The Intervention Experts: How a Fortune 500 Executive Intervention Works

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Many employers and major companies want to retain a valuable employee who is struggling with drug addiction, alcohol addiction, sex addiction or other dangerous addictive behaviors. These companies are willing to help the individual and often times don’t know where to start or how to help.

The Intervention Experts work with a number of individuals each year who are motivated to get help because of a well-planned intervention.

We are most time contacted by the employer or Human resource director seeking help for a valued employee who is capable of, but not performing their work because of an addiction.

As a team, we work together with the employer, human resource director and chosen associates who would be appropriate and helpful in the intervention.

The Intervention Experts have an extremely high rate of success with this type of intervention.

The New Drug Crisis: Addiction by Prescription Part 3 of 3

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Skull Crossbones Prescription Drugs

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Florida is lousy with such pain-clinic pill mills, in part because of extremely loose oversight of the people operating them. Until June, when Governor Charlie Crist signed a new law cracking down on the operations, there was nothing to prevent felons from opening a clinic and hiring doctors to write the prescriptions. Indeed, on the national ranking of practitioners dispensing Oxycodone, every doc in the top 50 has a Sunshine State address.

“I’ve taken to calling the problem ‘pharmageddon,'” says Dr. Barbara Krantz, Hanley’s CEO and medical director. “There are seven deaths per day in Florida from prescription-drug overdoses.” The state has also become a hub for opioid traffickers in the Southeast. (Read “Difficulties in Determining a Drug Overdose Death.”)

What worries Krantz and other substance-abuse professionals is that an addiction scourge that is, for now, hitting the boomer demographic hardest won’t stay there and instead will gather greater strength in the under-25 cohort. It’s not just young cancer patients given a legal taste of Oxy who are in danger in this group; it’s everyone. “A parent comes home from the dentist with 30 doses of Oxycontin and only takes a few,” says Barber. “Then the pills are stored in the medicine chest, where anyone can get them.”

This is leading to a rise in the incidence of what’s known as skittling, a social phenomenon with deadly consequences. “Kids steal from their parents’ medicine chests, go to a party and dump everything into a bowl at the door,” says Juan Harris, a Hanley drug counselor. “Anyone who comes in just grabs a handful.” (Comment on this story.)

Killing the Buzz
For kids, education programs in schools help a little, at least in terms of informing them of the risks associated with drugs. But such a rearguard action goes just so far, and a longer-term solution will come only when the government increases its control over the legal dispensation of the most popular pills. The first step would be better surveillance and tracking. An alphabet soup of agencies — from the FDA to the CDC to SAMHSA to the National Institute of Drug Abuse — all have a hand in monitoring prescription meds, but no single one is in charge. “You need Congress choosing an agency and saying, ‘This is your baby,'” says Barber.

In early 2009, the FDA announced that it was initiating a “risk-evaluation and mitigation strategy,” contacting the opioid manufacturers and requiring them to participate in a study of how their meds can continue to be made available while at the same time being better controlled. The regulations the FDA is empowered to issue include requiring manufacturers to provide better information to patients and doctors, requiring doctors to meet certain educational criteria before writing opioid prescriptions and limiting the number of docs and pharmacies allowed to prescribe or dispense the drugs. (See “The Year in Health 2009: From A to Z.”)

“And with all that,” warns Dr. John Jenkins, director of the FDA’s Office of New Drugs, “we do still have to make sure patients have access to drugs they need.” Any regulations the FDA does impose won’t be announced until 2011 at the earliest and could take a year or more to roll out.

Other solutions don’t face the same regulatory maze. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration recently announced a straightforward idea to reduce misuse: a drug take-back day on Sept. 25, 2010, when patients can safely dispose of unwanted prescription drugs at 3,400 government-sponsored sites around the country. An electronic database of all pharmacies across the country could also help catch patients and doctors who are gaming the system, particularly those who hopscotch across state lines. Doctors need to be less cavalier about prescribing drugs and stingier with the amount they do allow. They could also do a better job of assessing patients for addictive histories and requiring urine tests if they suspect a problem. If the patients don’t want to comply, they don’t have to — but they won’t get their drugs either.

Insurers — the bad guys in so many policy debates — can do a lot of good, keeping better track of the number and types of controlled substances policyholders are receiving. Big Pharma must help as well, and that means climbing down off the opioid gravy train and working harder to develop more nonaddictive painkillers — even if it means fewer sales and lower profits. At least one company, New Jersey–based King Pharmaceuticals, is seeking a solution. According to a recent review article in the journal Drugs, the company is experimenting with abuse-deterrents built directly into pills. One technique involves including pellets coated with a chemical called naltrexone — which neutralizes the effects of opioids — in the pill. The pellets remain intact and pass through the body if the drug is taken as intended. If the pill is crushed, however — a trick addicts use to produce a faster, more powerful kick — the naltrexone is released, killing the high.

Until then, it’s up to responsible doctors and cautious patients to keep the epidemic in check. That, certainly, is not easy. “When drug addicts or alcoholics ask us if they can ever use substances in moderation, we tell them no,” says Krantz. “Once your brain becomes a pickle, it can’t go back to being a cucumber.” Too many Americans are pickled already. The time to help them — and protect the rest — is now.

Source: Time.com

The New Drug Crisis: Addiction by Prescription Part 2 of 3

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Health officials do not tease out which drug is responsible for every death, and it’s not always possible. “There may be lots of drugs on board,” says Cathy Barber, director of the Injury Control Research Center at the Harvard School of Public Health. “Is it the opioid that caused the death? Or is it the combination of opioid, benzodiazepine and a cocktail the person had?” Still, most experts agree that nothing but the exploding availability of opioids could be behind the exploding rate of death.

Contrary to stereotype, the people most at risk in this epidemic are not the usual pill-popping suspects — the dorm rats and users of street drugs. Rather, they’re so-called naive users in the 35-to-64 age group — mostly baby boomers, with their aching bodies and their long romance with pharmaceutical chemistry. “People with pain complaints get a 30-day prescription for Oxycontin, and it’s like a little opioid starter kit,” says Barber.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has, in its dilatory fashion, begun addressing the problem, but it doesn’t promise any action before next year — if then. That leaves millions of people continuing to fill prescriptions, tens of thousands per year dying and patients in genuine pain wondering when a needed medication will relieve their suffering — and when it could lead to something worse. (See TIME’s special report “How to Live 100 Years.”)

Unintended Consequences
The U.S.’s opiate jag began, like so many things, with the best of intentions. In the 1990s, the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) — the accrediting body for hospitals and other large care facilities — developed new policies to treat pain more proactively, approaching it not just as an unfortunate side effect of illness but as a fifth vital sign, along with temperature, heart rate, respiratory rate and blood pressure. As such, it would have to be routinely assessed and treated as needed. “It was a compassionate change,” says Barber. “Patient-advocacy groups pushed hard for it.” And, she points out, drug companies did too, since more-aggressive treatment of pain meant more more-aggressive prescribing.

But the timing was problematic. The new JCAHO policy went into effect in 2000, which was not only about the time the new opioids were hitting the market but also shortly after the Federal Trade Commission began allowing direct-to-consumer drug advertising. When market, mission and product converge this way, there’s little question what will happen. And before long, patients were not only being offered easy access to drugs but were actually having the medications pushed on them. No tooth extraction was complete without a 30-day prescription for Vicodin. No ambulatory surgery ended without a trip to the hospital pharmacy to pick up some Oxy. Worse, people with chronic pain were getting prescriptions that could be renewed again and again. (Read “Curbing Drug-Company Abuses: Are Fines Enough?”)

“For me, it started with lower-back pain,” says Jason (not his real name), a carpenter in his late 50s. Jason is a 90-day inpatient at the Hanley Center, a residential addiction facility in West Palm Beach, Fla. “I went to my doctor, and he prescribed Oxycontin. After a little while, I was finishing a one-month prescription in three weeks, then in two. I started complaining of more pain than I had so I could get more Oxy, and finally I started buying it on the street. In a pharmacy, I paid $8 for 160 pills. On the street, I was paying $25 each.”

Jason’s demographic profile is typical of Hanley’s — older, whiter and generally wealthier than addicts of previous generations. And while some people do wind up buying on the street, many never need to, thanks to the gray market that has sprouted up around opioid sales. As long as the drugs are legal and real M.D.s are prescribing them, it’s a simple matter to hang out a shingle and call yourself a pain clinic. Pay-to-play patients are given prescriptions based on little more than their word that they’re in pain — sometimes backed up by self-evidently altered MRIs.

Says Evelyn (another pseudonym, and another baby boomer at Hanley), “When my physician refused to prescribe me more pills, he sent me to a clinic. The doctor there didn’t even ask me my name at first. He wrote me a prescription while he was on the phone dealing with some court case he was involved in. When you’re well dressed and you have insurance, they don’t think of you as an addict.”

Continued in part 3

Source: Time.com

Intervention Experts to Convene in Florida

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“The Moment of Change: Intervention Approaches for Professionals” conference is scheduled for September 2010 in Palm Beach, Florida, providing professionals with access to top experts in the field and news on the latest advances, studies and trends.

Brentwood, TN, June 10, 2010 –(PR.com)– Foundations Recovery Network and Southworth Associates announce their sixth national conference on intervention, “The Moment of Change: Intervention Approaches for Professionals.” The annual event will return to The Breakers in Palm Beach, Fla., Sept. 27-30, 2010, providing professionals with an opportunity to explore the specific issues surrounding the intervention process as well as disease concepts, family participation and practical business considerations – all in a beautiful beach setting.

The Moment of Change includes six keynote addresses and 30 workshops led by more than 40 of the industry’s leading experts on addiction and recovery. The field of intervention and addiction treatment is always growing and expanding so events like this one are particularly important for professionals to stay on top of the latest advances, clinical studies, trends and varying approaches to treatment.

Continuing education credits are also available, allowing attendees to gain valuable knowledge about the process of intervention as it relates to addiction and mental illness.

This year, conferees also have the option to participate in a bonus one-day event to promote networking among interventionists at the brand new Interventionists’ Networking Showcase.

For more information or to register, go to www.foundationsevents.com or call 877-345-3274.

The New Drug Crisis: Addiction by Prescription Part 1 of 3

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It’s not easy to find a mother who would look back fondly on the time her son had cancer. But Penny (not her real name) does. Penny lives in Boston, and her son got sick when he was just 13. He struggled with the disease for several years — through the battery of tests and the horror of the diagnosis and, worst of all, through the pain that came from the treatment. For that last one, at least, there was help — Oxycontin, a time-released opioid that works for up to 12 hours. It did the job, and more.

The brain loves Oxycontin — the way the drug lights up the limbic system, with cascading effects through the ventral striatum, midbrain, amygdala, orbitofrontal cortex and prefrontal cortex, leaving pure pleasure in its wake. What the brain loves, it learns to crave. That’s especially so when the alternative is the cruel pain of cancer therapy. By the time Penny’s son was 17, his cancer was licked — but his taste for Oxy wasn’t. When his doctor quit prescribing him the stuff, the boy found the next best — or next available — thing: heroin. Penny soon began spending her Monday nights at meetings of the support group Learn to Cope, a Boston-based organization that counsels families of addicts, particularly those hooked on opioids or heroin. (See the top 10 medical breakthroughs of 2009.)

“Penny told the group that she actually misses her son’s cancer,” says Joanne Peterson, the founder of Learn to Cope. “When he had that, everyone was around. When he had that, he had support.”

Penny and her son are not unique. Humans have never lacked for ways to get wasted. The natural world is full of intoxicating leaves and fruits and fungi, and for centuries, science has added to the pharmacopoeia. In the past two decades, that’s been especially true. As the medical community has become more attentive to acute and chronic pain, a bounty of new drugs has rolled off Big Pharma’s production line.

There was fentanyl, a synthetic opioid around since the 1960s that went into wide use as a treatment for cancer pain in the 1990s. That was followed by Oxycodone, a short-acting drug for more routine pain, and after that came Oxycontin, a 12-hour formulation of the same powerful pill. Finally came hydrocodone, sold under numerous brand names, including Vicodin. Essentially the same opioid mixed with acetaminophen, hydrocodone seemed like health food compared with its chemical cousins, and it has been regulated accordingly. The government considers hydrocodone a Schedule III drug — one with a “moderate or low” risk of dependency, as opposed to Schedule II’s, which carry a “severe” risk. Physicians must submit a written prescription for Schedule II drugs; for Schedule III’s, they just phone the pharmacy. (Schedule I substances are drugs like heroin that are never prescribed.) For patients, that wealth of choices spelled danger. (See the most common hospital mishaps.)

“If someone is dying, addiction isn’t a problem,” says Dr. Jim Rathmell, chief of the division of pain medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital. “But for prescribers, the distinction between a patient who has three or four weeks to live and one who’s 32 and has chronic back pain started to blur.”

The result has hardly been a surprise. Since 1990, there has been a tenfold increase in prescriptions for opioids in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). In 2007, 3.7 million people filled 21 million legal prescriptions for opioid painkillers, and 5.2 million people over the age of 12 reported using prescription painkillers nonmedically in the previous month, according to a survey by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). From 2004 to ’08, emergency-room visits for opioid misuse doubled. At the same time, the drugs have become the stuff of pop culture, gaining cachet in the process. The fictitious Dr. House and Nurse Jackie gobble them like gumdrops, as did the decidedly nonfictional Rush Limbaugh and Heath Ledger. And, like Ledger, some users don’t make it out alive.

In 1990 there were barely 6,000 deaths from accidental drug poisoning in the U.S. By 2007 that number had nearly quintupled, to 27,658. In 15 states and the District of Columbia, unintentional overdoses have, for the first time in modern memory, replaced motor-vehicle incidents as the leading cause of accidental death; and in three more states it’s close to a tie.

Continued in Part 2

Source: Time

Pharmadeggon Deferred: New Measures to Stop Opioid Abuse

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There’s a party going on and the entire country is invited. The problem is, it’s an opioid party—and too many Americans have been accepting the invitation. As I reported a few weeks ago, the development of new forms of highly addictive painkillers like Oxycodone, Oxycontin and hydrocodone has led to a 10-fold increase in prescriptions since 1990, an explosion of illegal sales and a quadrupling of accidental overdose deaths. Just this week, however, there was promising news on a couple of fronts that could help reverse—or at least—slow the trend.

The first good—and very straightforward—idea comes from the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), which is scheduling a nationwide prescription drug take-back day on Saturday, Sept. 25. Part of the reason so many people get addicted to meds is that they are routinely given 30-day prescriptions for opioids after procedures like tooth extractions, which often require only a day or two of drugs before the pain subsides. The couple dozen remaining pills then get stored in medicine chests, where teens  can grab them and the person to whom they were prescribed can be tempted to take the recreationally.

Flushing the pills down the toilet or tossing them in the trash can lead to other kinds of problems since, as I also reported back in April, this contributes to the growing problem of pharmaceutical toxins in waterways and reservoirs. This causes developmental changes in aquatic animals and may be doing the same to us.

The government has instead set up 3,400 take-back sites around the country where people can safely dump unwanted drugs, which can then be disposed of in environmentally safe ways. The DEA website offers a complete list of all the collection locations, which is easily searchable by zip code.

A different approach is being taken by New Jersey-based King Pharmaceuticals. The journal Drugs recently published a review article about three experimental abuse deterrents the company is trying to build directly into pills. One of the things that makes opioids especially dangerous is that addicts have found they can crush or chew the tablets to produce a faster, more powerful kick. Chemists are thus developing opioid pills that are also spiked with niacin, which can produce side effects such as flushing, rapid heart rate and nausea if taken in too potent a dose. Another approach involves including coated pellets of a chemical called naltrexone—which neutralizes the effects of opioids—in the pill. The pellets remain intact and pass through the body if the drug is taken as intended; if it’s crushed, however, the naltrexone is released—killing the high. A third technique involves manufacturing the pills as a slow release gel cap, which is metabolized only deep in the gut and must arrive there intact or it will not be effective.

Painkillers can be very, very good things; abusing them can be very, very dangerous. A little creative chemistry and a lot of vigilant pill collection can move us closer to balancing the two.

By Jeffrey Kluger

Source: TIME Healthland

West Palm’s Hanley Center Hopes Brain Scanner can Tailor Addiction Treatment

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Dr. Daniel Amen shows brain scans of a patient both drunk and sober during a talk about scans and their use in addiction treatment at a seminar at the Hanley Center Tuesday morning, September 14, 2010. Starting this month, every new Hanley Center patient will have a SPECT scan taken of their addicted brain. The SPECT images, which reveal blood flow to the brain, will show patients their substance-abuse damaged brains, help Hanley Center design more effective treatment, and identify other brain-based conditions that contribute to addiction,such as depression and brain trauma.

The image has been seared into the memory of an entire generation: an egg frying in a sizzling hot pan.

“This is your brain on drugs. Any questions?”

Well, the people who treat drug and alcohol addiction at Hanley Center in West Palm Beach have bought themselves a bigger and more expensive – nearly $500,000 – camera, and they’re betting the image it makes will not only deter people from using drugs but help hundreds of addicts get better treatment.

It’s called a SPECT scan.

While it is not a technology new to medicine, it is certainly a new and not-yet-common tool in the treatment of addiction.

“We are definitely a pioneer in this,” said Barbara Krantz, Hanley’s CEO and medical director of research. “Addiction medicine is finally catching up with technology.”

Hanley is teaming up with renowned brain imaging expert Dr. Daniel Amen to put the pictures to use.

And in these pictures, the brain of an addict looks less like a fried egg and more like Swiss cheese.

This is probably the SPECT scan’s most agreed-upon benefit.

People who can see that an addict’s brain is physically different – riddled with holes where blood flow should be or lit up like a fireball with an overabundance of activity – are more likely to believe they have a problem or to recognize that addiction isn’t simply an attitude.

And what a deterrent.

Amen, speaking to a group of about 200 health care professionals at Hanley Tuesday, boasts that he shows his kids the Swiss cheese “your brain on drugs” images in hopes they’ll steer clear.

He said a judge in Cleveland buys poster images “by the hundreds” for the same purpose.

Amen and Krantz believe the scans will be even more valuable in tailoring recovery programs for individuals.

How extensively the scans can be used in diagnosing psychiatric, behavioral or mood disorders that may underlie or accompany addiction continues to be a matter of discussion in the medical community.

The problem?

For one: Not all addicts’ brains look alike. Some addicts’ brains are more resilient and healthy looking than others.

And some people who are not addicts have imperfect scans for other reasons, said Marisa Silveri, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School who specializes in neuroimaging research.

Still, she describes herself as optimistic that down the road such efforts will lead to better treatments, yet cautious about the current rise in the use of SPECT imaging for personalized diagnosis.

For now, what she wants are more empirically based SPECT studies that compare the brains of control groups to those of addicted ones.

That evidence is something Amen’s few ardent critics say he lacks.

The director of the National Institute of Mental Health, Dr. Thomas Insel, is on record as saying neuroimaging is the future in psychiatric treatment.

The institute’s website notes neuroimaging can be a useful tool to find the right diagnosis for mood and behavioral problems.

And brain imaging – not just SPECT scans, but PET scans, which are more detailed, and MRIs which don’t require radioactive material coursing through veins – are responsible for strides in the understanding of addiction.

Amen, who operates four clinics from his home offices in California and boasts the world’s largest collection of nearly 60,000 SPECT scans, said he has seen the benefits firsthand.

For example, he said, he might be confronted by two alcoholics. One can’t stop thinking about his drug. He’s controlled. Obsessed.

The other is simply impulsive. Doesn’t think a lot about it, but when presented with it can’t refuse.

A brain scan, Amen said, would give insight into how each brain functions and could lead to entirely different treatment approaches.

Hanley plans for everyone coming for treatment to be scanned initially as part of the program cost.

They can have a follow up after they’re in recovery, for $1,200 – a fee that some insurance will cover, Krantz said. The machine will also be available to the public, she said.

Finally, the scans will be part of an ongoing research project that Hanley is coordinating with Scripps Florida’s Paul Kenny. They hope to find biomarkers that predict which patients are most likely to relapse.

Staff researcher Niels Heimeriks contributed to this story.

Source: Palm Beach Post

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The Intervention Experts

Certified Sex Addiction Therapist

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The Intervention Experts Qualifications

CSAT: Certified Sex Addiction Therapist

This post-master’s course is taught by Dr. Patrick Carnes, the pioneer and leader in sex addiction treatment and therapy. It takes one full year to receive this certification and requires the professional to work with sex addicts, relationship addicts, love addicts those who suffer from early childhood trauma. What causes the addiction. The certification goes into every aspect of sexual behavior as it relates to sex addiction, love addiction and romance addiction and how the person becomes out of control and life becomes unmanageable. The professional is requires to work personally under the supervision of Dr. Patrick Carnes for 4 one week periods during the year in class. There are less than 700 professionals who hold this designation. It also requires 60 hours of supervision by a certified instructor. Sitting in front of the supervisor with patients struggling with sex addiction issues. Dan worked with John Jamieson, CSATS (Certified Sex Addiction Therapist Supervisor) trained by Patrick Carnes.

Board Registered Interventionist

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The Intervention Experts Qualifications

BRI: Board Registered Interventionist

1. The professional has to be in the field of addiction for at least 5 years
2. Successfully complete a minimum of 14 hours of training/education specific to addictions other than to alcohol and drugs, i.e., gambling, food, sex, etc.
3. Have six years of work experience conducting interventions.
4. Demonstrate experience with addictions other than alcohol and drugs Gambling, food, sex, etc.
5. Completed fourteen (14) hours of training/education on intervention to minimally include:

  • History of interventions
  • Suicide and homicide screenings
  • Stages of Change
  • Family Therapy
  • Johnson Intervention Model
  • Systemic Intervention Model
  • ARISE Intervention Model
  • Other types of intervention strategies
  • Ethical consideration of an interventionist
  • How to determine what intervention model to use

Requirements for BRI II

Meet all training requirements to become a BRI I and provide documentation of a minimum of fourteen (14) hours of training on Intervention techniques for the following:

  • Food Addictions
  • Sex Addiction
  • Gambling Addiction
  • Domestic Violence
  • MISA clients
  • How to work with special populations, i.e., lawyers, pilots etc.
  • Choosing the right intervention approach