Article de Périodique
HIV disease in the intravenous drug user : role of the primary care physician (1991)
(Séroposivité VIH chez le toxicomane intraveineux : rôle du généraliste)
Auteur(s) :
WARTENBERG A. A.
Année
1991
Page(s) :
S35-S40
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Refs biblio. :
41
Domaine :
Drogues illicites / Illicit drugs
Discipline :
MAL (Maladies infectieuses / Infectious diseases)
Résumé :
FRANÇAIS :
Description de la place que peut prendre le généraliste dans la prise en charge des toxicomanes. Après un survol de la personnalité du toxicomane, les différentes modalités de prise en charge à la disposition du clinicien sont décrites : relationnelle, médicamenteuse, institutionnelle. Les complications somatiques sont abordées avec principalement les infections par le VIH mais aussi les hépatites B et C. Cette description traduit une optique "nord-américaine" de la prise en charge.
ENGLISH:
Intravenous drug users (IVDUs) are increasingly encountered in the medical arena, on both an inpatient and an outpatient basis, in large part because of complications related to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Clinicians must work to overcome long-standing antipathy towards this population in order to provide appropriate care, as well as to develop an understanding of the process of addiction and of the addict as a patient. The use of relationship skills, limit setting, and contingency contracting and an ability to choose and gain access to appropriate and/or available chemical dependency treatment options are important in the care of these patients. Finally, an adequate biomedical knowledge base of the medical complications of IVDUs, as well as the care of drug-related complications and withdrawal and overdose syndromes, is necessary to provide optimal care. In addition, the IVDU may have certain features of HIV-related disease that differ from those of other groups, and the clinician must be familiar with these features. Provision of such care is within the scope of the primary care clinician and can improve patient retention in treatment and the outcomes of such treatment, as well as both patient and clinician satisfaction.
Description de la place que peut prendre le généraliste dans la prise en charge des toxicomanes. Après un survol de la personnalité du toxicomane, les différentes modalités de prise en charge à la disposition du clinicien sont décrites : relationnelle, médicamenteuse, institutionnelle. Les complications somatiques sont abordées avec principalement les infections par le VIH mais aussi les hépatites B et C. Cette description traduit une optique "nord-américaine" de la prise en charge.
ENGLISH:
Intravenous drug users (IVDUs) are increasingly encountered in the medical arena, on both an inpatient and an outpatient basis, in large part because of complications related to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Clinicians must work to overcome long-standing antipathy towards this population in order to provide appropriate care, as well as to develop an understanding of the process of addiction and of the addict as a patient. The use of relationship skills, limit setting, and contingency contracting and an ability to choose and gain access to appropriate and/or available chemical dependency treatment options are important in the care of these patients. Finally, an adequate biomedical knowledge base of the medical complications of IVDUs, as well as the care of drug-related complications and withdrawal and overdose syndromes, is necessary to provide optimal care. In addition, the IVDU may have certain features of HIV-related disease that differ from those of other groups, and the clinician must be familiar with these features. Provision of such care is within the scope of the primary care clinician and can improve patient retention in treatment and the outcomes of such treatment, as well as both patient and clinician satisfaction.
Affiliation :
Substance Abuse Treatment Center, Roger Williams General Hospital, and the Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA
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