Home | Research bulletins | Subject search | Text search | Matrices | Hot topics | Contact |
Effectiveness Bank | ||
|
||
Effectiveness Bank bulletin 4 February 2015 | ||
Saving lives is the theme, of heroin and other opiate users by prescribing substitutes like methadone and supplying non-medical personnel with the overdose-reversing medication naloxone, and of drinkers in Wales by eliminating the cheapest sources of alcohol. ‘Recovery coaches’ are prominent in guidance and discourse on recovery from addiction but not so prominent in the research.
|
||
Discover your own research gems by exploring the entire Effectiveness Bank.
Subject search on broad themes like prevention or treatment or specific sub-topics Free text search to find documents which contain your chosen key words |
||
Opiate substitute prescribing saved lives in Sweden | ||
Sweden’s restrictions on opiate substitute prescribing have meant that country has been able provide solid evidence for extending the treatment. Latest example concludes that in Sweden just such an extension was associated with and may have led to decreases in opiate-related deaths and illness. | ||
Also see similar Norwegian study. | ||
WHO backs naloxone to prevent opiate overdose deaths |
||
Experts convened by the World Health Organization judged the risk-benefit profile strongly in favour of naloxone distribution to prevent opiate overdose deaths, but cautioned that this “does not address the underlying causes of opioid overdose”. | ||
Also see Effectiveness Bank hot topic on naloxone and the UK’s record in controlling drug-related deaths. | ||
Ending cheap drink would save lives in Wales |
||
After similar analyses for England and Scotland, this simulation of what a minimum unit price for alcohol would do for health, crime and workplace absence in Wales predicts it would save lives and reduce social impact by making (especially poor and heavy) drinkers cut back. | ||
Official US review assesses evidence for ‘recovery coaches’ |
||
Review commissioned by the US government to establish the evidence for former problem substance users acting as peer supporters and ‘recovery coaches’ found little solid research, but some encouragement for services considering this widely recommended recovery aid. | ||
Sent by Drug and Alcohol Findings Effectiveness Bank to alert you to site updates and UK-relevant evaluations of drug/alcohol interventions. Managed by DrugScope, Alcohol Concern, the National Addiction Centre and Alcohol Research UK. Supported by Alcohol Research UK, Society for the Study of Addiction, and J. Paul Getty Jr. Charitable Trust. View in browser Forward to friend Respond to editor@findings.org.uk Change address/switch to plain text Unsubscribe *|EMAIL|* Forwarded to you? For your own mailings order FREE UPDATE SERVICE Click below to share via your favourite social networks *|SHARE:twitter,facebook,linkedin,google,digg|* *|LIST:DESCRIPTION|* |