Adolescent Substance Abuse: John Sargent, M.D

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Adolescent Substance Abuse

John Sargent, M.D.


• Learning Objectives:
• 1)Learn features associated with
substance abuse in adolescents.
• 2) Learn a clinical approach to
treating substance abusing
adolescents and their families
Current Massachusetts Data (within last month)

• Alcohol use 40%


• Binge drinking 40%
• Marijuana use 16%
• Cigarette use 35%, regular use 20%

(from Kids Count, Casey Foln)


• Adolescents because of immaturity of
impulse control and judgment are
especially prone to experimentation
with drug & alcohol use
• Novelty seeking, poor parental
supervision and peer involvement
further reinforce use
• Adolescent autonomy and freedom
offer opportunities for use
• Teens with ADHD, Conduct Disorder,
Trauma history and school failure are
especially at risk
• Situations with limited opportunity,
easy access to drugs, routine family
and community use amplify use
Specific risks of drug use:

• Binge Drinking
• Inexperience coupled with impulsivity
• Secondary problem – unwanted
sexual behavior, rape
• Disinhibition
• Driving while intoxicated
• Addiction with associated withdrawal
is rare in adolescence, however other
consequences are common – poor
school performance, family conflict
and legal difficulties
• Drug use is indicative of a health-
compromising lifestyle
• Drug use is a choice, something that one
willfully does for definable reasons
• Parents are important throughout
adolescence
• When teens are using drugs a great deal,
there are consequences that are upsetting
to them
• Some drug use is normal
Assessment

• Substance Use History


• Drugs used
• Frequency of use
• Places used
• Type of use: impulsive, planned,
measured
• Goals of use of each drug
• Progression of use
Consequences of Use

• Costs
• Drug influenced behaviors
• Arrests
• School failure
• Peer relations
• Pregnancy
• Erratic and unreliable behavior
• Lying
• Irritability, argumentativeness,
relationship problems
Mental Health Co morbidities

• Depression
• Anxiety
• Post trauma difficulties
• Sequellae of childhood maltreatment
• ADHD
• Bipolar Disorder
• Adolescent schizophrenia
• Eating disorders, especially bulimia
Family Situation and Relationships

• Socioeconomic concerns
• Parental mental health concerns,
especially mood disorders
• Parental substance use
• Parenting style especially supervision
and monitoring
• Parental response to drug use
• Marital or post divorce conflict
• Parental preoccupation
• Be sure to assess strengths, capacities,
interests and possibilities
Approach to Treatment

• Motivation is malleable
• Relationships critical
• Treatment individualized
• Planning and flexibility operate
together
Domains of adolescent function

• Identify development/support
autonomy linked with responsibility
• Peers
• Bonding to prosocial institutions
• Racial/cultural issues
• Health/sexuality
• Drug use
• Look for impairments in 2 or more
domains
• Look for development detouring
effects
• Multiple approaches
• Multiple targets
• Multiple interventions
Treatment involves…

• Development
• Preventing problem behavior
• Therapy
– Individual
– Family
• Treatment parameters time, space,
frequency, etc
• Motivational interviewing can be very
useful in helping youth appreciate
consequences of drug use and
deciding if drug use furthers their
personal goals
Attend to Risk:

• Economic Deprivation
• Parental Difficulty
• Family Conflict
• Poor parental management
• Poor conflict resolution
• Frustration – relief through disconnect
with child
• Family primary location for child
treatment
• Buffers negative peer environment
• Goal interdependence
• Engagement of parents
– hopeful, enthusiastic and realistic
– question denial
• Offer respectful interest in teen
– especially attentive to strengths and
interests
– quiet concern about problems that
have been drug related
– offer opportunity to join treatment team
• Develop drug free expectation
– rules
– monitoring
– consequences
– reparations
– parental collaboration
• Decide how to deal with crises
– suicide
– intoxication
– arrest
– school responses
– peer difficulties
• Promoting positive family interaction
– conflict resolution
– supportive engagement
– hope for sober outcomes
– addressing family conflicts openly
– constructive not punitive
– reinforcing drug free activities
– enhancing communication
• Encouraging adolescent voice and
goals – individual sessions
• Dealing with relapses
– harm reduction
• Encouraging engagement with
mutual support organizations and
drug treatment programs
• Engage family in treatment of
– co morbid problems in child
– Co morbid problems in parent
Prevention efforts:

• Enhancement of academic
opportunities
• Provide treatment for co morbid
problems
• Engage families in shared activities
• Provide after school opportunities –
activities, sports, jobs
• Target especially at risk teens
• Build drug-free recreation experiences
Resources

• Schools
• Jobs
• Prosocial Support
• Activities
• Medical
• Other
Goals

• Build a therapeutic alliance with the


adolescent
• Create a collaborative agenda
• Establish a developmental –
ecological framework of treatment
• Improve functioning in several
developmental domains
• Transform a drug – using lifestyle into a
developmentally normal lifestyle
• Facilitate developmentally adaptive
competence in multiple settings
• Build a therapeutic alliance with a
parent
• Create a collaborative agenda
• Establish a developmental –
ecological framework
• Facilitate parental commitment
• Prevent parental abdication
• Facilitate an improved relationship or
improved communication between
the parent and adolescent
• Increase knowledge about and
effectiveness of parenting practices
(e.g. limit setting, monitoring,
appropriate autonomy granting)

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