How to discuss Vivitrol with the ambivalent patient
For the most part, Vivitrol will remove the person’s day-to-day participation in their decision to use drugs. This is unsettling for many of our patients who find that using a substance of their own volition makes them feel more in control than does taking a prescribed medicine. The decision to use Vivitrol to treat their addiction is asking patients to think ahead and face what comes up day to day in ways they may not have. Clients can experience fear and sadness when attempting to manage life without the “escape hatch.” It’s natural to want to fight against any feelings of being controlled. To work through ambivalence, allow the patient to air these concerns, acknowledge that feeling controlled understandably is an uncomfortable experience, and then move into ways the patient may see Vivitrol as giving them more control. It is in this kind of conversation about the pros and cons that we can help a patient recognize what feels “wise” in the long term.
Patient: “If I take Vivitrol, I could imagine using many more opioids to override the blockade.”
This thought is a kind of hopeless, automatic one, such as “This won’t work for me,” or “I will just use on it.” We can remind our patient that a thought is simply a thought. Mindfulness can be used to help this patient identify and label his/her thoughts. The task is then to figure out whether it is wise to act on those thoughts. It is crucial to be able to monitor and track this kind of thinking to help a patient identify and manage cravings. These thoughts will happen, but the behavior does not have to follow. In dialectical behavior therapy, we help patients identify thoughts that come mostly from emotions, which are, for the most part, about having short-term relief rather than thoughts that are more balanced by emotion and reason. We call the latter kinds of thoughts “wise mind”; they are more focused on long-term goals. Clinicians should help the patient discern the difference between these different types of thoughts. Remember, if the patients are sitting in your office, there must have been some “wise mind thinking” that led them there, and you should highlight and explore why they made that choice in the first place.
Patient: “I want to have the ability to use opioids if things get really bad.”
Opioids can become a source of security and a reliable resource that doesn’t fail the patient when he or she is struggling. Most of the time, patients have gotten to a place in which opioids are the only coping skill they have to manage life’s difficulties. These clients need to relearn alternative coping skills. Using Vivitrol gives them the ability to be sober enough to practice distress tolerance skills and realize the benefits of not using opioids. Learning how to distract, soothe, and use relaxation strategies are the only ways they are going to be able to build a satisfying life again without substance use. If we can hold up the dilemma facing this person by saying “On the one hand, you are scared not to have your usual go-to; and on the other hand, you want things to change.” It may be helpful to have an in-depth discussion of what patients imagine might happen if they don’t have opioids to fall back on. This discussion may uncover the patients’ lack of confidence about being able to cope and a way to introduce some of the alternative coping strategies. It also may leave them with some concrete ways to manage the difficult feelings they are experiencing.
Patient: “What if I get in an accident and really need opioids?”
Some patients who have developed a dependence on opioids did so as a result of a past prescription for pain medication. They know very well the relationship between opioids and pain relief and the concern that they won’t have this option may be a real obstacle for them. Clinicians are in a position here to explain that, in most cases, patients can be treated with alternatives to opiate medication such as regional analgesia, nonopioid analgesics, and general anesthesia. In an emergency situation, a trained anesthesia provider is able to reverse the Vivitrol blockade so that the client can receive adequate pain management.
Patient: “I’m worried about side effects … ”
The most common side effects of Vivitrol are headache, nausea, somnolence, and vomiting. A serious but very rare complication is hepatocellular injury, but this is really only seen at extremely high doses of naltrexone (five times the approved dosage). If the patient is pregnant or planning pregnancy, she should consider alternative relapse-prevention medications, such as buprenorphine or methadone. If the patient has a proven allergy to naltrexone, polylactide-co-glycolide, carboxymethylcellulose, or any other component of the injection, Vivitrol should be avoided. As for the injection site, the client may experience some pain, tenderness, swelling, bruising. In very few cases, the site reaction can be severe. Again, here is an opportunity for a valuation of pros and cons of both continued opioid use and a Vivitrol trial.