Kitsap Sun

Research backs new drug treatment

Approaches combine strategies to aid substance use recovery

- Conor Wilson

For decades, research into substance use treatment has found that a rigid focus on abstinence-only models has caused just a small fraction of those in need to seek treatment.

But as the opioid epidemic surges in Kitsap and across the country, Wayne Swanson, director of Subacute Recovery Services at Kitsap Mental Health Services, says providers are beginning to examine new approaches of substance use treatment, including ways to lower barriers and better engage those in need.

As part of a free lecture he’ll give at Olympic College Thursday, titled “Rethinking Approaches to Substance Use

Recovery,” Swanson will outline how providers are embracing a more compassion­ate treatment model. They are shifting away from an all-or-nothing mindset of abstinence and instead focusing on how harm reduction can be included in treatment.

“Overdose deaths are higher than they’ve ever been, and we recognize the need to engage people in treatment more effectivel­y,” Swanson said in an interview last week. “We’ll talk about the problem and then about how we’ve traditiona­lly done treatment and ways we can expand or even redesign that to catch more of the people who need treatment.”

The talk is the first of what Kitsap Mental Health Services says will be a series of educationa­l events addressing community topics. It comes as city, county, and regional leaders are investing more effort in addressing the opioid crisis.

Overdose deaths, primarily driven by fentanyl, have skyrockete­d across the state, the Washington State Standard re

ported earlier this year. Between 2020 and 2022, opioid overdoses were responsibl­e for 169 deaths among Kitsap residents, according to data from a state Department of Health’s dashboard.

Traditiona­lly, treatment for those with substance use disorders, like opioids, has meant getting someone to abstain from drug use. It was seen as separate from harm reduction, such as safe injection sites or free Narcan, Swanson said, which were used in the field to keep people alive.

However, Swanson says providers are increasing­ly seeing that the philosophy of harm reduction, positive change, and safety can be effective components in better treatment outcomes. For patients, treatment may not mean abstinence, but it could be reduced use or ceasing use of one substance in favor of another that’s less harmful, he said.

Non-abstinence-based treatment of substance use disorders is a relatively novel approach, gaining momentum across the country in the last 20 years, according to a 2022 review of the model’s history co-authored by psychologi­sts at the University of North Carolina and University of New Mexico.

The evolution of substance use disorder treatment was heavily shaped by the 12-step model of Alcoholics Anonymous, a nonprofess­ional support group for those looking to quit drinking or narcotics. That model generally argued for an abstinence-only approach that remains pervasive among modern providers, the authors note, while research and implementa­tion of non-abstinence approaches have lagged behind.

The idea behind non-abstinence models is to not force people into unwanted change but allow them to address their own goals and make positive improvemen­ts.

Patients often come into substance use treatment with varying readiness for change, Swanson said. Rather than total sobriety, the majority of patients say their top priorities from treatment are things like reduced use of drugs, a better relationsh­ip with loved ones, or holding down a job.

“As a field, we need to recognize that,” Swanson said. “It doesn’t mean abstinence might not best serve those people in the long run. It means that [for] engagement, we have to look at all the other factors—the whole person—and see how we can get closer to that goal by working on what they’re coming to us with.”

A Kitsap Mental Health patient, for example, could have both a mental health and substance use disorder, but may only be ready to seek treatment for their mental health challenges.

“Again, [it’s] about lowering that barrier. You could be ready to work on mental health, but not ready to work on substance use,” Swanson said. “But that [therapist] sitting with you has an eye on it and can help you develop some motivation to maybe work on the substance use or at least increase your understand­ing of how substances are affecting your mental health.”

The “Rethinking Approaches to Substance Use” talk will be held Thursday, April 25, from 5 to 6:30 p.m. at Olympic College (1600 Chester Ave. in Bremerton), Building 4, room 129.

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