Drug Intervention

Drug use behavior appears, from this perspective, as the product of a complex field of forces. The socio-ecological model aims to revalue the human being as a social and cultural being. It addresses the drug problem as a multidimensional phenomenon, making it possible to search for and discover new intervention alternatives that allow it to be reduced and controlled by attacking its causes at different levels of depth. In this sense, drug use is resized as a social problem.

Intervention

In

Addiction

The Intervention is directed toward the problem’s causes and not only the symptoms.

 The Intervention is conceptualized from primary prevention, understood as a scientific attempt to know the factors that make a social problem possible –risk factors– and try to reduce its probability of appearance.

 That is, primary prevention is seen as an anticipatory action against risk factors to reduce their appearance and, in this way, lessen the incidence of maladjusted behavior. 

Preventive Actions Will Have The Following Characteristics

The subjects' socializing experiences are considered force vectors that condition their social behavior. It will try to intervene on these vectors rather than on the behavioral intentions of the potential drug user.

Preventive interventions start from childhood since the concept of primary prevention becomes unspecific, oriented to the integral development of the individual and not only to the avoidance of a specific behavior.

In this methodological and theoretical context, intervention actions have been proposed in the social and educational fields, among which we highlight the following as a representative sample of the proposals offered by the socio-ecological perspective.

Alcohol Consumption

 Action is taken on the risk factor, trying to find it in the greatest possible degrees of depth.

Thus, if, for example, research determines that certain personality traits increase the probability of early consumption in a minor or the development of addictive behavior in an adult, it will be necessary to find out what environmental conditions operate, in turn, as etiological antecedents of these traits –family socialization experiences from childhood, etc.–, to intervene on them to guide them in the right direction.

This type of action has as a common denominator the search for the cause rather than the direct Intervention on the behavioral intention:

  • Provide parents with the necessary resources and skills so that the socialization strategies they submit to their children are oriented towards promoting protective factors and avoiding risk factors. A representative work model is that of the schools for fathers and mothers, an educational instance where parents with small children learn strategies based on behavioral sciences and education to acquire sufficient skills and resources to educate their children (Pinazo, 1993).
  • Propose to society as a whole a critical analysis –albeit slow, objective, and non-moralizing– of the uses and customs that legitimize the consumption of institutionalized substances. Human behavior is not immune to the influences of macro social factors that define a society’s historical, political, and ethnographic characteristics. Individual decisions, micro-social influences, and these other wide-ranging factors inform everyday behaviors. For this reason, broad knowledge about the conditions that lead to an uncritical attitude towards commonly used drugs cannot be neglected, which, on the other hand, are the ones that facilitate learning in substance use (Melero, 1993).

Efficacy And Safety Of The Drug

Efficacy is the ability to produce an effect (e.g., lower blood pressure).

Efficacy can be accurately assessed only under ideal conditions (i.e., when proper criteria select patients and strictly adhere to the dosing schedule). Therefore, efficacy is measured under skillful supervision in a group of patients like to have a response to a drug, such as in a control clinical trial.

Strength differs from efficacy in considering how well a drug works in real-world use.

Often a drug that is effective in clinical trials could be stronger in actual use. For example, a drug may be highly effective in lowering blood pressure but low in strength because it causes so many adverse that patients stop taking it. Strength may also be less than efficacy if clinicians inadvertently prescribe the drug inappropriately. Therefore, effectiveness tends to be lower than efficacy.

Patient Oriented Results

Patient-oriented outcomes are those that affect the well-being of the patient. They comprise one or more of the following:

life extension

Improvement of function (e.g., prevention of disability)

Symptom relief

Surrogate Results

Surrogate or intermediate results involve factors that do not directly involve the well-being of patients.

It is often things such as physiologic parameters (e.g., blood pressure) or test results (e.g., glucose or cholesterol levels, tumor size on CT scan) that are thought to predict outcomes. Real patient oriented. For example, clinicians typically assume that low blood pressure will restrain the patient-oriented outcome of uncontrolled hypertension (e.g., death from a heart attack or stroke). However, a drug might lower blood pressure but not lower mortality because it has fatal adverse effects. Also, if the surrogate is simply a marker of disease (e.g., HbA1C) rather than a cause of the disease (e.g., high blood pressure), an intervention could reduce the marker in ways that do not affect the underlying disorder. Therefore, indirect outcomes are less desirable measures of efficacy than patient-oriented outcomes.

On the other hand, surrogate results may be much more feasible, e.g., e.g., when patient-oriented outcomes take a long time to appear (e.g., renal failure as a consequence of uncontrolled hypertension) or are rare. In such cases, clinical trials must be very large and run for long unless there is an alternate outcome. In contrast, surrogate outcomes are often continuous numerical (e.g., blood pressure, blood glucose). Unlike dichotomous outcomes, numerical variables can indicate an effect’s magnitude. Therefore,

However, surrogate outcomes should be proven to correlate with patient-oriented outcomes under ideal conditions. Many studies in which such a correlation seemed reasonable but was not present. For example, treating certain postmenopausal women with estrogen and progesterone resulted in a possible lipid profile. Still, it failed to achieve the postulated corresponding reduction in myocardial infarction or cardiac death. Similarly, lowering blood glucose to near normal concentrations in patients with diabetes in the intensive concern unit resulted in high mortality and morbidity (possibly through triggering hypoglycemic episodes) than lowering blood glucose at a slightly higher level. Some oral hypoglycemic drugs lower blood glucose, including HbA1C levels, but do not lower the risk of cardiac events. Some antihypertensive drugs lower blood pressure but do not lower the danger of stroke.…

Adverse Effects

Clinically related adverse effects are patient-oriented outcomes; examples involve the following:

  • A loss of life
  • Disability
  • Discomfort

Surrogate adverse (e.g., altered serum marker concentrations) are often used, but, as with surrogate efficacy outcomes, they should ideally correlate with patient-oriented adverse effects. Clinical trials designed to demonstrate efficacy may still need help identifying adverse effects if the time required for an adverse effect to develop longer than required for an advantage to occur or if the adverse strength is rare. For example, cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors relieve pain rapidly, and thus their efficacy can be shown in a comparatively short study. However, the growing incidence of myocardial infarction caused by some COX-2 inhibitors occurred over a long period and was not evident in the shorter and smaller trials. For this reason, because clinical trials may preclude certain subgroups and high-risk patients, adverse strength may only be fully known once a drug has been in widespread clinical use for years.

Many of the adverse effects of medications are dose-related.

 The Balance Between The Advantage And Adverse Effects Of Drugs

Whether a drug is indicated depends on the equivalence of its profit and harm. In such judgments, clinicians often consider somewhat subjective factors, such as personal experience, anecdotes, peer practices, and expert opinion.

The number needed to treat (NNT) is a less subjective measure of the potential benefits of a drug (or any other intervention). The NNT is the number of patients that are important to be treated for one patient to profit. For example, consider a drug that reduces mortality from a certain disease from 10% to 5%, an absolute danger reduction of 5% (1 in 20). That means that out of 100 patients, 90 would live even without treatment and, therefore, would not benefit from the drug.

The relative danger is the proportional difference between two levels of risk. For example, a drug that loses mortality from 10% to 5% reduces absolute mortality by 5% but decreases relative mortality by 50% (i.e., a 5% mortality rate indicates 50% fewer deaths than a 5% mortality rate). The mortality rate of 10%). Profits are often reported in the literature as relative danger reductions because these make a drug seem much more effective than absolute risk reductions (in the example above, a 50% reduction in mortality sounds much better). Then a reduction of 5%). Rather, adverse effects are generally reported as an increased risk because they make a drug appear safer. For example, if a drug gain the incidence of bleeding from 0,

When balancing NNT and NNH, weighing the magnitude of the specific benefits and harms is important. For example, a drug that causes much more harm than good may be worth a prescription if the harm is minor (e.g., reversible, mild) and the benefits are important (e.g., prevention of mortality or morbidity ). In all cases, it is better to use patient-oriented results.

Genetic profiling is increasingly used to identify subgroups of patients more susceptible to some drugs’ benefits and adverse effects.

Therapeutic

One of the goals of drug development is to have a large difference between the effective dose and the dose that cause adverse effects. A large difference is called a therapeutic index, therapeutic quotient, or wide therapeutic window. Suppose the therapeutic index is narrow (e.g., < 2). Usually, clinically insignificant factors (e.g., food-drug interactions, drug-drug interactions, small dosing errors) can have detrimental clinical effects. Insufficient anticoagulation grows the risk of complications from the anticoagulated disease (e.g., increased risk of stroke in atrial fibrillation), while excessive anticoagulation increases the risk of bleeding.…

What Is The Intervention Service?

The Intervention Service carries out the functions of control and internal inspection of the provincial institution’s economic, financial, and budgetary management, its autonomous body, and accounting functions.

The purpose of the auditing function is to supervise all the acts of the local entity and its autonomous body that give rise to the recognition and liquidation of rights and obligations or expenses of economic content, the income and payments derived from them, and the collection, investment, and application, in general, of the public funds administered, so that the management conforms to the provisions applicable in each case.

Professional Interventionist

Hiring a professional interventionist is very useful to help balance and direct to a good end, avoiding the conflicting part and the addict’s predisposition to emotional sabotage of the arguments at stake, also control that they overflow with bad forms such as shouting, fighting, etc. He will help with his work so that loved ones can give the addict the kind of fruitful care that he requires. The intervention accomplishes this by helping loved ones better understand their complicit behavior to begin healing themselves.

The help of an interventionist is the first step towards the freedom of the whole set of people involved in the process.

Important Intervention Therapy

Cognitive Therapy

Cognitive therapy is one of the main schools of psychotherapy and one of the oldest, second only to psychoanalytic therapy. Created by the American psychologist Aaron T. Beck in the 1970s, this famous psychology professional affirmed that a person’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are interrelated.

Following this theoretical framework, he created cognitive therapy. Distorted thoughts and beliefs are identified and modified, affecting how the person feels and acts. By modifying negative thoughts, the person can develop more flexible and positive ways of interpreting what happens to him and, in this way, improve his emotional state.

Psychoanalytic Therapy

Psychoanalytic therapy is one of the best-known therapies worldwide and the least understood by the general population. Developed by Sigmund Freud himself from his theories, psychoanalysis seeks to discover the mental mechanisms through which our unconscious conditions our thoughts and behaviors.

Therefore, the main objective of psychoanalytic therapy is to discover the early or previous experiences of the person’s life currently affecting him, thus offering insight and resolution of the patient’s problem.

 Psychodynamic Therapy

Psychodynamic therapy emerges as a type that includes the methods of action and theories of the different psychoanalytic therapies.

Therefore, as in psychoanalysis, therapy sessions aim to bring the unconscious to the surface, making it easier for the patient to understand the feelings and beliefs that are deeply rooted and that influence the way they live in the present.

The main difference between psychodynamic therapy and its school of origin is that the latter focuses on present problems or difficulties, trying to develop quick solutions.…

Behavioral Therapy

Unlike cognitive therapy, behavioral therapy focuses on thoughts and the need to promote changes in those behaviors that are harmful or maladaptive for the person.

The goal is for the person to choose which behaviors are positive or effective in interacting with the environment. Therefore, it is an action-based therapy that does not go so deeply into the deepest causes that lead to undesirable behavior but instead focuses on the current forms of behavior and how these can be modified.

 Cognitive Behavioral Psychotherapy

As a result of a combination of cognitive therapy and behavioral therapy, cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy (CBT) appeared. The professionals who followed these currents realized that both thoughts and behaviors strongly impact our emotional state and that these are not entities that act separately.

Cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy teaches the person that both thoughts and behaviors impact him and his environment, so this type of therapy aims to identify and evaluate learned behaviors and the dynamics of thought. Negative to modify them effectively and adaptively.

 Rational Emotive Psychotherapy

Within the cognitive school, we find a little-known therapy called rational emotive psychotherapy. This type of therapy is characterized by the fact that the patient must use reason and logic to identify distorted and negative thoughts and modify them to convert them into constructive thoughts that improve the effective state of the patient.

 Gestalt Therapy

Unlike previous therapies, Gestalt therapy stems from an entirely different school of thought, the Gestalt school. This psychological current defends the principle of relational theory, according to which each individual is a whole made up of body, mind, and soul.

The main objective of Gestalt therapy is to promote self-awareness free of value judgments and to enable clients to create a unique perspective on their lives. According to the theoretical framework of this type of therapy, sometimes this self-perception can be blocked by maladaptive thought patterns, which cause the person to develop negative or distressing effects.

Brief Strategic Therapy.

Strategic brief therapy is part of the so-called humanistic psychological school; it is a relatively new type of therapy that focuses mainly on creating solutions to specific problems, leaving aside the deepest roots of the problem.

The main advantage of strategic brief therapy is, as its name suggests, its brevity; since it does not usually require more than 20 therapy sessions. These sessions eliminate the person’s problematic behaviors and modify how the patient constructs his reality.

Full Attention Or Mindfulness

Mindfulness is not about psychological therapy as such, but about a type of thinking technique that allows us to connect directly with the present, paying attention to what is happening at present and thus reducing feelings of anxiety.

Through mindfulness, the person learns to know how to wait, put priorities in order, and control or manage negative reactions and day-to-day stress.

Logotherapy

Another of the main types of psychological therapy which is not well known by people is logotherapy. This type of therapy was created after World War II by the psychiatrist Viktor Frankl, who spent part of his life imprisoned in a Nazi concentration camp.

 Experiential Therapy

Finally, experiential therapy is another type of humanistic therapy that places each person as a unique and different being searching for transcendental meaning.

In this type of therapy, the role of emotions is highlighted as the main element with which to work in therapy sessions. It seeks to modify and restructure behaviors and beliefs subject to said emotions to achieve this.