Drug Education for SA Providers Courtney Ycaza, MA, LCAS, LPC, CSI - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Drug Education for SA Providers Courtney Ycaza, MA, LCAS, LPC, CSI - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Drug Education for SA Providers Courtney Ycaza, MA, LCAS, LPC, CSI McLeod Addictive Disease Center 4/17/2015 Objectives Recall basic drug groups & a refresher on each Descriptions of designer drugs & comparison Current trends


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SLIDE 1

Drug Education for SA Providers

Courtney Ycaza, MA, LCAS, LPC, CSI

McLeod Addictive Disease Center 4/17/2015

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SLIDE 2

Objectives

  • Recall basic drug groups & a refresher on each
  • Descriptions of designer drugs & comparison
  • Current trends
  • Screening Clients & how to work with clients

based on this drug education

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SLIDE 3

What do you want to know?

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SLIDE 4

Major Drug Categories

  • Opiates
  • Benzos
  • THC
  • Alcohol
  • Amphetamines
  • Depressants
  • Steroids
  • Inhalants
  • Hallucinogens
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SLIDE 5

“Uppers, Downers, All- Arounders”

  • Uppers: Stimulants
  • Downers: Opiates/ Opioids, Sedative-

Hypnotics, Alcohol & minor downers

  • All- Arounders: Everything Else
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SLIDE 6

Uppers

  • Strong: Cocaine, Amphetamines
  • Moderate: Diet Pills, Some Rx’s
  • Mild Plant: Khat, Betel Nut, Ephedra
  • Legal Stimulants: Caffeine, Nicotine
  • Stimulants initially boost energy; long term they

deplete the body and can lead to depression

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SLIDE 7

Downers

  • Opiates/ Opioids
  • Benzos
  • Alcohol
  • Opiates are Natural, Semi-synthetic or Synthetic
  • Benzos: Sedatives are the ‘calming drugs’;

Hypnotics are the ‘sleeping drugs’

  • Alcohol is the worlds most widely used drug, is

legal in most countries

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SLIDE 8

Basic’s to remember...

  • Medical need vs.

abuse/ dependence

  • “If my doctor

prescribed it then it’s OK”

  • Detox process needs

to be carefully considered

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SLIDE 9

Designer Drugs

  • Usually labeled ‘Not for Human Consumption’
  • Internet has fueled sales of designer drugs
  • No research- Human Testing!
  • Usually variations of things we already have;

designed to get around laws

  • Unknown effects, unknown treatment
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SLIDE 10

Where did Designer Drugs come from?

  • Dr. John W Huffman- Clemson University
  • 1984: Researching Cannabinoid compounds for

MS, HIV, Chemo

  • Developed over 450 synthetic compounds
  • JWH series was the first; reports that it was

found on the internet and used to start making synthetic THC

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SLIDE 11

The New World of Designer Drugs

  • Matt Bowden of New

Zealand

  • Founder of Stargate

International

  • Recovering Meth

Addict

  • Runs one of the worlds

most sophisticated labs for development

  • f new designer drugs
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SLIDE 12

All- Arounders

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=cLD3AKoyV5Q

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SLIDE 13
  • Stargate is a private organisation dedicated to minimising the harms

associated with drug use across the community.

  • Stargate’s role, both in New Zealand and internationally, covers a number
  • f facets:
  • • Advocating for more effective, evidence-based drug policy through the

political process at a national level, and through governments & NGOs to influence global policy;

  • The development and bringing to market of progressively safer, legal

alternatives to alcohol and other drugs to reduce harm by providing substitution options;

  • Funding the Neuronutrients project to subsidise targeted nutritional

technology to support the body's natural systems of addiction interruption, abstinence maintenance and cognitive restoration for existing and recovering alcohol and other drug users;

  • The development of ‘on the ground’ harm minimisation strategies in the

retail and consumption environments to provide physical help for people experiencing drug related difficulties;

  • Establishment of self-funded clinics to bundle advanced treatment

services tailored to individual consumers with an unprecedented level of duty of care;

  • Representing the interests and issues of those communities most effected

by drug use to government and the public.

  • Taken from Stargateinternational.org
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SLIDE 14

Krokodil (Desomorphine)

  • Derivative of morphine that is 8 to 10x ore

powerful

  • Get the name because users develop patches of

dark, scaly skin

  • Been around for a while; last medical use in 1981
  • 2003: Homemade version in Siberia
  • 2010: Increased illegal production in Russia
  • Multiple reports of use in the US; Nothing

confirmed by DEA of any toxicology

  • Life expectancy of users is 1 to 2 years
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SLIDE 15

DMT: The Spirit Molecule

  • Found in some plants; used with another plant in

the Amazon for natives in rituals

  • Users report a relatively low urge to use more

(cravings)

  • Extreme Hallucinatory experiences- “Machine

Elves”

  • Users rank it to be stronger than Ketamine, LSD and

Shrooms

  • Number of people in the US using DMT has gone up

every year since 2006:

▫ 688,000- 2006 ▫ 1.475 M- 2012

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SLIDE 16

Flakka

  • http://miami.cbslocal.com/2015/03/24/exclusi

ve-man-on-flakka-impaled-while-trying-to- climb-fence/

  • Causes hallucinations, superhuman thinking,

temporary insanity, violent outburst

  • Increased body temps can lead to cardiac arrest,

arrhythmias, kidney failure

  • Multiple reports of use leading to injuries and

arrest

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SLIDE 17

25I- NBOMe

  • Synthetic LSD
  • Manufactured in China as a safe, legal alternative to

LSD

  • Sold as powder, liquid, blotter paper, edibles
  • Discovered in 2003, hit the illegal drug market in

2010 when it was sold by vendors as research chemical

  • 6 to 10 hour high based on dose
  • Lethal dose has not yet been determined
  • As of 9/2013, 6 OD deaths in the US (+1 in NC since

then)

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SLIDE 18

Designer Drug Intoxication & Addiction

  • Varies; look for normal signs of intoxication
  • Clients acting erratic, violent or aggressive
  • Confused or disoriented behaviors
  • Changes in behavior
  • Changes in weight
  • May agree to drug screens thinking they are

‘getting around’ the system

  • Other signs of addictive behavior
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Designer Drugs: Treatment

  • Medical treatment may be needed in the event of

intoxication (Hydration, monitoring, benzo if needed)

  • No medication interventions in treatment
  • Will need to look at drug testing issues
  • Can look at options for treatment related to the

type of drug it is mimicking

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Designer Drugs: Client Issues

  • Clients may be hesitant to disclose their use of

Designer Drugs

  • Will need to discuss testing procedures with

your lab

  • Due to the notion that some of these are not

addictive, clients may not see them as an issue

  • Adolescent clients will report high use of these

designer drugs

  • Clients may look at this as a legal high
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SLIDE 21

The Bottom Line

  • Designers are out there and new ones are

coming daily

  • As professionals, we have to try and be aware of

what’s going on with our clients

  • When one compound is made illegal, another

will replace it

  • Designers have little to no actual research so,

there is not much known about there long term effects

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SLIDE 22

Current Drug Trends

  • $700 Billion in annual

cost to the US from Alcohol, Tobacco & other drugs

  • 1 in 3 fatally injured

drivers tested positive for drugs (2009)

  • MTF Survey: Rates of

teens using e-cigs is rising

  • Ages 18- 25: More first

time Rx pill use than THC use

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SLIDE 23

North Carolina Statistics

  • NC statistics are similar to national stats
  • Meth lab seizures in NC are also similar to

national statistics

  • NC Controlled Substances Reporting System
  • Drug Take- Back Programs
  • Atlanta HIDTA
  • North Carolina counties: Alamance, Buncombe,

Durham, Gaston, Guilford, Henderson, Johnston, McDowell, Mecklenburg, Randolph, Union, Wake, Wayne, and Wilson

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SLIDE 24

The Big Business of Drugs

  • Marketing

Heroin

  • Marketing

THC

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SLIDE 25

As treatment providers, what do we do?

  • Ask Questions
  • Stay Current
  • Work with other

professionals

  • Provide Education
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SLIDE 26

Recovery

  • “The mentality and behavior of drug addicts and

alcoholics is wholly irrational until you understand that they are completely powerless

  • ver their addiction and unless they have

structured help, they have no hope.” ― Russell Brand

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SLIDE 27

Questions?

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SLIDE 28

References

  • Uppers, Downers, All- Arounders: Physical and

Mental Effects of Psychoactive Drugs. 6th

  • Edition. Darryl S Inaba & William E Cohen.

2007

  • DSM- 5. Fifth Edition. American Psychiatric

Association.

  • The ACA Encyclopedia of Counseling. ACA.

2009

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SLIDE 29

Contact Info

  • Courtney Ycaza
  • Courtney.ycaza@mcleodcenter.com