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Integrated Care for drug users: Principles and practice
ANNEX 4C
Guide to choosing assessment tools: Factors to consider
Primary use: Ensure that the stated use of the tool matches your requirements. Tools primarily designed for outcome evaluation tend to collect quantitative rather than qualitative information.
Ensure that the tool has been validated for use with the
target client group. Some tools have been found to be inappropriate for some client groups such as prisoners or clients with co-existing mental health problems (Rome 2002, Type 2/3). Often tools are too broad in their scope to highlight particular issues synonymous with specific client groups.
Available assessment instruments for substance users have been designed with different purposes in mind and vary widely in the
time frame they capture. The assessor will need to be aware of the time frame covered by the instrument.
Similarly assessors should be careful to select a measure sensitive to the
type of substance use involved. Many tools have a focus on opiate injecting behaviour: the focus and nature of questions within the tool may have limited relevance to people using non-opiate drugs and who do not inject.
Many tools provide a
composite measure or score of the severity of substance use. This formula approach, multiplying
frequency of use by
amount, might indicate that, by comparison, using cocaine twice daily is less problematic than using a similar amount of opiate three times in a day. Assessors will need to be aware of the variance in scoring methods and how this affects the resulting care provision.
Assessors should recognise that
short periods of abstinence may be more significant for substances associated with steady use for example opiates or methadone than for those characterised by binge or episodic use e.g. cocaine.
The
time taken to complete assessment tools ranged from three minutes to four hours for the tools examined in the assessment tool study (Rome 2002, Type 2/3). Brief screening instruments tend to take less time to complete than comprehensive tools. On average, up to 30 minutes appeared to be a reasonable time to spend on a comprehensive assessment. Specialist or specific assessments, for mental state assessment or social enquiry report may take longer.
Administration: tools that require scoring and/or inputting from paper to computer database will provide additional administrative work for frontline workers or require dedicated administrative support. Frontline workers score 61% of commonly used tools. One third of all tools reported in the study are stored on computer databases (Rome 2002, Type 2/3). The additional administrative requirements of each tool should be taken into consideration.
Training requirements: Typically training of one day or less was required on the use of specific tools (Rome 2002, Type 2/3). Service managers should ensure that initial training and updates are available to all staff who would use these tools. Training should include issues regarding the assessment process and specific guidance on the use of selected tools.
Developers of new instruments must consider carefully their usefulness across a number of potential substance use disorders and settings. Before embarking on developing a new assessment instrument for substance use,
careful consideration should be given to evaluating whether an appropriate one does not already exist and could be used with no or minor modification for the task in hand.
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