Pubdate: Thu, 11 May 2000 Source: Arizona Daily Star (AZ) Copyright: 2000 Pulitzer Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.azstarnet.com/ Author: Randolph E. Schmid, The Associated Press DOCTORS URGED TO WATCH FOR ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE WASHINGTON -- A leading substance-abuse center yesterday urged the nation's doctors to focus more closely on alcohol and drug use by their patients after finding that more than nine out of 10 physicians didn't diagnose alcohol abuse when presented with its early symptoms. A survey by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, known as CASA, found that physicians felt unprepared to diagnose substance abuse and lacked confidence in the effectiveness of treatment. When presented with an adult showing early signs of alcoholism, 94 percent of primary-care physicians failed to diagnose substance abuse, the center reported. And 41 percent of pediatricians didn't diagnose illegal drug abuse when presented with a classic description of a drug-abusing teen-age patient. The center said that when the doctors were asked to suggest five possible diagnoses for the symptoms, they failed to include substance abuse. The findings were reported in a study, "Missed Opportunity: The CASA National Survey of Primary- Care Physicians and Patients," released yesterday in Washington. "Primary-care physicians must stop ignoring this elephant in their examining rooms. Medical schools, residency programs and continuing medical education courses have an obligation to provide the training those physicians need to spot and deal with substance abuse," Joseph A. Califano Jr., CASA president, said in a statement. Barry R. McCaffrey, director of the White House office of national drug control policy, said he supports the center's call for additional training of physicians in substance abuse and addiction. "Families have always relied on their doctors for health care advice. Drug abuse rips families apart. Giving the right advice on drug prevention and treatment can keep a family together," he said. The survey found that only about 20 percent of doctors felt very prepared to diagnose alcoholism and 17 percent felt prepared to diagnose illegal drug use. In contrast, nearly 83 percent felt very prepared to identify high blood pressure, 82 percent to diagnose diabetes and 44 percent to identify depression. In addition, 86 percent felt treatment for high blood pressure is very effective. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake