collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32188665/lessons-of-the-month-3-intravenous-poppers-abuse-case-report-management-and-possible-complications
#1
REVIEW
Alexander Reisinger, Susanne Vogt, Anna Essl, Ines Rauch, Florian Bangerl, Philipp Eller, Gerald Hackl
BACKGROUND: Poppers are nitrite-containing liquids, which are inhaled for their aphrodisiac and hallucinogenic effects. Despite some cases of severe poisonings, poppers are often perceived as harmless by consumers. Inhalation and ingestion of poppers are well known, but, according to our literature review, intravenous abuse has not been reported before. CASE PRESENTATION: A 34-year-old man injected poppers intravenously for recreational purposes. He then suffered from dyspnoea and general discomfort...
March 2020: Clinical Medicine: Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31994242/commentary-on-frost-et-al-2019-the-end-of-sbirt-and-a-new-continuum-of-care
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mark Willenbring
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 28, 2020: Addiction
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30587235/study-protocol-testing-toolkit-versus-usual-care-for-implementation-of-screening-brief-intervention-referral-to-treatment-in-hospitals-a-phased-cluster-randomized-approach
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robin Newhouse, Michelle Janney, Anne Gilbert, Jon Agley, Giorgos Bakoyannis, Melora Ferren, C Daniel Mullins, Meg Johantgen, Rhonda Schwindt, Kelli Thoele
BACKGROUND: Alarming rates of unhealthy alcohol, non-prescription drug, and tobacco use highlight the preventable health risks of substance abuse and the urgent need to activate clinicians to recognize and treat risky use. Screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) is an efficacious and effective processes to identify, reduce and prevent risky use of substances. This paper describes a study protocol testing implementation of a toolkit to enhance use of SBIRT in acute care settings to recognize and address patient risky alcohol, drug, and tobacco use...
December 27, 2018: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30078375/emergency-department-screening-and-interventions-for-substance-use-disorders
#4
REVIEW
Kathryn Hawk, Gail D'Onofrio
The emergency department (ED) has long been recognized as providing critical access to the health care system for many, yet only in the past few decades has the ED visit been recognized as an opportunity to identify and link patients to care for substance use disorders (SUDs). This review explores the evidence for ED-based screening, psychosocial and pharmacological interventions, and linkage to treatment for the spectrum of SUDs including high risk alcohol use and alcohol, opioid, tobacco and other SUDs. Despite knowledge gaps, methodological challenges and some inconsistency across interventions studied, opportunities for EDs to improve the care of patients across the spectrum of SUDs are robust...
August 6, 2018: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30133930/a-transdiagnostic-dimensional-approach-towards-a-neuropsychological-assessment-for-addiction-an-international-delphi-consensus-study
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Murat Yücel, Erin Oldenhof, Serge H Ahmed, David Belin, Joel Billieux, Henrietta Bowden-Jones, Adrian Carter, Samuel R Chamberlain, Luke Clark, Jason Connor, Mark Daglish, Geert Dom, Pinhas Dannon, Theodora Duka, Maria Jose Fernandez-Serrano, Matt Field, Ingmar Franken, Rita Z Goldstein, Raul Gonzalez, Anna E Goudriaan, Jon E Grant, Matthew J Gullo, Robert Hester, David C Hodgins, Bernard Le Foll, Rico S C Lee, Anne Lingford-Hughes, Valentina Lorenzetti, Scott J Moeller, Marcus R Munafò, Brian Odlaug, Marc N Potenza, Rebecca Segrave, Zsuzsika Sjoerds, Nadia Solowij, Wim van den Brink, Ruth J van Holst, Valerie Voon, Reinout Wiers, Leonardo F Fontenelle, Antonio Verdejo-Garcia
BACKGROUND: The US National Institutes of Mental Health Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) seek to stimulate research into biologically validated neuropsychological dimensions across mental illness symptoms and diagnoses. The RDoC framework comprises 39 functional constructs designed to be revised and refined, with the overall goal of improving diagnostic validity and treatments. This study aimed to reach a consensus among experts in the addiction field on the 'primary' RDoC constructs most relevant to substance and behavioural addictions...
June 2019: Addiction
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28296625/a-social-work-response-to-the-affordable-care-act-prevention-and-early-intervention
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew J Corrigan, Kathryn Krase, John Charles Reed
The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act represents a reinvestment in primary care, with a focus on prevention of illness and remediation of the impacts of chronic diseases through a behavioral health framework. Licensed social work professionals, specifically those trained in behavioral health, are a natural fit to help implement these new approaches. Though there are many evidence-based interventions that will be helpful, two that come from the field of substance abuse ought to be specifically beneficial: SAMHSA's SBIRT Model and Motivational Interviewing, developed by Miller and Rollnick...
April 2017: Journal of Psychoactive Drugs
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26189884/d-aspartate-induces-proliferative-pathways-in-spermatogonial-gc-1-cells
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alessandra Santillo, Sara Falvo, Paolo Chieffi, Maria Maddalena Di Fiore, Rosalba Senese, Gabriella Chieffi Baccari
D-aspartate (D-Asp) is an endogenous amino acid present in vertebrate tissues, with particularly high levels in the testis. In vivo studies indicate that D-Asp indirectly stimulates spermatogenesis through the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. Moreover, in vitro studies have demonstrated that D-Asp up-regulates testosterone production in Leydig cells by enhancing expression of the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein. In this study, a cell line derived from immortalized type-B mouse spermatogonia retaining markers of mitotic germ cells (GC-1) was employed to explore more direct involvement of D-Asp in spermatogenesis...
February 2016: Journal of Cellular Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23185985/pragmatic-randomized-controlled-trial-of-providing-access-to-a-brief-personalized-alcohol-feedback-intervention-in-university-students
#8
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
John A Cunningham, Christian S Hendershot, Michelle Murphy, Clayton Neighbors
BACKGROUND: There is a growing body of evidence indicating that web-based personalized feedback interventions can reduce the amount of alcohol consumed in problem drinking college students. This study sought to evaluate whether providing voluntary access to such an intervention would have an impact on drinking. METHODS: College students responded to an email inviting them to participate in a short drinking survey. Those meeting criteria for risky drinking (and agreeing to participate in a follow-up) were randomized to an intervention condition where they were offered to participate in a web-based personalized feedback intervention or to a control condition (intervention not offered)...
October 10, 2012: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23186245/a-qualitative-study-of-anticipated-barriers-and-facilitators-to-the-implementation-of-nurse-delivered-alcohol-screening-brief-intervention-and-referral-to-treatment-for-hospitalized-patients-in-a-veterans-affairs-medical-center
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lauren Matukaitis Broyles, Keri L Rodriguez, Kevin L Kraemer, Mary Ann Sevick, Patrice A Price, Adam J Gordon
BACKGROUND: Unhealthy alcohol use includes the spectrum of alcohol consumption from risky drinking to alcohol use disorders. Routine alcohol screening, brief intervention (BI) and referral to treatment (RT) are commonly endorsed for improving the identification and management of unhealthy alcohol use in outpatient settings. However, factors which might impact screening, BI, and RT implementation in inpatient settings, particularly if delivered by nurses, are unknown, and must be identified to effectively plan randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of nurse-delivered BI...
2012: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23186254/screening-for-adolescent-alcohol-and-drug-use-in-pediatric-health-care-settings-predictors-and-implications-for-practice-and-policy
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stacy Sterling, Andrea H Kline-Simon, Charles Wibbelsman, Anna Wong, Constance Weisner
OBJECTIVE: This paper used data from a study of pediatric primary care provider (PCP) screening practices to examine barriers to and facilitators of adolescent alcohol and other drug (AOD) screening in pediatric primary care. METHODS: A web-based survey (N = 437) was used to examine the influence of PCP factors (attitudes and knowledge, training, self-efficacy, comfort with alcohol and drug issues); patient characteristics (age, gender, ethnicity, comorbidities and risk factors); and organizational factors (screening barriers, staffing resources, confidentiality issues) on AOD screening practices...
2012: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23186284/screening-and-brief-intervention-sbi-has-it-hit-the-tipping-point
#11
EDITORIAL
Richard Saitz
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2012: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23186309/can-screening-and-brief-intervention-lead-to-population-level-reductions-in-alcohol-related-harm
#12
REVIEW
Nick Heather
A distinction is made between the clinical and public health justifications for screening and brief intervention (SBI) against hazardous and harmful alcohol consumption. Early claims for a public health benefit of SBI derived from research on general medical practitioners' (GPs') advice on smoking cessation, but these claims have not been realized, mainly because GPs have not incorporated SBI into their routine practice. A recent modeling exercise estimated that, if all GPs in England screened every patient at their next consultation, 96% of the general population would be screened over 10 years, with 70-79% of excessive drinkers receiving brief interventions (BI); assuming a 10% success rate, this would probably amount to a population-level effect of SBI...
August 28, 2012: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23186329/study-design-to-examine-the-potential-role-of-assessment-reactivity-in-the-screening-motivational-assessment-referral-and-treatment-in-emergency-departments-smart-ed-protocol
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dennis M Donovan, Michael P Bogenschutz, Harold Perl, Alyssa Forcehimes, Bryon Adinoff, Raul Mandler, Neal Oden, Robrina Walker
BACKGROUND: Screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) approaches to reducing hazardous alcohol and illicit drug use have been assessed in a variety of health care settings, including primary care, trauma centers, and emergency departments. A major methodological concern in these trials, however, is "assessment reactivity," the hypothesized impact of intensive research assessments to reduce alcohol and drug use and thus mask the purported efficacy of the interventions under scrutiny...
August 28, 2012: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23237456/testing-the-effects-of-brief-intervention-in-primary-care-for-problem-drug-use-in-a-randomized-controlled-trial-rationale-design-and-methods
#14
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Antoinette Krupski, Jutta M Joesch, Chris Dunn, Dennis Donovan, Kristin Bumgardner, Sarah Peregrine Lord, Richard Ries, Peter Roy-Byrne
BACKGROUND: A substantial body of research has established the effectiveness of brief interventions for problem alcohol use. Following these studies, national dissemination projects of screening, brief intervention (BI), and referral to treatment (SBIRT) for alcohol and drugs have been implemented on a widespread scale in multiple states despite little existing evidence for the impact of BI on drug use for non-treatment seekers. This article describes the design of a study testing the impact of SBIRT on individuals with drug problems, its contributions to the existing literature, and its potential to inform drug policy...
2012: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23324597/feasibility-of-a-computer-assisted-alcohol-sbirt-program-in-an-urban-emergency-department-patient-and-research-staff-perspectives
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mary K Murphy, Polly E Bijur, David Rosenbloom, Steven L Bernstein, E John Gallagher
OBJECTIVES: The study objective was to assess the feasibility of a computerized alcohol-screening interview (CASI) program to identify at-risk alcohol users among adult emergency department (ED) patients. The study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of implementing a computerized screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT) program within a busy urban ED setting, to report on accurate deployment of alcohol screening results, and to assess comprehension and satisfaction with CASI from both patient and research staff perspectives...
January 16, 2013: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23399417/screening-and-brief-intervention-for-alcohol-and-other-drug-use-in-primary-care-associations-between-organizational-climate-and-practice
#16
MULTICENTER STUDY
Erica Cruvinel, Kimber P Richter, Ronaldo Rocha Bastos, Telmo Mota Ronzani
BACKGROUND: Numerous studies have demonstrated that positive organizational climates contribute to better work performance. Screening and brief intervention (SBI) for alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use has the potential to reach a broad population of hazardous drug users but has not yet been widely adopted in Brazil's health care system. We surveyed 149 primary health care professionals in 30 clinics in Brazil who were trained to conduct SBI among their patients. We prospectively measured how often they delivered SBI to evaluate the association between organizational climate and adoption/performance of SBI...
2013: Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
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