From club to clinic: Complex cases and clinical tools Jones Owen - From club to clinic... · •...
Transcript of From club to clinic: Complex cases and clinical tools Jones Owen - From club to clinic... · •...
From club to clinic: Complex cases and clinical tools
• An update on NPS • Clinical cases – Manchester, London, Brighton • NEPTUNE guidance • How to build a local response
An update on club drugs and novel psychoactive substances
Dr Owen Bowden-Jones Addiction Psychiatrist, Imperial College London, UK
Club Drugs
• Club drugs tend to be used by teenagers and young adults at bars, nightclubs, concerts, and parties
(NIDA) • E.g. Cocaine, MDMA,
Ketamine, GHB/GBL, methamphetamine
Novel Psychoactive Substances
• Psychoactive drugs which are not prohibited by the United Nations Drug Conventions but which may pose a public health threat comparable to that posed by substances listed in these conventions
(UK Home Office) • E.g. Cathinones, synthetic
cannabinoids, piperazines
EMCDDA 2015
Number of internet sites selling NPS
New generation, new access
How big is the problem?
UK population estimates Crime Survey England and Wales (2013/14)
Treatment demand is increasing
UK stimulant deaths (excluding cocaine)
Who are using these new substances ?
Depends where you are, and who you are !
• Clubbers and students - Major cities, University towns
• MSM- London, Manchester • Heroin users moving to mephedrone injecting
- Yorkshire, Lancashire, Nottingham, South Wales
• Ketamine-Squats and alternative communities • Ketamine and mephedrone ‘Kit-kat’ • ‘Bubble’ – generic white powder
Are we looking in the right place?
Perfect drugs for prisons? Cheap, potent, undetectable
Are services ready to identify and treat harms associated with NPS and
club drugs?
• New drugs – Little/no research into treatment – Harms still poorly understood – Other ‘club drugs’ are different to traditional
drugs e.g. Ketamine bladder – Rapidly changing profile
• New populations – Different context of use e.g. methamphetamine
and high risk sexual behaviours – Not ‘typical’ drug user. How to engage?
HEROIN CRACK
COCAINE
CANNABIS
ALCOHOL BENZOS
piperazines tryptamines
phenethylamines
synthetic cannabinoids
synthetic cathinones
new synthetic opioids
‘others’
Challenge for specialist drug services
• Clinical staff have poor knowledge of changing patterns of drug use
– ‘technical’ knowledge (what are the drugs, how
do they work) – ‘cultural’ knowledge (who is using, how are they
using) – ‘clinical’ knowledge (how to clinical manage
acute/chronic presentation) – ‘service’ knowledge (when and where to refer)
Six steps to meet the challenge • Step 1: Widen the front door
• Step 2: Support the frontline
• Step 3: Connect the frontline
• Step 4: Watch horizons for harm
• Step 5: Promote research into
club drugs and NPS
• Step 6: Empower users through education
www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pdf/FR%20AP%2002_Sept2014.pdf
Detection Assessment Brief Intervention
Complex Intervention (Acute)
Complex Intervention (Chronic)
Primary Care ✔ ✔ ✔ ✖ ✖
Emergency Room ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✖ Sexual Health ✔ ✔ ✔ ✖ ✖ Mental Health ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✖ Prison Health ✔ ✔ ✔ ✖ ✖ Specialist Drug Services ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔ ✔
Conclusions • NPS presents a huge challenge for treatment
services, both specialist drug services and other health settings.
• Limited knowledge on clinical harms, user profiles, engagement strategies and treatment approaches
• Responses require adaptation of existing evidence-based interventions supported by investment in training and further research
• Project NEPTUNE is a new approach to meet the challenge
www.clubdrugclinic.com
@ClubDrugClinic
Clinical cases