Assessment and Treatment of Alcohol Dependence: A Brief Guide To The
Assessment and Treatment of Alcohol Dependence: A Brief Guide To The
Assessment and Treatment of Alcohol Dependence: A Brief Guide To The
Assessment and
Treatment of Alcohol
Dependence
Suggested citation: Quigley, A., Connolly, C., Palmer, B., & Helfgott, S. (2015) A brief guide to the assessment
and treatment of alcohol dependence (2nd ed.). Perth, Western Australia: Drug and Alcohol Office.
ISBN: 978-1-876684-63-1
© Western Australian Drug and Alcohol Authority 2015
Note – The Drug and Alcohol Office is the business name of the Western Australian Alcohol and Drug
Authority, which is an independent statutory authority established in November 1974. Its functions are set
out in the Alcohol and Drug Authority Act 1974.
This booklet is produced by Next Step Drug and Alcohol Services and Workforce Development Branch,
Drug and Alcohol Office. It may be reproduced in whole or in part for study or training purposes subject
to an inclusion of an acknowledgement of the source and no commercial usage or sale. Reproduction for
purposes other than those above requires the written permission of:
Drug and Alcohol Office, PO Box 126, Mount Lawley WA 6929
Website: www.dao.health.wa.gov.au
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Step
DRUG AND ALCOHOL
SERVICES
1.4 1 34 1 7.5 39 22
375ml 375ml 24 x 375ml 100ml 750ml 4 Litres 700ml
Full Strength Mid Strength Full Strength Standard Serve Bottle of Cask White Wine Bottle of Spirits
4.8% Alc Vol 3.5% Alc Vol 4.8% Alc Vol of White Wine White Wine 12.5% Alc Vol 40% Alc Vol
11.5% Alc Vol 12.5% Alc Vol
8. Insight
• poor insight (intoxication, brain damage)
Seizures
Severe
withdrawal
Severity of signs and symptoms
marked tremor
vomiting
Mild extreme agitation
withdrawal disorientation
confusion
anxiety paranoia
agitation hyperventilation
tremor delirium tremens
nausea
tachycardia
hypertension
disturbed sleep
raised temperature
HA LLU CI N AT I O NS
1 2 3 4
DAY DAY DAY DAY
In the majority of patients benzodiazepines should be ceased prior to planned discharge as there exists the
potential to develop a dependence on benzodiazepines.
For patients undergoing alcohol withdrawal, the The safety of naltrexone for pregnant or
following thiamine regime is recommended: breastfeeding women has not been established.
• For healthy patients who have adequate dietary The recommended daily dose of naltrexone is
intake, 300mg/day of oral thiamine should be 50mg (1 tablet).
administered for 5 days.
• Patients in poor health with poor dietary intake Acamprosate
will have poor absorption of oral thiamine and Acamprosate is a synthetic GABA analogue that
should therefore be administered 250mg/day reduces glutamatergic hyperactivity and is thought
of thiamine parenterally for 3-5 days, then oral to reduce alcohol withdrawal associated negative
doses of 300mg/day for the duration of their affect and reduce craving and alcohol related
admission. cue induced relapse during abstinence (Jupp &
Lawrence, 2010).
Neuropsychology
All alcohol dependent patients should be
considered for a neuropsychology referral and
assessment. Between 50% – 80% of people
with problematic alcohol use display deficits on
neuropsychological tests (Bates, Bowden & Barry,
2002) and 45% to 70% of clients entering treatment
for problematic alcohol use have impairments
in problem solving, abstract thinking, concept
shifting, psychomotor performance, and memory
tasks (Oscar-Berman, & Marinkovic, 2007). These
impairments are difficult to detect in structured
interviews (Fals-Stewart & Schafer, 1992; Fals-
Stewart & Lucente, 1994) and are usually not
apparent without neuropsychological testing.
Clinicians should consider administering the
Mini-Mental State Examination (Folstein, Folstein,
& McHugh, 1975; Appendix 1) or the Montreal
Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) to patients where
neuropsychological deficits are suspected.
DATE___________________ CLINICIAN_____________________________________
ORIENTATION
Score one point for correct answers to each of the following questions.
What is the Time? Day? Date? Month? Year? 5 points ( )
What is the name of This Clinic? This suburb? This city? This state? This
country? 5 points ( )
REGISTRATION
Say: “I’m going to name 3 objects for you and I want you to remember them.
The objects are Car, Dog and Book. Can you repeat them?”
Score 1 point for each object correctly repeated (order not important). Endeavour, by
further attempts and prompting, to have all three repeated, so as to test recall later. 3 points ( )
ATTENTION AND CALCULATION
Ask the client to subtract 7 from 100, and then 7 from the result — repeat this five
times, scoring 1 for each time a correct subtraction is performed. 5 points ( )
RECALL
Ask the client to recall the three objects previously repeated (Car, Dog, Book).
Score 1 for each correctly recalled. 3 points ( )
LANGUAGE
Show the client a pencil and ask them to name it. Show the client a watch and ask
them to name it. Score 1 point for each object correctly named. 2 points ( )
Ask the client to repeat the phrase: “No ifs, ands or buts”. Score 1 point if correctly
repeated. 1 point ( )
Hand the client the MMSE sheet and say: “Take this piece of paper in your right
hand, fold it in half with both hands, and place it on the floor”. Score 1 point for
each stage correctly executed. 3 points ( )
Point to CLOSE YOUR EYES (over page) and ask the client to obey what is written.
Score 1 point if client closes their eyes. 1 point ( )
Ask the client to write a sentence. Score 1 if the sentence is sensible and has a verb
and a subject. 1 point ( )
VISUAL-SPATIAL
Ask the client to copy the diagram over the page. Score 1 point if this is correctly
copied (Two 5-sided figures with the intersection creating a 4-sided figure). 1 point ( )
SENTENCE
___________________________________________________________________________
WITHDRAWAL DAY
TIME
BAL
BP 240
230
TEMP 220
TEMP 40º 210
39º 200
38º 190
37º 180
36º 170
35º 160
150
BP PULSE 140
130 130
120 120
110 110
100 100
PULSE 90 90
80 80
70 70
60 60
50 50
40 40
1. NAUSEA AND VOMITING – Ask “ Do you feel sick to your stomach? 6. TACTILE DISTURBANCES – Ask “Have you any itching, pins and
Have you vomited? Observation. needles sensations, any burning, any numbness, or do you feel bugs
crawling on or under your skin?” Observation.
0 no nausea and no vomiting
1 mild nausea with no vomiting 0 none
2 1 very mild itching, pins and needles, burning or numbness
3 2 mild itching, pins and needles, burning or numbness
4 intermittent nausea with dry heaves 3 moderate itching, pins and needles, burning or numbness
5 4 moderately severe hallucinations
6 5 severe hallucinations
7 constant nausea, frequent dry heaves and vomiting 6 extremely severe hallucinations
7 continuous hallucinations
2. TREMOR – Arms extended and fingers spread apart. Observation. 7. AUDITORY DISTURBANCES – Ask “Are you more aware of sounds
around you? Are they harsh? Do they frighten you? Are you hearing
0 no tremor anything that is disturbing to you? Are you hearing things you know are
not there?” Observation.
1 not visible, but can be felt fingertip to fingertip
2
0 not present
3
1 very mild harshness or ability to frighten
4 moderate, with patient’s arms extended
2 mild harshness or ability to frighten
5
3. moderate harshness or ability to frighten
6
4 moderately severe hallucinations
7 severe, even with arms not extended
5 severe hallucinations
6 extremely severe hallucination
7 continuous hallucinations
3. PAROXYSMAL SWEATS – Observation 8. VISUAL DISTURBANCES – Ask “Does the light appear to be too
bright? Is its colour different? Does it hurt your eyes? Are you seeing
0 no sweat visible anything that is disturbing to you? Are you seeing things you know are
not there?” Observation.
1 barely perceptible sweating, palms moist
2
0 not present
3
1 very mild sensitivity
4 beads of sweat obvious on forehead
2 mild sensitivity
5
3 moderate sensitivity
6
4 moderately severe hallucinations
7 drenching sweats
5 severe hallucinations
6 extremely severe hallucinations
7 continuous hallucinations
4. ANXIETY – Ask “Do you feel nervous?“ Observation. 9. HEADACHE, FULLNESS IN HEAD – Ask “Does your head feel
different? Does it feel like there is a band around your head?“
0 no anxiety, at ease Do not rate for dizziness or lightheadedness. Otherwise, rate severity.
1 mildly anxious
2 0 not present
3 1 very mild
4 moderately anxious, or guarded, so anxiety is inferred 2 mild
5 3 moderate
6 4 moderately severe
7 equivalent to acute panic states as seen in severe delirium or acute 5 severe
schizophrenic reactions 6 very severe
7 extremely severe
The CIWA-Ar scale measures 10 symptoms. Scores of less than 9 indicate minimal to mild withdrawal.
Scores of 9 to 15 indicate moderate withdrawal (marked autonomic arousal);
and scores of 15 or more indicate severe withdrawal (impending delirium tremens).
The CIWA-Ar alcohol withdrawal assessment tool should be discontinued after 5 to 7 days