iu students and substance use - healthlinc indiana...become familiar with indiana...
Post on 31-Aug-2020
1 Views
Preview:
TRANSCRIPT
GOALS
• BECOME FAMILIAR WITH INDIANA UNIVERSITY-
BLOOMINGTON SUBSTANCE USE TRENDS
• LEARN ABOUT OASIS’ COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH
• EXPLORE COLLEGIATE ADDICTION RECOVERY
• FURTHER IMPLICATIONS FOR INTEGRATION
SUBSTANCE USE ON CAMPUS
ALCOHOL
• 57.9% 21 AND UNDER (PAST MONTH)
• 81.9% 21 AND OVER (PAST MONTH)
• 51.9% REPORT BINGE DRINKING (PAST 2
WEEKS)
• 21.3% REPORT BINGE DRINKING 3+ (PAST 2
WEEKS)
• NO DIFFERENCE IN GENDER
OTHER DRUGS
• MARIJUANA, RX DRUGS, OTHER HALLUCINOGENS
• 25.2% MJ USE IN PAST MONTH
• 7.3% REPORT RX MISUSE PAST MONTH
• MALES USE MORE THAN FEMALES (RX, MJ AND COCAINE)
• MOST COMMON MISUSED RX: STIMULANTS (16.1%),
BENZOS (4.3%), OPIOIDS (4.1%)
• CLUB DRUGS (MDMA)
• VERY EXPERIMENTAL, CURIOUS
Source: Indiana Collegiate Substance Use Survey, 2014 (N=992)
i.e. what’s really going on?
SUBSTANCE USE ON CAMPUS, CONT'D
ACUTE HEALTH CONSEQUENCES
• INJURIES AND POISONING
• INFECTIONS, ILLNESS
• ACUTE PANCREATITIS
• WEIGHT GAIN, MALNUTRITION
• TRAFFIC ACCIDENTS
• OVERDOSE AND DEATH
Source: Indiana Collegiate Substance Use Survey, 2014 (N=992)
COLLEGE SUBSTANCE USE: CHALLENGES
• SUBSTANCE USE NORMALIZED AMONG THE STUDENT BODY,
STAFF, FACULTY
• #1 PROBLEM LEADING TO POOR HEALTH OUTCOMES, LIMITED
PROGRESSION AND RETENTION, YET NOT PROPERLY
FUNDED OR ADDRESSED ON CAMPUS
• TRADITIONAL PREVENTION FAVORS AN ABSTINENCE BASED
MODEL, WHICH CAN BE ISOLATING
• REACTIVE ENVIRONMENT VS. PROACTIVE
ARE WE GOING TO ACCEPT
CIRCUMSTANCES AND
CONDITIONS AS THEY ARE NOW?
OR
ARE WE GOING TO TAKE
RESPONSIBILITY FOR
SUPPORTING CHANGE?
POLLING QUESTION #1
•WHAT ARE COMMON CHALLENGES IN ADDRESSING
SUBSTANCE USE AT IU-BLOOMINGTON?
OASIS MODEL
• OUR MISSION: REDUCE THE HARM CREATED BY THE PRESENCE OF SUBSTANCES
ON CAMPUS
• ADDRESS ENTIRE CONTINUUM OF SUBSTANCE USE ON CAMPUS (ABSTAINERS-
RECOVERING)
• STRUCTURALLY PART OF IU HEALTH CENTER, HOUSED IN RESIDENCE HALL
• REFERRED FOR TREATMENT (MEDICAL WITHDRAWAL SOMETIMES NECESSARY)
• “WELLNESS” AND “RECOVERY” VS. “ABUSE” AND “ADDICTION”
• COLLABORATION IN A WORLD OF SILOS
• MEDICAL STAFF (NURSES, PHYSICIANS, PHARMACISTS, PSYCHOLOGISTS,
PREVENTION AND HEALTH PROMOTION SPECIALISTS)
Nationally, 31% of 18-24 year-olds meet diagnostic criteria for
addictive disorders (SAMHSA, 2015). Only 4% receive help.
Supporting Recovery
Is Part of our
Prevention/Wellness
Responsibility
Recovery
SECONDARY PREVENTION
Screening, Assessment, Brief Intervention, Counseling
Alcohol
Skills
Training
Program
(ASTP)
Brief
Alcohol
Screening
Intervention
For College
Students
(BASICS)CASE
MANAGEMENT
Factoid: OASIS conducts 1,800+ sessions per year. 89% mandated, 11%
self-referred (2015-16)
TERTIARY PREVENTION: REFERRAL AND RECOVERY SUPPORT
• ASSESSMENT REFERRAL TO LOCAL AND NATIONAL RESOURCES FOR TREATMENT
&
• TRANSITIONAL CARE RETURNING TO CAMPUS
• HEALTH AND WELLNESS SUPPORTS
• DUAL CARE (CO-OCCURING CONDITIONS)
• CROSS-TOLERANCE/CROSS-ADDICTION EDUCATION
• CHRONIC CONDITIONS DIABETES, ASTHMA, HEPATITIS, STI
• ACADEMIC SUPPORTS (ACADEMIC AND CAREER ADVISING, LEGAL COUNSELING)
• AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT(ADA) PRIORITY REGISTRATION
What would happen if we renamed “addiction counselors” to
“recovery counselors?”
COLLEGIATE ADDICTION RECOVERY
• EARLIEST PROGRAMS: 4 BETWEEN 1977-1997, NOW 62+ (NONE IN
INDIANA)
• COLLEGIATE RECOVERY PROGRAMS COMBINE THE BEST OF:
SOCIAL AND PEER SUPPORTS, SPECIALIZED ACADEMIC
RESOURCES, HEALTH AND WELLNESS SUPPORT, MEDICAL CARE
• RECOVERY+ RETENTION+ PROGRESSION=GRADUATION
• EARLY RESEARCH INDICATES: ABOVE AVERAGE GPAS,
ENGAGEMENT AND POSITIVE SOCIAL CONTAGION
IMPLICATIONS• WE CAN NO LONGER AFFORD TO ISOLATE SUBSTANCE USE DISORDER ASSESSMENT,
TREATMENT, AND RECOVERY SUPPORT
• SUCCESS DEPENDS ON IMPROVED SHARING, COMMUNICATION, AND AN
INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH
• HEALTH PROMOTION, PREVENTION, INTERVENTION, AND TREATMENT: COMPREHENSIVE
MODEL
• DO WE WANT TO BE RIGHT, OR DO WE WANT TO BE HAPPY?
• IT’S ABOUT THE PERSON/PATIENT/CLIENT/STUDENT, NOT THE PROFESSIONAL.
• GENERATIONAL DIVIDE: TECHNOLOGY, PREFERENCES IN
TIME AND LOCATION, VERY OPEN
POLLING QUESTION #2
•COLLEGIATE RECOVERY PROGRAMS ARE BEST
DESCRIBED AS A GROUP OF INTERVENTIONS ALONG
WHAT PHASE OF THE PREVENTION SPECTRUM?
Q AND A
OFFICE: 1900 E. 10TH STREET, EIGENMANN HALL WEST, ROOM 726
PHONE: (812) 856-3898
EMAIL: OASIS@INDIANA.EDU
SOCIAL MEDIA: FACEBOOK (OASISIUB), TWITTER
(@IUDRUGALCPREV), PINTEREST (OASIS INDIANA U)
top related