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Simple Screening Instruments for Outreach for Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse and Infectious Diseases
Treatment Improvement Protocol (TIP) Series 11

TIP11: Simple Screening Instruments for Outreach for Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse and Infectious Diseases
Simple Screening Instruments for Outreach for Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse and Infectious Diseases

[Front Matter]

[Title Page]

Simple Screening Instruments for Outreach for Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse and Infectious Diseases
Treatment Improvement Protocol (TIP) Series 11
 
Ken C. Winters, Ph.D.
Jonathan M. Zenilman, M.D.
Consensus Panel Co-Chairs
 
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Public Health Service
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Center for Substance Abuse Treatment
Rockwall II, 5600 Fishers Lane
Rockville, MD 20857
DHHS Publication No. (SMA) 95-3058.
Printed 1994. Reprinted 1995.

[Disclaimer]

This publication is part of the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant technical assistance program. All material appearing in this volume, except quoted passages from copyrighted sources, is in the public domain and may be reproduced or copied without permission from the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) or the authors. Citation of the source is appreciated.

This publication was written under contract number ADM 270-91-0007 from the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Anna Marsh, Ph.D., and Sandra Clunies, M.S., served as the CSAT Government project officers. Duiona Baker, M.P.H., served as the Government content advisor.

Randi Henderson, Mim Landry, and Deborah Shuman served as writers.

The opinions expressed herein are the views of the consensus panel members and do not reflect the official position of CSAT or any other part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). No official support or endorsement of CSAT or DHHS is intended or should be inferred. The guidelines proffered in this document should not be considered as substitutes for individualized patient care and treatment decisions.

What Is a TIP?

CSAT Treatment Improvement Protocols (TIPs) are prepared by the Quality Assurance and Evaluation Branch to facilitate the transfer of state-of-the-art protocols and guidelines for the treatment of alcohol and other drug (AOD) abuse from acknowledged clinical, research, and administrative experts to the Nation's AOD abuse treatment resources.

The dissemination of a TIP is the last step in a process that begins with the recommendation of an AOD abuse problem area for consideration by a panel of experts. These include clinicians, researchers, and program managers, as well as professionals in such related fields as social services or criminal justice.

Once a topic has been selected, CSAT creates a Federal resource panel, with members from pertinent Federal agencies and national organizations, to review the state of the art in treatment and program management in the area selected. Recommendations from this Federal panel are then transmitted to the members of a second group, which consists of non-Federal experts who are intimately familiar with the topic. This group, known as a non-Federal consensus panel, meets in Washington for 5 days, makes recommendations, defines protocols, and arrives at agreement on protocols. Its members represent AOD abuse treatment programs, hospitals, community health centers, counseling programs, criminal justice and child welfare agencies, and private practitioners. A chair for the panel is charged with responsibility for ensuring that the resulting protocol reflects true group consensus.

The next step is a review of the proposed guidelines and protocol by a third group whose members serve as expert field reviewers. Once their recommendations and responses have been reviewed, the chair approves the document for publication. The result is a TIP reflecting the actual state of the art of AOD abuse treatment in public and private programs recognized for their provision of high quality and innovative AOD abuse treatment.

This TIP, titled Simple Screening Instruments for Outreach for Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse and Infectious Diseases, addresses the twin epidemics of substance abuse and infectious diseases. Service providers from many disciplines and across many systems and agencies are increasingly encountering individuals with AOD abuse problems, which place them at higher risk for acquiring infectious diseases. The TIP presents two screening instruments - one for AOD abuse and one for infectious diseases - that were designed to be able to be rapidly administered by a wide range of providers and relatively simple to score and interpret. The instruments are flexible and applicable to diverse populations. The TIP describes considerations in the development of these instruments and offers guidelines for their use in field tests. Guidelines for training staff in the use of these instruments are also presented, and legal and ethical concerns, especially in the area of confidentiality, are discussed.

This TIP represents another step by CSAT toward its goal of bringing national leadership to bear in the effort to improve AOD abuse treatment.

Consensus Panel

Chairs:

Ken C. Winters, Ph.D.
Director
Center for Adolescent Substance Abuse
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Jonathan M. Zenilman, M.D.
Assistant Professor
Division of Infectious Diseases
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Baltimore, Maryland

Facilitators:

Michele D. Kipke, Ph.D.
Associate Director
Division of Adolescent Medicine
Children's Hospital of Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California
Juan Carlos Lovelace, Ed.D.
Executive Assistant
Child and Youth Services Administration
District of Columbia Commission on Mental Health Services
Florence Stroud, M.P.H., B.S.N.
Senior Deputy Director of Health
for Community Health Programs
San Francisco Department of Public Health

Workgroup Members:

Margaret Brooks, J.D.
Consultant
Montclair, New Jersey
Lynn M. Campanario
Senior Community Epidemiologist STD/HIV Clinic
Fulton County Health Department
Atlanta, Georgia
Barbara Chaffee, M.D.
United Health Services
Binghamton, New York
Yvonne Frazier
Associate Director
Grants and AIDS Activities
Community Substance Abuse Services
Department of Public Health
City and County of San Francisco
Nancy Jainchill, Ph.D.
Principal Investigator
Center for Therapeutic Community Research
National Development and Research Institutes
New York, New York
Lee A. Jenkins
Supervisor
Street Team AIDS Risk Reduction
Communicable Disease Branch
Georgia Department of Human Resources
Atlanta, Georgia
Rolando T. Martinez, M.S.W., B.C.D.
Director of Social Work
St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center
Hartford, Connecticut
Ann Elizabeth Medinger, M.D.
Associate Professor of Medicine and Physiology
George Washington University School of Medicine
Washington, D.C.
Eileen C. Napolitano
Assistant Chief
Sexually Transmitted Disease Control Program
New Jersey Department of Health
Trenton, New Jersey
Sheryl S. Palmer, M.A.
HESS Coordinator
Treatment Alternatives for Special Clients, Inc.
Chicago, Illinois
John Rullan, M.D.
Executive Director
Central Office for AIDS Affairs and Communicable Disease
Puerto Rico Department of Health
Kevin M. Shipman, M.H.S.
Public Health Educator
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services Administration
Washington, D.C.
James P. Simmons
Consultant
Potomac, Maryland
Wayne Wiebel, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
School of Public Health
University of Illinois at Chicago

Foreword

The Treatment Improvement Protocol Series (TIPs) fulfills CSAT's mission to improve alcohol and other drug (AOD) abuse and dependency treatment by providing best practices guidance to clinicians, program administrators, and payers. This guidance, in the form of a protocol, results from a careful consideration of all relevant clinical and health services research findings, demonstration experience, and implementation requirements. A panel of non-Federal clinical researchers, clinicians, program administrators, and patient advocates employs a consensus process to produce the product. This panel's work is reviewed and critiqued by field reviewers as it evolves.

The talent, dedication, and hard work that TIPs panelists and reviewers bring to this highly participatory process have bridged the gap between the promise of research and the needs of practicing clinicians and administrators. I am grateful to all who have joined with us to contribute to advance our substance abuse treatment field.

Susan L. Becker
Associate Director for State Programs
Center for Substance Abuse Treatment

 



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