Unhealthy Alcohol and Other Drug Use in Primary Care


Introduction

The Health and Medicine Division, National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine has provided a working definition of primary care:

Primary care is the provision of integrated, accessible health care services by clinicians who are accountable for addressing a large majority of personal health care needs, developing a sustained partnership with patients, and practicing in the context of family and community.

This definition emphasizes several aspects of care that impact individuals who use alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs.

  • 1.

    Continuity of care over a “sustained” time period

  • 2.

    Responsibility for addressing the majority of health care needs, including behavioral or psychological conditions

  • 3.

    Coordination of “integrated” care that may include multiple consultants and groups

  • 4.

    Inclusion of community and family issues that may challenge or promote health

  • 5.

    Being “accountable” for care, implying some regard for efficiency and cost effectiveness, and for long-term outcomes across multiple conditions

  • 6.

    Care is provided by clinical teams that might include physicians, nurses, counselors, physician’s assistants, and others who are key to effective care.

They go on to describe core functions of primary care relevant to people who use substances.

  • 1.

    Universal, selective, and indicated prevention, including screening for modifiable risk factors before consequences develop

  • 2.

    Education of patients to help them live healthfully and to self-manage their health conditions and risks

  • 3.

    Initial evaluation and treatment of health consequences as they emerge.

Primary care may be practiced by many medical professionals. Most readers will be familiar with general internists, family practitioners, or pediatricians in this role, but gynecologists, and other subspecialists, such as those in infectious disease, nephrology, or endocrinology, often provide primary care. In the United States, about half of the approximately one trillion doctor visits made in 2004 were to primary care clinicians (internal medicine, family medicine, and pediatrics).

Given primary care’s ubiquity and the multiplicity of functions (particularly the “ownership” in the long run of a patient’s care), primary care providers are poised optimally to help patients with chronic behavioral health conditions, especially those that manifest with physical or emotional troubles that may cause someone to seek medical attention. Indeed, the setting for which the literature best supports the efficacy of brief interventions for alcohol is primary care practice. Conditions that are accompanied by shame and secrecy may need a trusted relationship with a professional to catalyze healthy change. The primary care clinician may be the only person in a patient’s life who can fill that bill. Tobacco smoking, unhealthy alcohol and other drug use, and other drug and alcohol-related conditions are common among patients seeing primary care practitioners. About one in five adults visiting primary care clinicians drink above recommended limits or have consequences related to alcohol. Studies of primary care practices have demonstrated the success of care provided to people with unhealthy substance use, but also the large gap between its prevalence and the rates of screening, detection, and treatment.

This chapter addresses those gaps. Primary care clinicians are optimally positioned to identify, assess, manage, treat, and refer to specialty care as needed for unhealthy alcohol and other drug use as well as psychiatric and medical conditions that accompany or are caused by the substance use. The challenge to primary care in this arena is great; so too is the opportunity to make a profound difference in the lives of patients and their families.

Screening

Unhealthy alcohol and other drug use is highly prevalent in the community and among primary care patients. It can result in physical and social deterioration and in increased use of costly medical resources. The primary care clinician can detect preclinical at-risk use or use with consequences and intervene effectively prior to the development of a substance use disorder. This paradigm is best studied and supported for alcohol and tobacco; whether detection and intervention for other drug use are effective remains controversial. It is for conditions for which we know that early versus later intervention can delay or diminish disease severity, morbidity, or mortality that a strong argument can be made for universal screening. Screening and screening tools can also be useful for identifying use, essential knowledge for diagnosis of medical symptoms, and for safe medication prescribing. The following sections review various screening strategies highlighting single-item tests that have the attractive attributes of convenience and good performance characteristics.

Screening for Alcohol Use

Surveys have found that screening is far from universal, and that only 13% of primary care clinicians use a validated instrument or tool to do so. When unhealthy use is identified, most primary care clinicians recommend self-help groups, but about a fifth of primary care clinicians offer no formal therapeutic intervention at all. In a review of thousands of records, McGlynn et al. found that about one-half of recommended health services were provided to adult patients. Services for the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) alcohol dependence were at the lowest level: only 10% of patients with alcohol dependence documented in the medical record had it addressed in any way.

The US Preventive Services Task Force recommends screening and brief intervention for unhealthy alcohol use for adults and pregnant women. The US Preventive Services Task Force found that screening and brief intervention improves important health outcomes and that benefits outweigh any risks. The recommendation is as strong as that for screening mammography for women 40–50 years of age, osteoporosis screening for women 65 years or older, or cholesterol screening in young adults with other risk factors for coronary artery disease. One clear difference between screening and brief intervention for alcohol use and the other preventive services listed is that screening and brief intervention is a more time-consuming interaction with a patient than is ordering a radiological or blood test. In a revenue-driven health care environment, test ordering may add revenue to an institution. Prevention and reduction of alcohol use consequences, in contrast, may slow down the primary care clinician, decreasing volume-based-revenue, even with the prospect of downstream cost-savings. (This scenario may be mitigated in part by the existence of a billing code for screening and brief-intervention for substance use.) Indeed, screening and brief intervention may be cost-effective and even cost-saving, at least from a societal perspective, if the benefits of self-reported use translate into reduced health consequences and care utilization. Based on randomized trials and simulation modeling, screening and brief intervention for alcohol ranks in the top five of preventive services in terms of cost-effectiveness. [CR] ,

Unhealthy Alcohol Use: Definitions

In the United States, about 70% of men and 60% of women 18 years of age or older drink alcohol. Although there is evidence that low-level consumption is relatively low risk (although it does increase the risk for cancers, such as breast cancer), higher amounts clearly risk numerous health consequences. Thus one dimension of screening for unhealthy alcohol use is solely based on quantity and frequency of intake. The other dimension that screening can address is alcohol consequences.

The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism has defined cutoffs for unhealthy use that are empirically based in epidemiological literature. Risky drinking amounts are those above these cutoffs. For men, this level is greater than 14 drinks per week or >4 drinks on an occasion; for women this cutoff is >7 drinks/week or >3 drinks on an occasion. For individuals over 65 years of age, the cutoff is the same as that for women. A “drink” is defined, in the United States, as 12–14 g of ethanol (12 oz of beer, 5–6 oz of wine, or 1.5 oz of 80 proof spirits) ( Table 46.1 ). Drinking risky amounts without associated consequences is risky drinking. If there are consequences, patients may have an alcohol use disorder (as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders , Fifth Edition [DSM-5]). An important exception to using consumption to define unhealthy use is when even low-level use risks consequences. Aside from alcohol being a carcinogen, other examples include women intending pregnancy, pregnant women, people taking medications that interact with alcohol, and people with health conditions worsened by even small amounts (e.g., hepatitis C virus infection). The key distinction among individuals with unhealthy alcohol use is whether a moderate to severe alcohol use disorder (AUD) is present. Identifying such is important because the best advice and management are different, as discussed later in this chapter.

Table 46.1
Alcohol Use Definitions.
Adapted from Akbik H, Butler SF, Budman SH, Fernandez K, et al. Validation and clinical application of the screener and opioid assessment for patients with pain (SOAPP). J Pain Symptom Manage . 2006;32:287–293; Cuijpers P, Riper H, Lemmers L. The effects on mortality of brief intervention for problem drinking: a metaanalysis. Addiction . 2004;99:829–845; O’Connor PG, Schottenfeld RS. Patients with alcohol problems. New Eng J Med . 1998;338:592–602.
Quantity Alcohol-Related Consequences
Lower risk use a Below NIAAA-recommended limits None
Unhealthy use
Risky use Above NIAAA-recommended limits None
Use with consequences but no disorder Not part of definition Present but not meeting criteria for DSM-5 AUD
Mild AUD Not part of definition Meets 2-3 DSM-5 AUD criteria
Moderate/severe AUD Not part of definition Meets 4 or more DSM-5 Criteria

a The possible exceptions to the “lower risk” category are conditions in which any drinking may pose health risks. These include alcohol use disorder (e.g., past), family history of alcohol use disorder, intended pregnancy, pregnancy, use of medications that interact with alcohol, and disorders or symptoms usually made worse by alcohol (e.g., psychiatric symptoms or medical disorders such as hepatitis, peptic ulcer disease, or epilepsy).

What is the best way to screen for unhealthy alcohol use? Although we usually think about face-to-face discussions or questions in the clinical setting, screening runs the gamut from these to telephone or web-based instruments. These approaches should be considered and adapted as appropriate, with an eye to optimal efficiency and effectiveness, for system-based approaches.

Any interaction between the primary care clinician and patient should serve to build the therapeutic relationship. Therefore history-taking should be conducted in an empathic, nonjudgmental way. Embedding questions about alcohol use among other routine medical history questions may serve to decrease resistance and improve both the tenor of the discussion and the quality of information generated. That said, screening is best done with interview questions that should be asked verbatim, as validated.

The first order of business is to ascertain whether the patient drinks at all. The clearest question is: “Do you sometimes drink beer, wine, or other alcoholic beverages?” If the patient does not drink at all, inquiring into the patient’s rationale for abstaining may reveal that the patient has prior use with consequences. If the patient drinks at all, then quantity and frequency of drinking should be evaluated.

One wants to further characterize alcohol intake. It is important to assess the average number of drinks in a week and whether there are any heavy drinking episodes (i.e., drinking in excess of the single-occasion cut-offs delineated by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism). This brief screen can be done with three questions.

  • 1.

    On average, how many days per week do you have an alcoholic drink?

  • 2.

    On a typical drinking day, how many drinks do you have?

  • 3.

    What is the maximum number of drinks you had on any given occasion during the past month?

With the first two responses, the number of drinks per week can be calculated, and if weekly cutoffs are exceeded, then there is risky drinking. Similarly, if limits per episode are exceeded, the patient is drinking at a risky level.

The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Clinician’s Guide recommends a single question to screen people who drink for unhealthy alcohol use :

“How many times in the past year have you had X or more drinks in a day?” where X = 5 for men and 4 for women. A response >1 is considered positive.

This single item is both sensitive and specific for detecting unhealthy alcohol use, memorizable, requires no scoring, and is thus appropriate for most practices. Single-question instruments are brief, valid, and efficient.

The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test ( Table 46.2 ) is a 10-item instrument developed by the World Health Organization with good performance characteristics for identifying unhealthy alcohol use. It is scored from 0 to 40 with a score of 8 classically, but more recently scores of 5 (for men) and 4 (for women and those older than 60 years of age) have been considered positive. It requires scoring so may be better suited to a pen-and-paper or automated process than to verbal interview. The main advantage of the longer tool is that it provides more information for discussion and can suggest the presence of a disorder with a score of 15–20 or more.

Table 46.2
AUDIT: The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test.
From National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Helping Patients Who Drink Too Much: A Clinician’s Guide . 2005 ed. NIH Publication No. 07-3769. Bethesda, MD; NIH; 2007.
For each question, circle the answer that best describes your experience.
Questions 0 1 2 3 4
1. How often do you have a drink containing alcohol? Never Monthly or less 2–4 times a month 2–3 times a week 4 or more times a week
2. How many drinks containing alcohol do you have on a typical day when you are drinking? 1 or 2 3 or 4 5 or 6 7 to 9 10 or more
3. How often do you have 5 or more drinks on one occasion? Never Less than monthly Monthly Weekly Daily or almost daily
4. How often during the last year have you found that you were not able to stop drinking once you had started? Never Less than monthly Monthly Weekly Daily or almost daily
5. How often during the last year have you failed to do what was normally expected of you because of drinking? Never Less than monthly Monthly Weekly Daily or almost daily
6.How often during the last year have you needed a first drink in the morning to get yourself going after a heavy drinking session? Never Less than monthly Monthly Weekly Daily or almost daily
7. How often during the last year have you had a feeling of guilt or remorse after drinking? Never Less than monthly Monthly Weekly Daily or almost daily
8. How often during the last year have you been unable to remember what happened the night before because of your drinking? Never Less than monthly Monthly Weekly Daily or almost daily
9. Have you or someone else been injured because of your drinking No Yes, but not in the last year Yes, during the last year
10. Has a relative, friend, doctor, or other health care worker been concerned about your drinking or suggested you cut down? No Yes, but not in the last year Yes, during the last year
Note: This questionnaire (the AUDIT) is reprinted with permission from the World Health Organization. To reflect standard drink sizes in the United States, the number of drinks in question 3 was changed from 6 to 5. A free AUDIT manual with guidelines for use in primary care settings is available online at www.who.org .

A briefer validated screening tool is the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test-C. It comprises three consumption questions from the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (the first three questions) and also requires scoring. Using a score threshold (or cut-point) of 4 for males and 3 for females will identify unhealthy alcohol use, while a score of 7 or more suggests moderate to severe alcohol use disorder. This test is in wide use and is good for practices with workflows that permit scoring.

If a patient is NOT drinking above recommended cutoffs and has no absolute contraindication to any drinking, then the patient should be congratulated on the healthy pattern, educated about the risks and benefits of “moderate” (low amounts of) drinking (the best evidence for the former being for an increased risk for breast cancer and for the latter, possible decreased cardiovascular risk) and educated about optimal limits. If the screening is “positive,” however, then further assessment is recommended for confirmation and to determine severity.

Screening for Tobacco Use

Evaluating the use of tobacco is by-and-large a simpler process than that for use of alcohol. The healthiest level of tobacco intake is none. Because efforts to make smoking a “vital sign,” smoking status is now frequently recorded routinely at contacts with clinicians. A single question, such as “In the past year have you smoked cigarettes or used any other tobacco product?” should be asked of all patients. Caution should be taken with patients who define smoking as regular or current use; they may report they are nonsmokers despite sporadic or recent but not current regular use. Finally, the presence of past or current smoking may itself raise concern for concomitant unhealthy alcohol or other drug use.

Screening for Other Drug Use

The DAST-10 is a screening questionnaire that asks about drug use and consequences. A score of 3 or more is positive. The length of the questionnaire, and particularly the lack of validation studies in primary care settings, limits its utility. The 10 questions probe for physical and social consequences (e.g., blackouts, withdrawal, relationship problems) and loss of control over use and do not identify the drug used.

The Alcohol Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST) is a complex instrument of 80 items yielding independent scores for each of multiple substances. A “positive” screening test can be defined as a score of 2 or greater (indicating any drug or alcohol use in the past 3 months), although the cutoff of 4 or greater is probably more clinically useful (indicating either weekly use or less-frequent recent use accompanied by consequences of use). ASSIST has been validated internationally. Although there are 80 items, if no use of a specific substance is reported, only 10 items need to be answered. If the patient reports any use of a substance, then a series of questions are asked about that substance. Its complexity, length, and need for scoring limit its utility in routine clinical primary care practice, although where computers are integrated into clinical or research settings, the test may be usable. The ASSIST is available online from the National Institute of Drug Abuse. Another major limitation of the ASSIST is that the results do not directly identify use of risky alcohol amounts per se, a critical target of screening in primary care settings because of the prevalence and proven value of brief intervention for such patients.

The best approach to drug use screening in primary care is to ask one or two validated questions. The following single question test has been validated : How many times in the past year have you used an illegal drug or used a prescription medication for non-medical reasons—for example, because of the experience or feeling it caused?

Any nonzero response is considered positive. This has good sensitivity (>70% and specificity (>94%) and is appropriate for primary care settings. Because marijuana is becoming legal in many states, it can also be useful to simply ask about the frequency of any marijuana (cannabis) use and then determine if it is medicinal or whether there are any consequences of use in a further assessment.

Assessment

For any patient with unhealthy alcohol or other drug use, further assessment should delineate the role of the substance use in the patient’s life. This runs the gamut among physical, emotional, interpersonal, and social/vocational functioning. Ultimately, ruling-in or ruling-out the diagnosis of moderate or severe substance use disorder is desirable, because management differs.

If the patient screens positive for drinking above recommended limits, there are several next steps: The primary objective of the evaluation is to determine if there is moderate to severe AUD. If there is only mild AUD, then brief counseling can have efficacy and is indicated. If there is severe AUD, then the effectiveness of brief intervention is less certain, but brief counseling with a goal of further care by the primary care clinician or via referral is desirable. Moderate to severe AUD (per DSM-5) warrants an offer of pharmacotherapy, mutual help, and counseling. This can be provided by the primary care clinician if they have the skills, and if time permits, and/or by referral to specialty care, generally the favored approach if available and the patient is willing to go; more and more clinicians with behavioral health expertise are embedded and available in primary care settings, which is ideal as they are more accessible and familiar to patients in those settings. The other important objective of assessment here, irrespective of whether AUD is diagnosed, is to gather information about the impact of alcohol on the patient’s life, both positive and negative, so that the patient can be counseled appropriately. Such insight into the personal impact of drinking may be at the core of effective motivational interviewing to assist with behavior change.

One approach to assessment is oriented toward ruling in or out a diagnosis of AUD (recommended by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Clinician’s Guide). The cardinal elements of AUD are loss of control, use despite negative consequences, and significant negative impact of use. A patient meets criteria for the diagnosis of AUD per DSM-5 if two or more of the following are present in a year, accompanied by significant impairment or distress:

  • 1.

    Tolerance

  • 2.

    Withdrawal

  • 3.

    Spending substantial time getting, using, and recovering from use

  • 4.

    Giving up important activities

  • 5.

    Use despite known negative consequences

  • 6.

    Inability to stop or cut down

  • 7.

    Using more or more often than intended

  • 8.

    Repeated use despite negative social consequences

  • 9.

    Repeated use in hazardous situations

  • 10.

    Craving

  • 11.

    Use repeatedly resulting in failure to fulfill roles or functions.

AUD is rated as mild if 2–3 criteria are met, as moderate if 4–5 are met, and severe if 6–11 are met. Further assessment for psychiatric comorbidity is indicated when an alcohol use disorder is identified because it is common and needs to be addressed.

Some screening tests provide information regarding the presence of alcohol use disorders. Although a detailed interview is recommended for assessment, primary care providers often will not have such time available, particularly at the same visit in which a patient screens positive. As such, screening tests that provide information about consequences can help suggest the presence of more severe AUD.

Although not designed as an assessment tool, the 4-item CAGE questionnaire at a score of 2 or greater indicates a high likelihood of lifetime AUD. The four questions with which many primary care clinicians are already familiar are:

  • 1.

    Have you ever felt you should Cut down on your drinking?

  • 2.

    Have people Annoyed you by criticizing your drinking?

  • 3.

    Have you ever felt bad or Guilty about your drinking?

  • 4.

    Have you ever taken a drink first thing in the morning ( Eye-opener ) to steady your nerves or get rid of a hangover?

A positive answer is worth one point, and a score of 1 is 85% sensitive and 78% specific for an alcohol use disorder; a score of 2 is 71% sensitive and 91% specific. The CAGE can serve as a starting point for a more detailed diagnostic assessment. The CAGE provides a natural segue to questions about the criteria for AUD that permit precise diagnosis.

Similarly for assessment and diagnosis of other drug use disorders, we recommend the ASSIST with a cutoff of 27 yielding high likelihood of a specific drug use disorder. Alternatively, the familiar CAGE questionnaire has been adapted to apply to drug use. The CAGE-AID is identical to the CAGE, one of the earliest validated alcohol screening questionnaires, with the exception that the clause “…or drug use” is appended to each of the four questions. For example, the C question is: “Have you ever felt you should cut down on your drinking or drug use ?” One affirmative response is a positive test. The CAGE-AID, like its source the CAGE, is limited in its focus on consequences, being less useful for identifying risky use. Again, the CAGE-AID, like the CAGE, is a jumping-off point for more detailed questions about consequences, leading to assessment of diagnostic criteria.

Management of Unhealthy Alcohol and Other Drug Use

Brief Intervention

Brief intervention is an essential part of the primary care clinician’s management of patients with unhealthy behaviors in general, and unhealthy alcohol and other drug use in particular. It is covered in detail in the Chapter 43 . Brief intervention is a brief, patient-centered counseling, a conversation of no more than 45 but usually 10–15 minutes. Informed by motivational interviewing, the primary care clinician provides feedback to the patient (after asking for permission to do so) about their substance use, use-related risks, and any consequences of importance to the patient (e.g., social, occupational, legal, medical, psychological consequences), and sometimes how their use compares to norms ( Table 46.3 ). Along with the assessment should come clear and nonconfrontational advice about change, again after asking for permission to do so. The patient’s desires and understanding about relevant behavior change should be elicited, as should their ability and readiness to change. Then with the patient’s agreement, a menu of options for courses of action should be discussed. Their commitment, including an agreement about the next step and (long- and short-term) goals should be agreed upon and recorded. Finally, arrangement for follow-up should be made. The approach must be empathic and supportive of the patient’s self-efficacy.

Table 46.3
Alcohol Epidemiology: Drinking Levels by Age and Sex of Community-Dwelling Adults in the United States.
Cumulative Percentile of Drinks per Week by Age and Gender
Age (yr) 0 1 2–3 4–5 6–8 9–12 13–19 20–29 30–39 40+
Men
18–20 32 65 71 76 80 84 87 90 93 100
21–25 20 49 59 65 73 79 85 90 93 100
26–29 19 53 63 71 78 84 91 94 97 100
30–34 21 57 68 76 82 88 93 96 97 100
35–39 25 57 67 73 80 86 91 95 97 100
40–44 26 60 68 74 80 86 91 94 95 100
45–49 27 59 69 75 81 86 91 94 96 100
50–54 28 61 70 75 81 86 92 95 96 100
55–59 32 65 72 78 84 89 94 97 98 100
60–64 36 68 74 77 83 88 93 96 97 100
65+ 45 73 78 82 87 91 95 98 99 100
Total 29 61 69 75 81 86 91 95 96 100
Women
18–20 40 81 86 90 92 94 96 97 98 100
21–25 27 72 81 85 90 93 96 98 99 100
26–29 30 80 88 91 94 97 98 99 99 100
30–34 32 80 87 92 94 97 98 99 99 100
35–39 32 78 86 90 93 96 98 99 99 100
40–44 35 80 86 91 94 96 98 99 100 100
45–49 36 79 86 89 93 95 97 99 99 100
50–54 42 82 87 90 94 96 98 99 99 100
55–59 43 82 88 91 93 96 98 99 99 100
60–64 50 85 90 93 95 98 99 100 100 100
65+ 63 89 92 94 96 98 99 100 100 100
Total 41 81 87 91 94 96 98 99 99 100
This table may be useful for helping patients understand how their level of drinking objectively compares to that of Americans of the same age and gender. For example, a 50-year-old woman who drinks two drinks every day can be provided advised that she drinks more than 98% of American women her age. Reprinted from Buchsbaum DG, Buchanan RG, Centor RM, et al. Screening for alcohol abuse using CAGE scores and likelihood ratios. Annals Intern Med . 1991;115(10):774–777, with permission from Elsevier.

More specifically, the clinician should determine the patient’s perception of their use and need for change (e.g., “Do you think your drug use is a problem?”). For patients who are not ready to change, the goals are to increase problem awareness, express concern, and agree to disagree. Sometimes a trial of abstinence or cutting down can be useful. For patients considering change, the goal is to tip the balance toward change by eliciting positive and negative aspects of drinking and not drinking, to demonstrate discrepancies between patients’ values and actions. Once the patient has decided to change, reviewing options for the next steps is recommended. The patient will need support and encouragement, and a reminder that the therapeutic relationship will continue regardless of continued unhealthy use or success in cutting down.

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