiate users
the process of understanding their alcohol use in terms of units consumed
and potential harm is a useful exercise.
Pattern
of drug use
As well
as how much the person is taking you also need a broader picture of their
current pattern of drug use.
Is the drug use:
- Experimental: being
tried out
- Recreational: used
intermittently and with some control
- Compulsive: dependent
daily use with physical and psychological dependence and little perceived
control over the use?
Most people who present
are in the latter category and methadone treatment is unlikely to be of
value for people in the former groups.
Is the heroin:
Do they take heroin:
- With friends
- At the dealers
- Alone
- Don't care as long
as they've got some?
How much at a time?
- Quantities of the
drug used at each use
- How long is each
drug-using episode
- How long does a
purchase last
- Can they save some
for the morning?
History
of injecting
Injecting
is the riskiest way of introducing a drug into the body. It by-passes
the body's natural defences by putting the substance straight into the
bloodstream. People who inject are taking more risks than people who do
not, the risks being infection, overdose and transmission of disease to
or from themselves.
The risks are not
only concerned with sharing syringes, and a supplement to any assessment
for methadone prescribing should be a detailed assessment of injecting
practices and an opportunity for the user to discuss this issue in detail.
An inspection of all
injection sites should be carried out both to verify that they exist and
to check for infection and other complications of injecting.
Drug-taking
history
It is important
to get a perspective of the current opiate use in terms of the person's
drug-taking history.
Ask about any other
drugs they have taken, starting with their first ever drug use. Chart
each drug with the following details:
- Age of first use
- Pattern of use
from then on
- Reasons why it
was first taken
- Reasons why they
continued to use it
- How its use related
to other drugs used
- When (if) its use
was stopped and why.
If the client has
had times free from each drug ask:
- How long were these
periods?
- What symptoms of
withdrawal did you experience?
- Did you replace
the drug with anything else?
- What started you
using it again?
A history of drug-free
times and the causes of relapse can be a great help in planning care and
strategies for the future.
A pattern of switching
dependence from one drug to another (particularly alcohol and benzodiazepines)
is likely to reduce the chances of methadone prescribing being an effective
intervention in the medium or long term if the client is likely to continue
with this pattern.
Life
history
It is important
that methadone treatment is seen in the context of wider psycho-social
help. The taking of a comprehensive history demonstrates that dealing
with issues arising from the past may be part of the treatment.
Clearly the amount
and quality of information gathered when taking the life history will
be determined by the state of mind of the client and the quality of the
relationship that can be built in the first session. If taking a full
history is not appropriate or possible in the first session then it is
useful to return to it at a later date.
As with any counselling
or psychiatric assessment, open questioning which will allow the client
to tell you about their background is important. Areas covered would normally
include:
- Early childhood
- Parental relationships
- Siblings
- Moves and schooling
- Abuse (childhood
and/or recent)
- Relationships
- Marriage
- Employment/unemployment
and the other areas
described below.
The
criminal 'justice' system
A significant
minority of people who are opiate dependent will have a history of court
appearances. These range from cautions for possession, convictions for
supply through to major prison sentences for drugs offences or related
crimes such as:
- Theft
- Burglary
- Violent offences
(these may have implications for case management).
Taking a history of
offences, prosecutions and sentences may also provide a useful opportunity
to assess the importance of problem drinking as offences committed under
the influence of alcohol suggest that this may be a potential problem
area.
Mental
health
Any history
of depression, psychosis or other mental health problems is of importance
as these indicate areas in which future problems may arise.
Also check for previous
admissions to psychiatric hospitals or out-patient clinics, suicide attempts
and overdoses. See also Section 11: Prescribing
for groups with special needs.
Physical
health
Many opiate
users have low incomes, lead unhealthy lifestyles and have little contact
with health care services. Health difficulties they encounter may be directly
related to the drugs themselves or may be a consequence of their lifestyle.
It is important to
ask about past and present health problems and be aware of possible future
ones during the assessment. Usually a general question about health will
be enough to prompt the client, but in particular be alert for the following:
- HIV/AIDS - everyone
involved in the care of drug users should be familiar with the signs
and symptoms of HIV-related illness
- Impaired liver
function which may be caused by hepatitis B or C or alcohol use
- Untreated chest
infections - common in opiate users as the cough reflex is suppressed
by opiates and most are smokers
- Weight loss
- Psychiatric/neurological
problems e.g. epilepsy, head injury or psychotic episodes
- Digestion: constipation
is common in opiate users
- Localised infections
such as abscesses
- Poor dental health
- Pregnancy.
Do not forget that
drug users may have the complication of underlying illness or injury masked
by the analgesic effects of opiates. Doctors assessing drug users should
always include a physical examination.
Current
situation
Events
leading to referral
There are
several topics to cover under this heading that will help you build up
a picture of what has brought this person to seek help and what services
will best help them address their problems.
Motivation
to attend
Determining
why someone is seeking help now is a key issue as it will underpin your
understanding of what changes they want to make and why, which in turn
informs your decision about what treatment aims to pursue.
Current
family situation
An understanding
of the family and other relationships that affect the user is important
in offering appropriate help. Questions such as the following can all
help in gaining an understanding of the relationships affecting the client:
- How has the drug
use affected the family?
- Have there been
breakdowns of relationships because of the use?
- What do the family
think about the use?
- Are they worried
or frightened?
- Do they need help
and support in their own right?
- Can they offer
support or assistance?
Child
care
Issues around
drug-using parents are also covered in Section
11: Prescribing for groups with special needs - Care of people with
responsibility for young people.
It is important to
ascertain at assessment whether clients have responsibility for the care
of any young people, and if so, their ability to discharge that responsibility.
Current
social situation
In terms
of a social life:
- Do they have friends
who are not in the drug scene or does life revolve around drugs and
other drug users?
- Do they still have
a job or prospects of one?
- Do they have any
interests or rewarding activities other than drugs?
- Are they able to
form and sustain relationships?
Answers to these questions
will give you a good insight into the importance that the clients place
on drugs in their lives and to the support structures they have in place
if they are looking at stopping using drugs.
Finances
The financial
health of the client is often a key indicator. Many people sell drugs
to support their consumption, and many become involved with crime and/or
get into debt.
A moderate to heavy
UK consumer of illicit heroin using say 1 gram per day may need to generate
at least £300 cash per week, or they may obtain drugs by other means,
such as working in the sex industry or by exchanging goods for drugs.
The client may have
worries and concerns about drug and/or other 'normal' household debts
that they need to discuss.
Objective
support for your assessment
It is important
to arrange, as soon as possible, for a urine sample to be sent to the
pathology lab for a drug screen or to use a portable test at the time
of assessment.
An opiate-positive
urine test in the notes of everyone with a methadone prescription is an
essential safeguard for all concerned. Urinalysis is discussed further
in Section 10: Practical issues in methadone
prescribing.
Liaison with other
agencies involved, with the consent of the client, can provide useful
corroboration of the history and can help you plan a co-ordinated approach.
Checking injection
sites for 'track marks' is good evidence of injecting although some people,
through careful injection technique, manage to inject leaving virtually
no trace on the skin. A record of the number and extent of injection sites
along with a description of the associated bruising and inflammation can
be useful in determining the success of treatment.
Observation of the
client in withdrawals and post-methadone dose also provides a relatively
objective measure of opiate dependence. However many opiate users (especially
those who have been using illicit methadone) do not produce text book
observable withdrawal symptoms even 18 hours after their last dose.
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