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Battling the Scourge of Opioids

As part of its social work continuing education program, the presented 鈥淥pioids, Addiction Treatment, and the Impact on Children and Families鈥 on Friday, Nov. 22, 2019, at the .
Dr. Travis Rieder
The day began with an introduction by Dr. Gary Stein, chair of Wurzweiler's continuing education program. Dr. Stein noted the importance and timeliness of the conference in addressing the fallout of the opioid epidemic, including premature deaths, serious illness and addiction, lost productivity, family breakdown and increased stigma of those whose illness legitimately require pain management. He hoped that the day鈥檚 program would promote thoughtful understanding and effective strategies to address the crisis. Dr. Stein was followed by Dr. Travis N. Rieder on the topic of 鈥淭he Opioid Dilemma: Responsible Prescribing During an Overdose Epidemic.鈥 Dr. Rieder is a philosopher and bioethicist at the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics, where he directs the Master of Bioethics degree program. In his talk, a version of which he has also given at the conference, he noted that 鈥淎merica has a serious problem with prescription opioids, but the problem is bigger than the problem that immediately comes to mind. Opioids are both dangerous and also highly effective at treating some kinds of severe pain.鈥 In the midst of a drug overdose epidemic, however, there is lack of clarity about how to use opioid analgesia, with the end result that 鈥渃linicians undertreat pain (out of fear of opioids) and overprescribe opioids (because they want to be able to treat pain),鈥 a situation that Dr. Rieder called 鈥淭he Opioid Dilemma.鈥 Solutions to the dilemma are not easy to come by because 鈥渂y being so bad at understanding pain, we鈥檙e not only screwing up in one direction, we鈥檙e screwing up in both directions.鈥 However, there are solutions to be found if clinicians and institutions can have clear and honest discussions about how to close the gaps without worsening the problem. Some of those solutions came out through two panel discussions. The first, 鈥淭he Impact of the Opioid Epidemic on Children and Families: What We Have Learned from Other Epidemics,鈥 featured Carol Levine, a Senior Fellow at the (UHF) in New York City and former director of UHF鈥檚 Families and Health Care Project, and Ivy Gamble Cobb, LMSW, Executive Director of .
Carol Levine
Levine presented the findings of the April 2019 UHF report, 鈥,鈥 the first comprehensive look at the successive waves of loss and trauma experienced by newborns, young children, adolescents and their families affected by opioid addiction. It also looks at the needs of kinship caregivers, typically grandparents, who often step in to care for these children. Levine also spoke about the potential remedies proposed in the report and the innovative programs around the nation that address these issues, 鈥渁ll of which,鈥 she pointed out, 鈥渄raw upon lessons learned from the HIV/AIDS and crack/cocaine epidemics, which, like the opioid crisis, were characterized by stigma and failures to provide needed services to children and families.鈥
Ivy Gamble Cobb
Cobb discussed her firsthand experience at The Family Center with families affected by illness, crisis and loss. The organization offers a variety of services to families across all five New York City boroughs, including individual and family counseling, legal assistance, mental health counseling and parenting groups and support specialized for grandparent caregivers. She explained that 鈥渢he future is often uncertain for children affected by the opioid crisis, and these services help them have more secure and successful lives.鈥 The second panel, 鈥淒iagnosing and Treating Opioid Use Disorder with Implications for the Family,鈥 brought together Dr. Timothy B. Conley, LCSW, assistant clinical professor at Wurzweiler and a certified addiction specialist with the American Academy of Health Care Providers in the Addictive Disorders, and Dr. S. Lala Ashenberg Straussner, LCSW, professor and chair of the Human Behavior in Social Environment Area and director of the Post-Master's Certificate Program in The Clinical Approaches to Addictions at New York University鈥檚 Silver School of Social Work.
Dr. Tim Conley
Dr. Conley discussed the formal diagnosis and treatment of Opioid Use Disorder and how it should be treated as what it is: a mental illness, not just a bad choice. 鈥淓ven clinicians sometimes stigmatize addiction whether they realize it or not,鈥 he noted, 鈥渁nd this affects the course of treatment for individuals who are struggling.鈥 As one of his presentation slides stated, 鈥淓ffective work with opioid addicted populations, whether it is clinical, policy, or research, requires an objective knowledge of one鈥檚 own values, attitudes, and personal understanding of addiction.鈥 Dr. Straussner focused on the effects on the family of an individual with this diagnosis, such as learning how to cope with a loved one鈥檚 opioid addiction, especially for parents of a child with Opioid Use Disorder or a child with a parent who has Opioid Use Disorder.
Dr. S. Lala Ashenberg Straussner
She highlighted (CRAFT), which teaches the friends and family strategies to help their loved ones with Opioid Use Disorder change their behaviors and feel supported as they reduce their drug use. Participants learn, for example, the power of positive reinforcement for positive behavior (and of withdrawing it for unwanted behavior) and how to use positive communication skills to improve interactions with their loved one.

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