Priority Health Topic: Substance Misuse
Background & History
Alaska’s State Health Assessment identified substance misuse as a topic of highest concern. Substance misuse data was tracked in the HA2020 plan with the LHI’s 14, 15a, and 15b that included measures on alcohol mortality rates, and adult and adolescent binge drinking. For all Alaskans, there was no progress on the alcohol induced mortality rate indicator, but both binge drinking indicators met their targets. The HA2030 team decided that the new State Health Improvement Plan will focus on both alcohol and drug-induced mortality rates to address multi-substance use, which aligns with Healthy People’s goal. There is considerable funding and community interest in drug and alcohol misuse prevention program action at this time, which may aid progress in this area. Efforts related to the binge drinking LHIs from HA2020 have been incorporated into the strategies and actions to lower alcohol mortality rates for HA2030.
The HA2030 team also decided to add a new objective to reduce the percentage of adults needing, but not receiving, substance use disorder treatment as a way to create strategies and actions focused on barriers to accessing treatment and support. This objective’s strategies will also support the progress on alcohol- and drug-induced mortality rates.
Objective 22: Reduce the alcohol-induced mortality rate per 100,000 population
Target: 23.6
Strategy 1: Promote policy, systems, and environmental changes that are designed to enhance community conditions to reduce alcohol-induced mortality
For successful health promotion strategies, models focused on policy, systems, and environmental change is a way of modifying the environment to make resources available to the at-risk and vulnerable population, and help facilitate healthy choices.
Sources:
- https://www.ruralhealthinfo.org/toolkits/health-promotion/2/strategies/policy-systems-environmental
- http://plan4health.us/policy-systems-and-environmental-change-strategies/
Action Step 1
Action | Promote and support policy changes such as: • Increases to the alcohol taxes statewide and/or locally, • Continue with Title 4 review work, • Create health and safety regulations for curbside and home delivery of alcohol, • Revise Local Option Laws after thorough research and work with people in rural Alaska who are impacted by these laws, • Prioritize and pursue other best practices in health policy. |
Measure | New/revised policies and healthcare guidelines get passed or changed. |
Timeframe | 2020-2030 |
Key Partners | • Recover Alaska • Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority • Mat-Su Health Foundation • Alcoholic Beverage Control Board • Advisory Board on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse (ABADA) • Marijuana and Alcohol Control Board |
Action Step 2
Action | Shift in the way problems are solved across the local to state level through system changes that develop and support prevention professionals, including: • Build communities of practice and cultivate the prevention profession, (e.g. Cohorts and coursework developed, Prevention Summit organized and implemented, prevention certification as a standard practice statewide) • Address barriers experienced by rural and marginalized communities trying to access resources, (e.g.: resource flows from state and other funders.) • Centralize data and story collection that provides real information that agencies and communities can trust and use. |
Measure | Implementation of coursework, prevention summit, and certification as statewide standard; equitable distribution of funding that represents the needs of communities; and community involvement in the development and use of data and information. |
Timeframe | 2020-2030 |
Key Partners | • Alaska Alcohol Misuse Prevention Alliance (The Alliance) • Community and local Stakeholders • Alaska Training Cooperative • University of Alaska Anchorage • Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium |
Action Step 3
Action | Change the context that affects alcohol-induced mortality through the development and introduction of messaging to increase health and wellbeing, including: • Conduct research on perceptions and beliefs around alcohol across the state, for use of localized data in media and health campaigns • Develop and disseminate media that shifts social norms, amplifies community efforts, and re-writes the narrative in favor of a healthy and healing Alaska. |
Measure | Analysis and dissemination of data from existing data sources (e.g. NSDUH, BRFSS, and YRBS) on knowledge, perceptions, and beliefs around alcohol use; and implementation of a strategic communication plan that measures the outcomes of media and health campaigns. |
Timeframe | 2020-2030 |
Key Partners | • Recover Alaska • Mat-Su Health Foundation • Alaska Alcohol Misuse Prevention Alliance (The Alliance) • Department of Health and Social Services |
Objective 23: Reduce the drug-induced mortality rate per 100,000 population
Target: 14.2
Strategy 1: Promote policy, systems, and environmental changes that are designed to enhance community conditions to reduce drug-induced mortality
For successful health promotion strategies, models focused on policy, systems, and environmental change is a way of modifying the environment to make resources available to the at-risk and vulnerable population, and help facilitate healthy choices.
Sources:
- https://www.ruralhealthinfo.org/toolkits/health-promotion/2/strategies/policy-systems-environmental
- http://plan4health.us/policy-systems-and-environmental-change-strategies/
Action Step 1
Action | Develop State government initiated policies and laws regarding controlled Substances Scheduling, Prescribing and Dispensing Policies, Harm Reduction, treatment, Integrated-information sharing, and linkages to care. |
Measure | • New/revised policies are developed and implemented • Laws regarding controlled Substances Scheduling, Prescribing and Dispensing Policies, and Harm Reduction, get passed |
Timeframe | 2020-2030 |
Key Partners | • State of Alaska, Division of Public Health, Office of Substance Misuse and Addiction Prevention • State of Alaska, Department of Public Safety • Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority • Advisory Board on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse (ABADA) • Marijuana and Alcohol Control Board • Alaska Pharmacists Association • Senior Care Clinics |
Action Step 2
Action | Conduct professional development and provider trainings related to substance misuse, abuse and prevention to shift the way problems are solved across the local to state level through system changes including: • Build communities of practice and cultivate the prevention profession, (e.g. cohorts and coursework developed, Prevention Summit organized and implemented.) • Shared Factors work groups commence • Provider education strategies aka Academic Detailing to promote judicious prescribing of opioids and other substances of concern, + project echo. |
Measure | • # of Academic Detailing Trainings Held • # of Project Echo meetings held • # of Shared Factors work group meetings held |
Timeframe | 2020-2023 |
Key Partners | • State of Alaska, Division of Public Health, Office of Substance Misuse and Addiction Prevention • Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium • State of Alaska, Division of Behavioral Health • UAA CHD, ANTHC, DOLWD |
Action Step 3
Action | Conduct Employer Toolkit “Addiction in the Workplace” trainings to change the context that affects drug-induced mortality through the development and introduction of messaging to increase health and wellbeing by supporting workforce wellness as it relates to substance use and access to supportive resources among Alaskan employers. |
Measure | # of Employer Toolkit “Addiction in the Workplace” disseminated and trainings held. |
Timeframe | 2020-2021 |
Key Partners | • State of Alaska, Division of Public Health, Office of Substance Misuse and Addiction Prevention • Recover Alaska • ANTHC |
Action Step 4
Action | Conduct research on perceptions and beliefs around substance misuse across the state, for use of localized data in health literacy campaigns, and develop and disseminate evidence-informed Core Messages. |
Measure | # of Core Messages developed and disseminated to inform public education, public education campaigns go live. |
Timeframe | 2020-2021 |
Key Partners | • State of Alaska, Division of Public Health, Office of Substance Misuse and Addiction Prevention |
Strategy 2: Develop Strategy for Hepatitis C (HCV) elimination in Alaskans with Substance Use Disorder (SUD) to reduce morbidity and mortality in the SUD population
The limited data available to this topic shows that among the prison SUD population, up to 40% have HCV compared to a prevalence of about 1% in the non-institutionalized adult population in Alaska. The CDC has linked the increase in HCV infections to the worsening opioid crisis. There is evidence that attempts to reduce the supply and demand for drugs is associated with a reduction in HCV.
Sources:
- https://www.cdc.gov/nchhstp/newsroom/2017/hepatitis-c-and-opioid-injection-press-release.html
- https://ldi.upenn.edu/healthpolicysense/opioids-and-hepatitis-c-how-oxycontin-fed-new-epidemic
Action Step 1
Action | Reduce mortality through policy, system and environmental changes with an emphasis on rural Alaska including: • Enhance access to treatment with innovative drug pricing models. • Expand DOC treatment eligibility to all individuals with active HCV viremia • Support syringe exchange programs • Expand and increase lab testing capacity |
Measure | Increased testing of at-risk population, increased funding for syringe exchange programs, increased number of labs for testing, decreased Hepatitis C (HCV) infection rates in Alaska correction facilities. |
Timeframe | 2020-2029 |
Key Partners | • HCV Elimination Committee of Hepatitis Advisory Work Group (HAWG) • State of Alaska, Department of Corrections (DOC) • Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, Liver Disease and Hepatitis Program • State of Alaska, Division of Public Health, Section of Epidemiology, Hepatitis Prevention program • State of Alaska, Department of Health and Social Services, Chief Medical Officer • Medicaid |
Objective 24: Reduce the percent of adults needing but not receiving substance use disorder treatment
Target: 7.9%
Strategy 1: Promote policy, systems, and environmental changes designed to enhance community conditions to reduce unmet needs for continuum of care for alcohol and substance use disorders, including but not limited to detox, treatment and substance recovery.
For successful health promotion strategies, models focused on policy, systems, and environmental change is a way of modifying the environment to make resources available to the at-risk and vulnerable population, and help facilitate healthy choices.
Sources:
- https://www.ruralhealthinfo.org/toolkits/health-promotion/2/strategies/policy-systems-environmental
- http://plan4health.us/policy-systems-and-environmental-change-strategies/
Action Step 1
Action | Advocate for policy changes with an emphasis on rural Alaska including: • Increasing access to treatment • Increase sustainability of treatment by improving reimbursement for effective practice models |
Measure | New/revised policies and healthcare guidelines are passed or updated and reported annually to Healthy Alaskans Core Team. |
Timeframe | 2020-2030 |
Key Partners | Federal, State and Local partners including: • State of Alaska, Department of Public Safety • Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority • Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, Liver Disease and Hepatitis Program • Advisory Board on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse (ABADA) • Marijuana and Alcohol Control Board |
Action Step 2
Action | Implement systems change across the state and local level to: • Improve the measurement of unmet treatment needs (e.g. purchase oversampling to increase NSDUH sample size) • Increase use of Screening Brief Intervention Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) and/or AUDIT screening tool across providers statewide. • Encourage providers to familiarize and utilize MAT for alcohol use disorders. • Sustain partnerships with Division Juvenile Justice in their provision of treatment options for justice-involved youth • Increase implementation of the full continuum of care and various treatment levels and options |
Measure | Increased availability of robust data (coverage, oversampling), increased usage of SBIRT, increased integration of behavioral health and primary care |
Timeframe | 2020-2030 |
Key Partners | • Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium • Alaska Mental Health Trust Authority • State of Alaska, Department of Health and Human Services • Health care and treatment facilities • Emergency responders |
Action Step 3
Action | Change the context that affects alcohol misuse through the development and introduction of messaging to increase health and wellbeing, including: • Develop and disseminate media that shifts social norms, amplifies community efforts, and re-writes the narrative in favor of a healthy and healing Alaska. • Increase promotion of tools connecting people to support services statewide (ie. MatSu Connect, Alaska 211, Crisis Now, treatmentconnection.com) |
Measure | Implementation of a strategic communication plan including an evaluation plan that measures the outcomes of the media and health campaigns. |
Timeframe | 2020-2030 |
Key Partners | • Recover Alaska • Alaska Alcohol Misuse Prevention Alliance (The Alliance) • OSMAP |
Strategy 2: Develop Strategy for Hepatitis C (HCV) elimination in Alaskans with Substance Use Disorder (SUD) by improving treatment in the SUD population
The limited data available to this topic shows that among the prison SUD population, up to 40% have HCV compared to a prevalence of about 1% in the non-institutionalized adult population in Alaska. The CDC has linked the increase in HCV infections to the worsening opioid crisis. There is evidence that attempts to reduce the supply and demand for drugs is associated with a reduction in HCV.
Sources:
- https://www.cdc.gov/nchhstp/newsroom/2017/hepatitis-c-and-opioid-injection-press-release.html
- https://ldi.upenn.edu/healthpolicysense/opioids-and-hepatitis-c-how-oxycontin-fed-new-epidemic
Action Step 1
Action | Improve treatment through policy, system and environmental changes with an emphasis on rural Alaska including: • Enhance access to treatment with innovative drug pricing models and STI Screening. • Support and utilize Mobile Health Units to connect SUD population to screening, treatment, and counseling • Support funding for HAV screening and treatment programs among SUD population • Develop peer counselor strategies to message important knowledge about HCV among the SUD populations • Support programs that improve continuity of care and counseling support to inmates returning to community setting • Expand and increase lab testing capacity |
Measure | Increased testing of at risk population, model drug pricing programs implemented, increased funding, implementation of peer counseling programs, decreased HCV infection rates in Alaska correction facilities, increased number of labs that test for HCV in AK. |
Timeframe | 2020-2030 |
Key Partners | • HCV Elimination Committee of Hepatitis Advisory Work Group (HAWG) • State of Alaska, Department of Corrections (DOC) • Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, Liver Disease and Hepatitis Program • State of Alaska, Division of Public Health, Section of Epidemiology, Hepatitis Prevention program • State of Alaska, Department of Health and Social Services, Chief Medical Officer • Medicaid |
Previous Priority Health Topic: Social Determinants of Health | ………………………………… | Next Priority Health Topic: Suicide Prevention |
News Bulletins
Healthy Alaskans releases first set of 2030 health improvement scorecards, issues final report, scorecards from 2020 plan
January 31, 2023
Healthy Alaskans releases scorecards assessing Alaska’s health progress for 2020 and a health improvement plan for 2030 that sets goals for the next decade
February 4, 2021
State Health Improvement Plan, Healthy Alaskans 2030 (HA2030), Draft for Public Comment Released
August 5, 2020
Healthy Alaskans 2030 Sets Framework for Alaska’s Health Goals; Strengthening communities and empowering individuals
January 22, 2020
Healthy Alaskans 2020 successes
December 9, 2019