The comprehensive assessment should result in
a treatment plan that is developed in concert
with the patient by a physician with input from
other health professionals. The treatment plan
should articulate clearly the treatment goals and
particular interventions aimed at meeting each of
those goals. The plan should be monitored and
revised as needed should the patient’s status or
needs change.^18
The comprehensive assessment also should
result in a detailed and thorough written report,
which should be incorporated into the patient’s
health record, that:
Provides a clinical diagnosis and identifies
the particular manifestations and severity of
the disease;
Identifies factors that contribute to or are
related to the disease;
Identifies a treatment plan to address these
risk factors and ensure that the treatment
plan is implemented and monitored
effectively; and
Provides connections to specialty care--i.e.,
an addiction physician specialist or other
specialty providers--as needed and to
auxiliary and support services.^19
Stabilization*
The first step in addressing addiction involving
nicotine, alcohol or other drugs is cessation of
use and, if necessary, medically managing the
clearance of toxic substances from the patient’s
system via a clinical process often referred to as
detoxification. Detoxification itself addresses
intoxication or withdrawal but is not treatment
of addiction.^20 In most cases, cessation of use is
the necessary first step to formal treatment
protocols. While cessation of use can in some
- Note that some of the medications described for use
in the stabilization (tobacco cessation and
alcohol/other drug detoxification) process will be
described in greater detail later in this chapter in the
discussions of acute treatments for addiction and
chronic disease management.
cases be a self-managed process, patients
typically need professional assistance.
Cessation of Use ..........................................................................................................
Tobacco. Smoking cessation, while unpleasant
for most persons going through it, is not unsafe
and does not require medical monitoring.
Patients undergoing smoking cessation may
experience certain withdrawal symptoms
including cravings, irritability, impatience,
hostility, anxiety, depressed mood, difficulty
concentrating, decreased heart rate, increased
appetite and sleep disturbances.^21 The calming
effect many smokers feel when smoking usually
is associated more with the relief of nicotine
withdrawal symptoms than with the effects of
the nicotine itself. Withdrawal symptoms can
commence in as little as a few hours after the
last dose of nicotine, peak within a few days,
and either subside within several weeks or, in
some cases, persist for months.^22
Nicotine replacement therapy (NRT)--through
the use of nicotine patches, gum, nasal spray,
inhalers, lozenges and sub-lingual tablets--is a
common pharmaceutical aid for persons
attempting smoking cessation. NRT lessens
withdrawal symptoms, increasing the chance
that a smoker will quit successfully.^23 NRT
replaces some of the nicotine formerly obtained
by smoking.^24 However, the nicotine in NRT is
delivered more slowly and at lower dose levels
than through smoking, so NRT is more likely to
reduce cravings than wholly eliminate them.^25
Some NRTs mimic the sensations of smoking
(the inhaler) or otherwise occupy the mouth
(gum, lozenges and sub-lingual tablets).^26
Research indicates that the most effective use of
NRT involves replicating the experience of
smokers: using nicotine patches to maintain a
baseline serum nicotine level along with the gum
or lozenges to produce a boost of serum nicotine
levels periodically.^27
Other pharmaceutical therapies such as
antidepressants (bupropion SR) and nicotine
agonists (varenicline) can help people quit