Pubdate: Sun, 03 Aug 2014 Source: Burlington Free Press (VT) Copyright: 2014 Burlington Free Press Contact: http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/632 Author: Tim Johnson UVM TAKES PROACTIVE STEP IN DRUG FIGHT This fall, a routine visit to the University of Vermont's student health center - say, for a sprained ankle - will expose the patient to an entirely new routine. The ankle will be examined, of course, but the student will also be offered an opportunity to disclose how much he or she has been drinking, or smoking weed, or using other drugs, including heroin. Any such disclosure will be voluntary - and confidential, with no legal or disciplinary ramifications. It might have nothing to do with the ankle sprain. But it might lead to further conversations or interventions that will affect the student's well-being long after the ankle has healed. Screening every patient for alcohol and substance abuse is an unusual step for a university health system, but it's something that Jon Porter, director of the Center for Health & Wellbeing, is firmly behind. Focusing only on the ankle, he said, "is not being very pertinent to issues that really threaten success here on campus, and health on campus, which is alcohol and substances." The brief, self-reported survey that will begin the patient's visit represents "a major shift in paradigm" for the clinician, Porter said. "This is putting a preventive effort right up front in every visit," he said. His hope is that this effort will engage a small subset of student substance abusers - opiate addicts - who typically don't respond to traditional forms of educational outreach. The prevalence of opioid use at UVM mirrors the national rate on college campuses according to surveys - about 1 percent, Porter said. At UVM, that amounts to roughly 100 students. Most use pharmaceuticals such as Oxycontine, Porter said, but some have shifted to heroin, a cheaper alternative. Many began developing the dependency before coming to UVM, he said, often in middle school. While alcohol and marijuana remain the predominant substances colleges struggle with, opiates have made inroads, too - apparently part of the "rising tide of drug addiction" in Vermont that Gov. Peter Shumlin spoke of in his State of the State address in January. "What started as an Oxycontin and prescription drug addiction problem in Vermont has now grown into a full-blown heroin crisis," Shumlin said. "We have seen an over 250 percent increase in people receiving heroin treatment here in Vermont since 2000, with the greatest percentage increase, nearly 40 percent, in just the past year." Heroin and synthetic pharmaceuticals in the opioid family, such as oxycodone (of which OxyContin is a brand), are chemically related and produce the same physiological effects and the same forms of addiction. Overall use has shifted away from pharmaceuticals to heroin in recent years for several reasons. The state's medical establishment has tightened oversight of prescription drugs, and pharmaceutical companies have reformulated medications to make the active ingredients more difficult to extract. Moreover, the price of heroin has dropped significantly, so it is cheaper than the pills. There's no quality control, however, so heroin users wind up exposing themselves to varying degrees of purity, raising the risk of overdose. "Last year, we had nearly double the number of deaths in Vermont from heroin overdose as the prior year," Shumlin said. Burlington police responded to 37 overdose calls last year, up from 28 the year before. Criminal citations for heroin possession totaled 32 last year, up from 22 the year before; and 12 citations for heroin sale, compared to 11 the previous year. The department's statistics don't specify the types of overdoses or whether any of the citations were to students. Campus numbers By all accounts, alcohol and marijuana use still far exceeds heroin on Vermont college campuses, but statistics are hard to come by. Federally mandated public safety reports under the Clery Act, available on campus websites and through the U.S. Department of Education, report annual "drug violations," defined as arrests and referrals to college disciplinary systems, without a breakdown of the types of drugs. Marijuana is believed to be the most common, by far. The University of Vermont, like other institutions, posts Clery statistics for three recent calendar years, ending in 2012. In 2012, drug arrests totaled 45, and drug violations referred for disciplinary action, 513. By comparison, liquor law arrests in that year totaled 4, and liquor law violations referred for discipline, 1,188. Other Vermont colleges reported similarly small numbers of arrests compared to referrals. Drug violation data for other schools for 2012: Middlebury College, 7 arrests, 50 referrals; Champlain College, 1 arrest, 198 referrals; Johnson State College, 2 arrests, 71 referrals; Saint Michael's College, 9 arrests, 61 referrals. The only specific references to heroin are found in referrals to Vermont District Court: over the last four fiscal years, two people have been cited into court for heroin trafficking and four for heroin possession. "We have not been impacted by heroin overdoes," said Tim Bilodeau, deputy chief at UVM. The primary health-and-safety concerns for UVM students, he said, "alcohol and some other drugs." Dawn Ellinwood, who has served as vice president for student affairs at Saint Michael's College for two years, said there have been "one or two" heroin "incidents" in her time there. Tim Donovan, chancellor of Vermont State Colleges, said no heroin use has been reported recently at any of the five schools. Same at Middlebury College, according to spokeswoman Sarah Ray. Castleton State College has had two documented cases of heroin use and no other opioid use in the last three years, according to spokesman Jeff Weld. "We do not see heroin as an issue on our campus," he wrote in an email, adding: "Our reported drug violations are almost exclusively for possession and/or use of marijuana." Luke Lewis, a counselor and alcohol/drug educator at Champlain College since 2010, said he might see a handful of students each semester about opioid use, but seldom heroin. The low prevalence of heroin seems to be born out by campus surveys, which indicate less than 1 percent of the student population had used opiates in the last 30 days. These surveys ask about "opiates," which technically means poppy derivatives (including heroin, morphine, codeine) but which might easily be taken to be synonymous with the the more generic "opioid," which includes those drugs and synthetic prescription pain killers such as oxycodone. A national Core Institute survey in 2012, of 168,499 college students, put the "lifetime prevalence" of opiate use at 2.7 percent, and the 30-day prevalence at 0.8 percent. John Brooklyn, medical director of the Chittenden Clinic, which comprises two methadone centers, said only a handful of college students have sought treatment over the last few years. He suggested that a student might have more difficulty sustaining an academic career with a heroin addiction than with some other addictions, such as to alcohol or cocaine. Once a heroin addiction is well-established, Brooklyn said, the user isn't so much chasing a high as trying to avoid the sickness of withdrawal. The resulting obsession and the need for regular fixes, plus the sick interludes, could easily obstruct one's studies. The new screen Alcohol and marijuana, while the primary substances of concern to campus regulators, are nevertheless socially condoned, unlike heroin. That's the observation of Amy Boyd Austin, director of UVM's Collegiate Recovery Community, a fellowship of mutual support for students of any addiction. Last semester, the group had 18 active members. "The group of students using opiates is isolated in a lot of ways," Porter, the UVM health center director, said, perhaps in part because "using other substances or alcohol is much more favorably looked on in some ways." Porter said traditional outreach, such as social messaging and posters, may be less effective on opiate users. One reason, he said, is that maintaining this addiction can be a full-time job, on top of schoolwork. That's why the new screening might reach some students who might otherwise elude intervention. "I think most people who are using opiates, when they go into a doctor's office, aren't asked if they're using," Porter said, adding: "People want to get information that will help them be successful. Raising the issue makes it acceptable to talk about." The survey that UVM patients will be asked to complete takes about a minute-and-a-half to complete. It's called SBIRT (Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment), a public-health instrument that the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration has been promoting. The questionnaire asks, among other things, whether the patient wears a bike helmet, texts while driving, smokes tobacco. It asks about the frequency of use of alcohol, marijuana, prescription medication and "other illegal drugs." Another question gauges levels of depression. Patients have has the option of refusing to answer or answering untruthfully. A respondent who replies positively to one of the substance questions will meet with a clinician who has been trained in "motivational interviewing." "Motivational interviewing involves being nonjudgmental with the patient," Porter said, "getting information about what's good about the behavior, what's not so good, helping the patient see, this isn't working for me in some ways, and then coming to some pretty clear goals that you use and follow up on with them." Higher levels of intervention could accompany self-reports of riskier behavior. Data from the surveys will be entered in a registry, so that students may be tracked over time to assess the effectiveness of the interventions. Porter contrasted this approach with the past practice of simply treating the symptom presented. "A common scenario on Saturday morning in the clinic: a student comes in with a boxer's fracture - it's a male, right? Fourth metacarpal, broken. Well, how did that happen? In a traditional setting or in many emergency rooms, the fracture gets taken care of. The issue that he was drunk and got angry at his partner doesn't come up." The new system might offer the opportunity to confer with that student at an earlier visit, perhaps addressing the drinking by saying "You know, you're drinking at level that's higher than your peers. Here's some ways that you you may want to think about that.'" "It's that early intervention," Porter said, "and I think that's the best way to reach anybody, whether it's alcohol, marijuana, opiates." "We know from big studies that this approach works," he said. "I think colleges are doing it in some places, but it's by no means the standard approach. The reason I really love it is, it makes the work meaningful. It's actually trying to go after things that harm people." [Sidebar] Get the reports: To get the federally mandated campus safety and security report for a college or a group of institutions, go to: http://1.usa.gov/ULGwjP - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom