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This is your gateway to numerous informative sites on the web - just click on the links to get you there, then click the "back" button on your browser to bring you back here. You can Search the Blogsite for articles from the past in the box at the top, or you can go to the bottom and click on "Older Posts", or bottom right under my picture for articles in previous months...... go on, you know you want to.....

Sunday 25 January 2009

How fast should we Detox?



Here's a question with no answer in science: so your patient says "Yes", now is the time to wean off my dependency on methadone/buprenorphine/heroin etc... so how fast should you do it? Some favour the "Grasp the nettle" approach and just get it over with as quick as possible - others, believeing that stepping off a cliff will hurt whereas a gentle if long-winded descent will be much more bearable, favour the latter.

As a paragon of client-centredness I have always gone with whatever my patient feels most confident with, but my inner prejudice, based on overseeing many thousands of detoxes over the years, is that the quick rough ride, maxed up with lots of motivation and support, is the better way: it seems that over a long period of painfully drawn out reductions, something inevitably happens that sets the client back.

So I was interested in a piece of research in Addiction Vol.104 Feb 2009 by Ling et al in the USA that compared the outcomes (in terms of total abstinence) of 7 day and 28 day taperings of buprenorphine... and basically there was no significant difference, both groups maintaining around 13% abstinence at 28 days - which on the one hand appears disappointing, on the other could be seen as encouraging. The authors conclusion being that: "there appears to be no advantage in prolonging the duration of taper."

Saturday 3 January 2009



Happy New Year people - thank you for looking at these pages again. What do have we to look forward to on 2009? Well, I think that many areas are looking at developing alcohol services in general practice, and I look forward to telling you more about the RCGP Alcohol Certificate training when it becomes available.

I hear from some quarters that Primary Care has never been busier, with all manner of pressures on time and resources, and sometimes it might seem that substance misuse is yet another niche piece of work that is more trouble than it's worth: others however remind me that there are few areas of medicine where it is possible to make so much difference to someone's life, so easily - and it remains one of the most rewarding aspects of a GP's life. So keep the faith, and keep on top of your CPD - I hope to meet many more of you this year. You can keep an eye on the upcoming training events on the right which are continuously updated - and please, if you have anything that would be of interest to colleagues in the region, please contact me and I'll post it.

PS: For those of you not lucky enough to get to APSAD (no, me neither) - there are some excellent presentations now available on the web (click here)