Addiction psychiatry is at an interesting stage of development and seems to be set on a path that will part company from general psychiatry. As the NHS enters a period of unprecedented growth linked to modernisation, then so specialisation will slowly become the norm. It follows that the future direction of alcohol policy is a matter of interest and concern to all psychiatrists and the forthcoming National Alcohol Policy represents a timely opportunity for reflection. There has been a remarkable absence of alcohol policy over recent years, indeed, so much so that the forthcoming strategy is expected to be the most important policy statement since the Kessell Report (Department of Health and Social Security & The Welsh Office, 1978), which laid down the blueprint for the current pattern and range of community-based alcohol services. Of course the strategy may turn out to be a fudge, a disappointment and an opportunity lost, however, there is encouragement from the National Service Framework for Mental Health (Department of Health, 1999a ) that government thinking about addiction services is moving the right way because:
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(a) brief interventions are to be more widely available
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(b) services will be integrated to deal with people at risk of suicide
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(c) strategies will be developed to deal with dual diagnosis patients
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(d) integration of specialist and other services is to be seamless.
If these themes are developed in the National Alcohol Policy then it is clear that there will be a broadening of the base of addiction services, perhaps to include addiction medicine and public health, while at the same time preparing for specialty status of the field. In many parts of the country addiction services are already integrated with primary care teams through the requirement on health authorities to establish shared-care working for opiate users (Reference Gerada and TigheGerada & Tighe, 1999). The success of shared-care needs to be extended within the NHS family. Addiction problems present in most areas of health and social care and it is inevitable that broadening the base of services means not only integrating a greater variety of professions, but also working in a wider variety of settings.
In 1996 the Society for the Study of Addiction launched a project that had the objective of pulling together the evidence to inform a National Alcohol Policy. The principle output from this project was a book called Tackling Alcohol Together (Reference Raistrick, Hodgson and RitsonRaistrick et al, 1999). The project was nicely complemented by an Alcohol Concern agenda to consult widely in and around interested parties and seek a consensus on policy direction. The writing of Tackling Alcohol Together involved a slightly unusual process. A number of distinguished practitioners and scientists from the addiction field agreed to prepare position papers on their personal subject areas. These papers were debated by the project group and the final agreed versions of text were then merged to make up suitable chapters. This proved to be an effective, albeit exacting, way of working. Thus the book is a composite of text, views and debate from the experts involved.
What must be seen as curious is the enthusiasm with which the National Drug Policy has been embraced as compared to the resistance that meets any discussion of alcohol policy. If a drugs policy is such a good thing then why not an alcohol policy? One answer to this question is that we have personal and cultural ambivalences about any restrictions on our drinking behaviour. Day-to-day leisure activities frequently include drinking. For example, one survey found that in the previous 3 months 74% of adults had visited a public house and 69% had had a meal in a restaurant; of activities not usually associated with drinking, 34% of adults had been to the cinema, 22% to a museum or art gallery and 17% to the theatre (Office for National Statistics, 1999). The General Household Survey of 1998 found that 75% of men and 59% of women had taken a drink in the previous week; 27% of men and 15% of women were drinking in excess of the safe limits of 21 and 14 units, repectively (Office for National Statistics, 2000). In short, drinking is something that most people in the UK like to do, however, there is also an understanding about the meaning of social drinking and when drinking is inappropriate. For example, in a survey of support among the general population for alcohol policy options, Pendleton et al (Reference Pendleton, Smith and Roberts1990) found that 92% wanted to enforce the law on under-age drinking, 91% wanted to enforce drink-driving laws, 88% wanted labeling of the alcohol content of drinks, 80% wanted a ban on alcohol at sporting events, 47% wanted to reduce off-licence opening hours and 46% wanted to reduce the total of drinking outlets. It looks as though the public are more willing to endorse policy options that will affect other people than they are to endorse options having a personal impact.
At a cultural and political level there is also ambivalence. The UK has a world class drinks industry that employs in excess of 1 million people through production of alcohol onto sales in hotels, restaurants, pubs and clubs (Brewers and Licensed Retailers Association, 1999). The UK is estimated to be the fourth largest producer of spirits and the sixth largest producer of beer in the world (Productschap voor Gedistilleerde Dranken; 1999). An industry of this size generates huge tax revenue for the government, estimated in 1998 at £10 033 million, 3.3% of total tax revenue. This tax was derived from £29.7 billion of consumer spending on alcohol in 1998 or, put another way, £56 507 spent every minute of every day. So, while the rhetoric of a drugs war is guaranteed to fire up political and public support, a war on alcohol would be political suicide. Certainly there are strong economic and probably personal enjoyment reasons for keeping a relaxed view of alcohol policy, but there is also a conspicuous down side to drinking.
The relationship between patterns of drinking and alcohol-related harm is complex. In broad-brush terms intoxication is most commonly associated with social harms, accidents and violence, whereas regular drinking is most commonly associated with health problems. There is plenty of choice when picking examples of alcohol-related harms. For example, the National Association for the Children of Alcoholics (2000) report 920 000 children living in a home where one or both parents misuse alcohol, and 6.2% of adults having come from a drinking family. The Health Education Authority (1997) estimated 60% of para-suicides, 30% of divorces, 40% of domestic violence and 20% of child abuse to be associated with alcohol misuse. A report from the Social Exclusion Unit (1999) found that, after drinking, 20% of young people report having sex that they regretted, 10% could not remember whether they had had sex and 40% were likely to have casual sex. The impact of alcohol on the Health Service is huge, albeit that the data are frequently incomplete. For example, the Department of Health (1999b ) report between 5000 and 45 000 deaths per annum attributable in whole or in part to alcohol misuse; the lower figure is calculated on illness directly related to alcohol, such as liver cirrhosis, whereas the higher figure includes illnesses where alcohol is one of several factors, such as hypertension or stroke. In 1995/1996 there were 72 500 hospital admissions with a mention of mental and behavioural disorders owing to alcohol and nearly half of these had alcohol dependence as the primary diagnosis.
The Tackling Alcohol Together project set out four key policy objectives that are reproduced in this article (see Box 1). A National Alcohol Policy has the difficult job of balancing the conflicting interests of stakeholders. For example, there is a need to balance individual freedom to drink alcohol against the impact that this might have on others; there is a need to balance the benefits of a successful drinks industry against the damage to the public health of unfettered drinks promotion. Alcohol policy is a kind of social system where the component parts are in a dynamic relationship so that a change in one part of the system ripples throughout the whole. For this reason Tackling Alcohol Together calls for strong national coordination of policy. The Home Office (2000) proposals for reform of licensing laws are an example of why coordination is so important: in essence, the reforms are aimed at reducing public disorder by extending drinking times and clamping down on unruly pubs and clubs. The difficulty is that the reforms may well work for the Home Office by reducing problems of intoxication, but may not be what works for the Department of Health because increased availability of alcohol would lead to an increase in regular drinking and health problems (Reference DrummondDrummond, 2000). Serious policy must be coordinated across government departments. The role of the National Treatment Agency, which came into being in April 2001, has yet to be clarified - it is crucial that the Agency take on alcohol as well as illicit drugs.
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Psychiatric services will have difficulty benefiting from the opportunities of a National Alcohol Policy unless mental health trusts lay down plans to prioritise addiction services. Appointing suitable consultant staff will be thwarted because there is a dire shortage of trained addiction psychiatrists and a shortage of suitable training placements for specialist registrars wishing to specialise in addiction. It seems likely that medical directors are going to need to do some imaginative thinking on how to bridge the manpower and service gap. One idea is for health authorities within a region to join together, as a transitional measure, and appoint a peripatetic team linked to an established centre. This could be attractive both to specialists thinking of retirement and specialist registrars looking for a full-time position with prospects. There will be plenty more ‘sticky plaster’ solutions to come. What is important is the debriefing after the publication of the National Alcohol Policy: what will psychiatry then do to advance the need for a modern addiction specialty?
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