Pubdate: Sat, 06 Sep 1997 Source: British Medical Journal Contact: BMJ No 7108 Volume 315 Personal view Saturday 6 September 1997 Drug misuse: GPs' pivotal role At a recent postgraduate meeting for psychiatrists I had to propose the motion, "The management of drug addiction should not be within the remit of the psychiatrist." After some reflection, I decided that there were three reasons why this was so. The first is that most people with drug problems are not mad. The second is that psychiatrists have neither the knowledge, the skills, nor the appropriate attitudes to manage drug misusers. And the third reason is that general practitioners are far better at doing it. In the spectrum of substance use, starting with experimentation, passing through recreation, and then on to dependence, problems may appear at any time. "It seems improbable, however, that gross mental illness is ever likely to make more than a marginal contribution to the totality of drug misuse." Says who? Drug Scenes, page 44, published by the Royal College of Psychiatrists, that's who. Drug misusers with insight, the overwhelming majority that is, will accept most opportunities for safer drug use and alter their practices accordingly. Remember those incredible stories about people stealing incinerator bins to reuse the contents? Once the penny dropped that it made good sense, in the name of preventive medicine, to provide clean equipment, drug injectors flocked to the needle exchanges. This showed scant evidence of madness. Psychiatrists who limit themselves to treating patients with a dependence syndrome will fail to deal with several of the damaging consequences of drug misuse. Not that many clamour for the chance of doing even that. Too often drug clinics are tagged on to the other duties of those least able to resist, and viewed as a chore rather than an opportunity. Surely that is a rather wobbly base on which to construct a productive relationship between doctor and patient. Doctors also need to listen to hearts and feel for spleens, and sensibly interpret the findings. Drug related pathology includes the soma as well as the psyche. Can general practitioners do any better? I believe so. Many now play a pivotal role in the management of drug misusers and, while not all are natural born performers, their needs by now are well understood. Given adequate resources, including the support of a specialist service, they can take on this work, and even find professional satisfaction in the process. Almost a quarter of practices in Glasgow now run drug misuse clinics, and the number of patients receiving methadone has risen tenfold over the past five years. As a consequence, 1997 should see a substantial decline in three main indices of drug related harm to health: drug deaths, emergency hospital admissions, and the prevalence of injecting drugs. There is no longer any place for therapeutic nihilism in this business. >From a purely medical perspective, I believe that we have recently been living through a golden age of drug misuse. Soon, however, we may have to confront a new therapeutic paradox. As medical interventions bring about a fall in injecting related mortality and morbidity, it will no longer be so easy to achieve so much for our patients by doing so little. New problems will require new solutions. General practitioners are taking us into that future and rightly so. Perhaps it is more important that doctors looking after drug misusers possess the correct attributes for the task, rather than a particular job title. At present most psychiatrists lack these qualities and have no place in the management of drug addiction. Of course, I lost the debate. Now isn't that encouraging, but only if they really mean it. Robert Scott, clinical director Glasgow