07 September 2014

The Language of New Drugs - From Education to Assessment


The KFx Cats, Bees and Dragonflies course explores the subject of newer, emerging drugs. One of the issues we address very early in this course is terms of reference. This inevitably brings up the vexed question of what collective terms to use about newer compounds.

For well rehearsed reasons we should eschew the phrase “Legal Highs.” Many of the compounds are no longer legal, and not all are stimulants. There is debate as to whether or not people construe legality to equate with safety. I am of the mind that ‘legal’ has connotations of being sanctioned or approved. It suggests legality via permission. As this is not the case with our newer compounds, I prefer “unregulated” as opposed to “legal.”
The phrase that has become de rigeur amongst academics and policy experts is Novel Psychoactive Compounds (or substances). It’s the phrase of choice for the EU, and the EMCDDA defines it thus:
a new narcotic or psychotropic drug, in pure form or in preparation, that is not controlled by the United Nations drug conventions, but which may pose a public health threat comparable to that posed by substances listed in these conventions.”

There are a number of problems with this definition, not least some of the compounds are not that new: Nitrous Oxide has been around since the latter half of the 19th Century, 4-mmc was first synthesised in 1929 and a lot of the benzo-type drugs doing the rounds at the moment were first synthesised in the 1960s.
It also creates the small problem that as soon as the drug is controlled by the UN drug conventions it ceases to be a Novel Psychoactive Compound (NPC).
Most problematically for me it has little or no relevance as a term to end users. A resource, service or awareness session entitled referring to Novel Psychoactive Compounds will not register with key target groups. Asking people “what NPCs have you used in the last month” won’t elicit the information that I am looking for. It’s akin to when the language switched from talking about “glue sniffing” to “volatile substance abuse.” The language may be more accurate but what it gains in accuracy it loses in comprehension.
The other thing that is interesting about all the widely used phrases: “Novel Psychoactive Compounds,” “Legal Highs,” and “Research Chemicals” is that the word Drugs is absent. According to Rick Bradley at KCA, presenting at a seminar in 2014, about 85% of NPS users do not recognise themselves as drug users.
The language we have all adopted contributes to the sense that these are somehow distinct from other drugs.

In turn, this linguistic sleight of hand has, to my mind, disempowered drugs workers. The recurrent theme from training sessions is a sense of not understanding this new world of NPS. These are often experienced workers who can deal with the full spectrum of “traditional” drugs. Reminding these workers that these are still drugs, much like ones they can and have worked with, does much to overcome this sense of disempowerment.

So over time I have tried to find a language that works to address these problems. I ended up finding that the phrase “Newer Unregulated Drugs” worked reasonably well. Except when the law changes. But it’s largely immaterial as I am not egotistical enough to think the phrase will ever catch on. What’s more important is that we have the discussion and explore the role language and terminology plays in constructing paradigms.
Language of Assessment:
What we call our emerging drugs also has a bearing on the assessment process. If we don’t ask and prompt about newer drugs, we may not get this information volunteered. And when it comes to newer drugs this brings with some very specific challenges.

1: Not perceiving substances to be drugs:
As highlighted earlier, there’s some evidence that some people may not consider their “legal” substances to be drugs, so if they are asked about other drugs may not volunteer emergent drugs.
2: Unfamiliar with collective terms:
We want to try and avoid the term “legal highs” for reasons mentioned and use of phrases such as Novel Psychoactive Compounds may not have a high recognition factor with young people.
3: May not be familiar with drug families or link drugs to families
Routinely we would ask people about (for example) their benzodiazepine use. But asking this doesn’t automatically mean that the respondent will link their Etizolam use to the use of benzos, and volunteer this as a response. Similarly, although we ask about cannabis use, the respondent may not volunteer that they are smoking synthetic cannabinoids.
4: May not know what they have used or have misidentified it:
The emergence of generic slang such as “legals” could cover a wide range of drugs. Regionally, slang such as “Monkey Dust” or “Bubble” could refer to a specific compound such as mephedrone or any unknown white powder.  In turn “mephedrone,” once referring to 4-mmc, could now be used interchangeably for other white powder drugs. So assumptions both by user and worker as to what a person is actually using could be both misleading and dangerous.
5: We don’t want to give people a shopping list:
Especially when working with younger, naïve users, it is important that the assessment process doesn’t end up introducing the client to a whole list of substances with which they were unfamiliar. So while initially tempting, an assessment form which either lists or illustrates a wide range of different products is risky. It is still unlikely to be comprehensive – there are SO many brands on the market now. But it also risks introducing substances to a client who was hitherto unaware of that compound of family of drugs. We need to prompt, but without exposing the respondent to still more compounds.

Assessment to Prompt, not Promote:
After a numerous training sessions and a number of false starts, a screening process emerged which addressed all my key concerns. It sits alongside an existing standard screen and looks specifically at newer drugs. Rather than exploring specific substances it looks at types of compound and routes. So for example by asking about smoked substances it can elicit synthetic cannabinoids, kratom, or salvia without naming the substances. Even vague references to “I smoked something, I’m not sure what it was…” can be incorporated.
 
Likewise, by asking about “white powders” we can explore all the different brands and unbranded substances, again without having to give names. Using the same format, the tool asks about Pills and Pellets, and Other Substances (swallowed, inhaled etc) to cover other drug groups.

In training we use the Drug Map to explore the relative location of different drugs. We can use it to explore
potency, duration and effects. In the context of assessment it is left blank, so the respondent can describe how the substance affected them – strong stimulant effect, very hallucinogenic, drowsy and so on. This is useful, not least because it ensures that the client can articulate their experience of the substance. It can also highlight where there’s a high chance they have used something other than their names substance – where the effects described are at variance with typical reports of that drug.
The assessment tool goes on to explore key issues stemming from use and develop an action plan. Sample pages are shown below.

As with other KFx resources this Assessment Tool can be downloaded from the KFx website here. It is free to download and use. If you have any feedback I would be keen to hear it and will revise the tool as feedback is received.
Ideally use of the tool will be combined with staff training to increase awareness and confidence of responding to Newer Unregulated Drugs. Such training is of course available via KFx.


LINKS: 







14 July 2014

Old Waves, New Waves, Permanent Waves



A couple of years ago I wrote a blog article about the strained relationship between radical politics and drug dependency. On that occasion I was looking at the challenge that social movements such as Occupy face when people experiencing problematic drug use and people engaged in social protests end up sharing the same created spaces – or what Hakim Bey called “Temporary Autonomous Zones.”

I was reminded of this blog on reading Alistair Sinclair’s excellent article in Drink and Drug News entitled “Catching the Wave.” Locating his discourse firmly from the perspective that the “personal is political,” Sinclair argues “while we have been encouraged to focus on the ‘canaries in the mine,’ those who are the first visible casualties of a sick society, fixing them and returning them to a productive life, we have been discouraged, interestingly from looking at the mine itself.”
Whilst agreeing wholeheartedly with Sinclair here, a bit that I find fascinating is the line “we have been discouraged…from looking at the mine itself.” Discouraged by whom, and why?

I originally looked TAZs in the context of radical politics. Since then it has been interesting to observe the new TAZs of the Recovery Movement emerge. The Recovery Walks, Festivals, Alcohol Free Bars are each examples of temporary spaces creating their own rules, norms and dialogues outside of the societal mainstream. In this respect they represent a radical, grass-roots derived response to substance dependency.
From the point of radical politics there is a great deal here to admire – the gathering of groups of people who find common cause and who, with minimal reliance on external agencies, have grown their own communities.

Here though, lies the first challenge. As Bey noted when talking of Temporary Autonomous Zones, as the initial rush of creativity is lost, a TAZ can stultify, and deteriorate to a structured system that stifles creativity. Those who make the path by walking it risk creating a new highway that all follow and from which only the brave or the foolhardy deviate.
There are however, bigger challenges. Perhaps these are why, as Sinclair notes, we are discouraged from looking at the mine itself.

Sinclair’s article talks with the passion of a fin de siècle theorist of how we are “staring in to an abyss and facing the ‘challenges of modernity.’” Radical talk indeed. Almost revolutionary. How well does such radicalism sit alongside 12 step traditions?

Given the AA tradition that “Alcoholics Anonymous has no opinion on outside issues,” there is a clear tension between internal personal audit and a process of external fault finding. An addict is sick, and must acknowledge this if they are to recover. But does the same model that encourages this introspection actively discourage acknowledgement of the sick society?

This sense of being unable or unwilling to look at the mine rather than just treating the canaries is reinforced by other articles of faith. The Serenity Prayer for example, the acceptance of things that can’t be changed, throws up the sharp question is a failing society something that should be accepted with serenity. Likewise, the invocation to “sweep off our side of the street,” discourages a more radical approach which seeks to challenge the causes. "His faults are not discussed. We stick to our own.” 

It would of course be wrong to elide all recovery communites and these aspects of AA tradition. Sinclair’s article takes a far wider view of recovery and is not rooted in a Fellowship paradigm. But at present much of UK recovery does draw on Fellowship traditions and as such it is firmly located within an apolitical nexus.

While the spaces that the recovery community create may themselves be apolitical, they are unavoidably located within a wider political context. The political idealism which has driven much of what is now labeled ‘recovery’ has very definite views of canaries and mines and recovery. Once recovered, a canary should very much get itself back down the mine, and become a hard-working canary, especially if it wants any more millet.

So very far from critically looking at the society that creates the sickness, the political paymasters are disinterested in healing a sick society rooted in inequality. They want the sick well so that they can go back to being efficient healthy cogs in the machine, but with an adjusted mind-set that allows them to cope with the machine better, in gratitude and humility.

I have no doubt that Sinclair’s right about our sick society and the need for communitarian responses. At present we risk a combination of temporary autonomous zones ossifying in to permanent ones, an ideological bedrock that eschews controversy, and paymasters who are more interested in human function than the human condition.

While some aspects of emergent recovery communities are deeply radical in spirit and execution, and while some individuals do speak loudly about the wider issue of our sick society, the fear is that the lack of radicalism will leave people in the same mine as they were ever in.