Thứ Tư, 26 tháng 9, 2018

Waching daily Sep 26 2018

all right we are rolling. how do you make

these videos what equipment do you use

to make these videos those are questions

we get asked all the time we're gonna

walk through how we make videos using

our phones what equipment we use and how

we make a video from start to finish how

do we come up with an idea for our

videos well it varies sometimes we plan

them in advance and other times they

happen spur-of-the-moment so let us show

you a quick clip of something that we

actually planned out and walk you

through how we did it

now when I say planned we didn't go

through and plan every single thing we'd

be doing during this shot what we

decided is we wanted to have a cool kind

of day on the town in Barcelona going

around all these different restaurants

and trying at least one dish at every

place you really didn't plan it beyond

that we started walking around going

from place to place we found dishes that

we would like we tried to keep it to one

dish at every place but some like this

place there were so many different

dishes that we wanted to try that by the

time we left I was so stuffed it was

time to call it a day most of the time

we're not planning out our videos and

we're shooting run and gun style that's

the reason we love the iPhone it's

always in our pockets and I can pull it

out and have it going pretty quickly so

let's see we both use the iPhone 8 plus

and Joe has a screen protector on his

and we both have the Pelican case which

keeps it a little bit protective when we

drop it and we have dropped it

well imagine when you're out you're

trying to shoot you've got this you're

focused on the phone it's easy to trip

you lose your balance and this thing

comes flying out of your hand it's

always good to have a good case on it

the iPhone also takes great time-lapse

of video and it works very well for

slow-motion shots we also use it to take

photos whenever we have shots where the

two of us are just kind of standing and

talking at the camera

cater I will set up the tripod we have a

small iPhone adapter on the top of it

and that's how we get a lot of our shots

so first thing Kate will do is she kind

of you know frames up the shot usually

I'm standing over here somewhere so that

she knows where the camera needs to be

so the iPhone snaps right in that little

holder you can see her getting the shot

limed up get a good idea of where we're

gonna be standing and like I said

usually I'm in the shot so it makes

things a lot easier but can't do that

since I'm filming I would say move a

little bit that's good and then take

half a step to your right there you go

I'm gonna be on your right side so kind

of covering the front of the van nice

background looks good lighting is decent

alright so let me get us let me start

shooting and then I'll walk over there

and we also have a few tricks up our

sleeves when we want to get a driving

shot for this shot I got out of the van

and climbed up on some rocks to get Kate

driving by when we want to get a shot of

the two of us walking but we don't have

a tripod we'll set the phone down

someplace and then just simply walk past

it now we also use a mirrorless samsung

camera to take photos and a GoPro for

those action shots now this little thing

is nearly indestructible when you have

it in a little watertight case so we use

that for a lot of the adventure shots we

get for example we are going down the

Bay of Fundy little motorboat we also

use it in the van what we'll do is we'll

use this little suction cup put it on

the window and we get shots out of the

van as we're driving it works really

well for that one of the most important

elements of any video is audio we have

three different sources the first are

these little lapel mics that I'm wearing

it is the zoom f1 field recorder and we

use these any time we need to pick up

our voices in a crowded spot or we're

talking about something like this video

I'm recording off the zoom right

but if I weren't recording off the zoom

we'd be getting the audio directly from

the iPhone now this is what it sounds

like from the iPhone when I'm talking

there's a big difference between this

and then when I go back to the zoom mic

now we also used the zoom IQ 7 this is a

little plug in mic that goes into the

port on the iPhone now the issue here is

whenever we use this I have to take the

phone out of the case that back in my

pocket and then I can plug this directly

into the phone the zoom is a stereo mic

it captures all of the sound around you

does a good job of getting voices as

well as ambient sound so let me turn it

on and you can hear what it sounds like

since Kate is filming with her iPhone

I'm just gonna go into the zoom app and

hit the record button we're now

recording I can set the gain on the

microphone so it's louder or lower

depending on the surrounding sound we

also have a windsock that goes over top

in case of windy situations let me just

let this go for a second so you can hear

everything going on around us you hear

the different crickets and the sounds of

nature you don't get that with a

microphone like this this is what it

sounds like with the zoom f1 field

recorder lav mic this is what it sounds

like on Kate's iPhone 8 and this is what

it sounds like with the zoom IQ 7

microphone why don't you have a drone do

you use a stabilizer I'm gonna let Jo

answer those questions as much as I

would love a drone to have and fly

around it just doesn't make sense for us

again our style is very run-and-gun

and anything we're shooting with needs

to be right at our fingertips all the

time something like a drone takes time

to set up you have to be in the right

place to fly it and all sorts of other

variables yes it would be cool to get

some of those shots but they just don't

work for us we've also looked into

having a large camera we used to shoot

with a Canon a TD but every time we

would bring it out we'd have to get the

settings right just for the lighting

we'd have to attach a microphone and all

sorts of other things and it just took

too much time

what we were finding is we were losing

the shot and more often than not I just

reach into my pocket and grab the iPhone

because it's always there and it's

always ready to go we've looked at other

things like a stabilizer a little gimbal

to carry the phone around but my

stabilizer is standing right behind the

camera right now she is great at holding

that camera steady and following me

around on all of our different

adventures so anytime we're

contemplating getting new equipment we

always ask ourselves a question is it

easy to set up and fast to use does it

work with that run and gun style we have

also is it going to move the needle

meaning if we spend thousands of dollars

on new equipment is it really going to

make that big of a difference in our

videos I bet that a lot of you didn't

really notice the difference between

when we were using the Canon which was a

$1500 camera with all the attachments

compared to using our iPhone 6 at the

time by the time video gets uploaded

it's been compressed and down rezzed

so the iPhone video looked almost as

good as anything else filming is only a

very small part of what we actually do

once we're done the real work begins

first step is take all of the content

off of our devices and put it onto the

drives now first step is taking all the

video content off of the iPhone this

takes quite a bit of time it's tedious

but it has to be done and of course all

the other devices each one of these

devices has its own memory card pull

those out import all the media get it

organized and then we're ready to sit

down and edit we're both using MacBook

Pros and using Final Cut 10 for all of

the editing we don't really use any

other software and in terms of equipment

aside from the MacBook we have quite a

few of these Seagate 4 terabyte hard

drives this is where we keep all of our

video images audio etc for our editing

none of it really goes on to the

computer otherwise the computer would

fill up really quickly I have a pair of

Sony these are the MDR 7 506 headphones

these are professional quality they are

wired but they work great and it's

essential if you're checking audio and

level

and things like that to have a really

good high quality pair of headphones I

also like to use a mouse this is the

Apple Magic Mouse it works well and

aside from that that's really all of our

equipment we try to keep everything as

simple as possible because again we live

in a van we have very limited space so

the more simple we can keep our setup

the better in terms of what music we use

we get all of that from YouTube's

content library they have a library full

of royalty-free music so it's one of the

reasons that if you watch a lot of

YouTube videos you've probably heard the

same songs used in other videos because

we're all grabbing music from that

library on occasion will also grab music

from Final Cut it has its own library

but it's pretty limited once the Edit is

complete we render out the file as a 4k

video and this is the final video you

see up on places like YouTube or a

website where the Russos dot-com this

has been all about the gear that we use

and how we put our videos together this

is just how we do it and when you go out

and start shooting your videos you need

to find your own style and what works

best for the type of videos you want to

make because our style may not fit with

what you want to do and it's perfectly

fine to have all the drone the

stabilizer the 20 cameras and whatever

else you need just make sure it works

for you and this is how we do it with

our iPhone yes and the one piece of

advice we always like to give to people

starting out is use what you have most

of us have a smartphone with a fairly

decent camera on it start making videos

on that and if you find you need the

bigger camera the stabilizer the drone

absolutely go out and get it but first

figure out what your style is and then

get the equipment to support that if

you'd like to see all the equipment

we're using head over to our website at

we're the Russos dot-com and click on

the link for the store now I want to

thank all of you for watching and we

will see you next time bye

For more infomation >> How We Make YouTube Videos with Our Phone - Duration: 10:54.

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Ivana - NEW CD and LP "Emotional Moments" Official Release Video Trailer by Ivana Raymonda - Duration: 1:17.

Hii Sweet Music Friends! :) ♥

Emotional moments, for me this is such a moment

My 5th album, emotional moments is released, on CD, and LP

They contain 24 minutes of emotional original songs.

Thank you so much Alex Voorhees for these beautiful songs.

I also would like to thank everyone

who placed a pre-order

and bought a name credit, on the CD, and LP.

Also many thanks to my sweet Patreons

and everyone else who supports me.

If you want to support me, you can buy my CD, or LP

physical or digital in my webshop. http://store.ivanavanderveen.com

Emotional Moments is also available

on iTunes, Amazon, Google Play, Deezer, Spotify,

CD Baby and many other online stores.

It would be so amazing if you go to my shop now

and order my new CD or LP

I really hope you enjoy Emotional Moments.

Much Love ♥♥♥ Ivana

For more infomation >> Ivana - NEW CD and LP "Emotional Moments" Official Release Video Trailer by Ivana Raymonda - Duration: 1:17.

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police pulled me over whilst filming a video... - Duration: 7:02.

oh my god that is so annoying I've just let a woman reverse out of her drive and

she and her partner and looked at me like I just fuckin done something so wrong I

literally just let you out the stupid b*tch so boys and girls

welcome to a brand new video in today's video and why am i laughing I'm annoying

in today's video we are doing better I don't know I'm moving about so much we

are doing a drive with me yes you heard that right we're fucking driving that

couldn't sound more boring could it yeah as well as driving in today's video I

may have something to eat actually that'll be quite exciting it won't will

it but now I love something to eat can you legally drive and eat is out I

don't know but yeah i evoke some duck tape just here to duct-tape me down cuz

I've got a fucking camera now they are 50 pounds for a fucking camera oh my god

oh my fucking god and right so my carries didn't even

fucking start why am I putting it in gear if you're here beeping I haven't

crashed my kites the reverse sensors on the car they just beep it fucking

anything really even if he's a fucking mile away they'll start beeping boy I'll

hit the kerb I'll for fuck's sake so what to just

stop okay beeping you're still out there we go thank God for that anyway let's go

right well here we yeah how I could have just gone over a bump and I thought I

come I just fell or you looking at your fucking gorgeous man but it's so weird I

think I'm going red dunno why there's something wrong with me quite clearly so

yeah boys and girls I guess these driving me videos I probably should have

watched one and then found out what other people talk about exactly no fuck

it can they want to talk about really I'm just gonna talk shit so yeah pretty

much everybody who looked into my casket

everyone do what the fuck am i filming here so yeah basically we sign traffic

at the moment I mean so yeah oh my god a little backstory like takes out another

fucking word but so pretty much just out film the drive with me there's a

chipping police car behind me with the sirens and they had the opportunity to

go round me but they didn't so I thought oh my god they're actually pulling me

over for like filming while driving cuz I didn't know if that was illegal I look

at my face

oh my god holy shit I just thought that'd come hallelujah me that oh my god

I Ching you only thought that cop cow was just coming after me then I didn't

know if it was illegal to like record yourself when you drive oh my god I just

shit myself okay so that just happened apparently I mean I'm just behind the

police at there no and I'm gonna try and get in front of them so I can get there

for mail than that but I can't believe that does that blow also when you also

let me know should I make this like a series where I go and meet or with other

youtubers or just other people whatever I don't really mind and I just drive

with them sounds so shit but now do you always just drive with people and just

have fun with people I could have worried about a bit better anyway and

things I kind of want to talk about in today's video we're gonna need to

somehow break toes now just get in and in today's video i just i don't know i

decided to just drive would be i'm gonna pour some songs and actually yeah let's

do that

I love people to to like stare you like you some fucking weirdo fuck you get a

spirit a spirit that I won't anyway just fuck off stop staring in their eyes and

so just called over to change songs honestly I'm not using my phone while

driving is yoyoyo by young pinch yeah sorry I'll just double checking so we

are one-on-one with a boss here there's our boss next to me so oh my god he's

good but yeah 1v1 via boss is my car faster than a boss

there we go I really can't say don't really bust them because I've got a boy

racer my ass wanting to boys but he's coming to my right now but you won't see

him and yeah he's just gone by you probably hear these cowards he's got

some fight sauce on it bacon fat I'm fat how fat we could have a race here I

think I'm low low low go

see you fucking later sir Mick song is by parish I think their names like Pio

door-to-door I don't fucking know I'd say you thought here we go there's a

care about to pull out on me don't pull out okay just pull down there so more so

than boys and girls I'm going to show you all a mask I recently bought and

just filled it here we are oh my god I look like a fucking carob

chip boys and girls I don't know what I'm doing I'm 18 years old for crying

out loud why I dress like big and literally this isn't like a fucking

Robin mask or anything and it's just a running mask is literally eroding mask

pretty much when it is cold you wear that and your throat doesn't get as like

painful I don't know I don't know what it is

Yaser my traffic stop bumpy road and this about I shall tune down into this

fucking fire you know when people looking you're like

I've just let you out and you're fucking David thank me you're stupid bitch oh my

god they so annoying I've just let a woman reverse out of their Drive and her

and her partner looked at me like it's just fucking done something so wrong

I literally just let you reverse you stupid bitch go go go go ahead boys and

girls I don't really know why I'm showing in these Drive we'd be video

because there is a few paths which they would all be Norton

now that sounds fucking weird but no boys and girls please bow in the poll do

you want me to me or with someone and do like a part two to this drive we be

series I think it would be quite exciting and quite fun yeah that's lit

for the air but no please do let me know down for though it wouldn't mean the

world to me really really would and to be honest we're if this video got three

hundred likes I would probably eat a branch of a tree that is one of the

weirdest thing that ever said he's driving the videos I've seen a fair few

of them on YouTube so I won't sound like the creator of this I mean about forty

thousand of YouTube but I just died be fun to do and hopefully it was enjoyable

to watch the amount people that look at you and judge you and you're like try

different people look at you injured you know by what you do in life so just fuck

what people think spirits but yeah thank you for watching have an amazing day I

love how this light kinda turned into a motivational fucking thing better have

an amazing day

For more infomation >> police pulled me over whilst filming a video... - Duration: 7:02.

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Adolescent Substance Use, Addiction, and Treatment: Full Video - Duration: 32:19.

Sarah Bagley: Hi, I'm doctor Sarah Bagley.

I'd like to talk to you today about the importance of addressing substance use in adolescence

and young adulthood.

Teens and young adults are wired to take risks and to experiment.

That means that teens and young adults are more likely to use drugs.

Adolescents and young adults are susceptible to boredom, to peer pressure, and so this

puts them at a higher risk of using alcohol and other drugs.

Adolescents and young adults may also be experiencing feelings of depression or anxiety or potentially

bullying at school, and those are some other reasons that they may decide to experiment

with alcohol and other drugs.

Well experimentation with drug and alcohol use during adolescence and young adulthood

doesn't necessarily lead to addiction.

We know that most people who develop an addiction later on started to use substances before

they were 18 years old.

Even for those adolescents and young adults who do not develop addiction, there's still

risks associated with using substances such as engaging in unsafe sex practices, getting

in motor vehicle accidents, and being vulnerable to other kinds of injuries.

Alcohol and marijuana are the most commonly used substances by adolescents.

According to Monitoring the Future, a national survey conducted every year with high school

students, we know that about 55% of all 12th graders have used alcohol in the last year

and about 36% of all 12th graders have used marijuana in the last year.

Importantly, although there is a high prevalence of alcohol and marijuana use in teenagers,

we also know that these rates are the lowest that they have been in years.

And that's really encouraging news.

It means that the prevention programs that have been implemented over the past decade

or so are making a real difference.

We also know that it means that when we're talking to teens who may say to us, "It feels

like everyone is using," we can actually use data and statistics to tell them that not

all of their friends are drinking and not all of their friends are smoking marijuana.

Adolescence is a critical time for brain development and we know that addiction is a brain disease.

All drugs work a little bit differently, but there's a similarity.

They all increase the amount of dopamine in our brain, and dopamine is the chemical that

affects our reward system and makes us feel good.

It's normal to want to feel good.

So our dopamine may increase if we eat or we do something that's enjoyable.

It also increases if we use a drug or use alcohol.

The adolescent brain, which is immature and is seeking sensations, responds really positively

when the dopamine increases in their brain, and that adolescent is going to seek to repeat

that experience and over time those repeated exposures can lead to addiction.

There's certain factors that we consider when treating adolescents and young adults who

have substance use disorder.

We're trying to prevent the downstream effects of addiction and development of other chronic

medical problems associated with addiction, and we have good treatment.

So we know that if we intervene early, we engage adolescents and young adults in treatment,

we can prevent those long-term effects.

It's also important because it allows us to intervene and try to prevent any of the short-term

effects like unwanted pregnancy, transmission of sexually transmitted infections, or other

infections that might be associated with injection drug use.

It's important to understand that many adolescents and young adults who have substance use disorder

also may have other mental health diagnoses like anxiety or depression.

When we treat adolescents and young adults we have to consider the other diagnosis they

may have and want to make sure that we're treating both of those conditions together.

We know that adolescents and young adults who are treated for both their substance use

and their mental health disorders do better.

That means that they're able to go back to school, go back to jobs, and rejoin the lives

that they want to have.

Addiction is a highly stigmatized disease, and we even find that some of the treatments

that we use for addiction are also stigmatized.

Some of the stigma is associated with having an addiction and a general perception in the

public that this is, the addiction is the result of lack of willpower, poor choices,

or just bad habits that people have.

We often find too that there's stigma associated with the medications we use to treat an opioid

use disorder.

So we hear in the community sometimes that we're just substituting one drug for another.

One really easy way that we can all try to reduce the stigma associated with addiction

is to change the language that we use.

For example, using person first language, so trying to get rid of terms like addict

or alcoholic or terms like abuse, and instead say person with a substance use disorder or

person with an alcoholic use disorder or someone who is misusing substances.

Another way that we can reduce the stigma associated with addiction is to use medically

accurate terminology.

We know that addiction is a brain disease, it's a chronic illness, and so that we should

use terms like we do when talking about asthma or COPD or diabetes or other chronic medical

illnesses when talking about patients who have addiction.

For a really long time people who had substance use or alcohol use disorders were viewed as

being weak, that they had a habit that they couldn't get rid of, and that they just needed

to have the willpower in order to overcome what was going on and change their lives.

Over the last couple of decades we have had definitive research showing that in fact addiction

is a brain disease, it's a chronic relapsing disease, and that people need more than just

willpower in order to recover from their alcohol or substance use disorder.

In our program we handle this a couple of ways.

One is just being really upfront with our patients and telling them that we recognize

that this is a stigmatizing disease and we recognize that there might have been a lot

of places in their life that they have been where they felt judged.

And just by showing them that we understand that, patients often will literally just relax

in our offices and we can see that they feel like they're in a safe place.

We know both through research and from talking to patients that because of the stigma associated

with addiction, people are less likely to seek treatment or ask for help.

That's because they're worried about being judged or they maybe have family members who

are concerned about what it's going to mean if they find themselves in treatment for an

alcohol or substance abuse disorder.

If you have any questions about what the right terms are to use, or what stigma might mean

when we're talking about stigma associated with addiction, feel free to ask.

People who are experts or people who maybe have a substance use disorder would be happy

to talk to you about that, and the humility you show by asking expresses the empathy that

you have for patients who have substance use disorder.

The first step to identify substance use in an adolescent is to recognize some of the

warning signs as early as possible.

Parents and all adults who interact with adolescents and young adults should be aware of some of

the warning signs of substance use.

These might include changes in behavior like becoming more withdrawn, or seeming more depressed,

changes in grades, maybe dropping out of school or losing a job, changes in friends, becoming

less interested in activities or in sports that the adolescent or young adult used to

be excited about.

Some other signs that substance use may be a problem for an adolescent or a young adult

is not been able to stop using when after having a conversation with a parent or other

adult about stopping use, trying to hide alcohol or substance use, or becoming really defensive

in conversations around substance use.

These signs can be really subtle, and it's important to recognize that some of these

signs might be symptoms of having a mental health diagnosis like depression or anxiety.

And so it's really important that parents or other adults involved in an adolescent

or young adult's life is able to have an open and honest conversation about what's going

on and ensure that that adolescent and young adult have access to an assessment to figure

out whether or not is substance use or other mental health problems that may be causing

their symptoms.

It's also important to realize that a lot of these signs can be subtle and sometimes

they don't exist at all or may not show up until later on when substance use has become

more problematic and parents shouldn't feel guilty if they missed these signs in their

adolescent.

Physicians such as primary care providers are trained to ask adolescents in a confidential

way at their annual exam about substance use, and parents can ask their primary care providers

to make sure that that assessment is happening every year.

When a substance use disorder is identified in an adolescent or in a young adult, it's

important that the first message that that teen or young adult is receiving is that no

matter what happens, the parent or the other caregiver is going to be there for them.

This can be a really difficult time and the teen or young adult may feel really alienated.

And if they feel like they can't have an open and honest conversation, then it's going to

be really difficult to engage that person in any kind of treatment.

It's important then to find substance use disorder services that are appropriate for

teenagers and young adults.

A lot of the treatments available for people with substance use disorder are tailored towards

adult, and teens and young adults have different needs.

You should make sure that you look for treatment that has professionals who are trained in

taking care of teens and young adults, and you can always talk to your primary care provider

to ensure that that treatment is appropriate.

Parents should look for treatment that addresses both the physical and the mental health needs

of their teen or their young adult.

Treatment should also include support for both the patient and also the family.

For example, at the CATALYST Clinic where I work at Boston Medical Center, we have a

team-based approach where our team is composed of physicians, social workers, nurses, recovery

coach, and so that way we're able to really wrap around our patients and make sure that

all of their needs are being addressed.

Part of support for a family whose adolescent or young adult is going through substance

use disorder treatment is helping the family realize that this isn't their fault.

A lot of the families that we meet feel guilty or they wonder whether or not they missed

any signs or symptoms of what was going on with their child.

We try to be really clear that addiction is a really complicated disease and it's easy

to miss the signs, and that the parents shouldn't feel guilty about that and moving forward

it's important to make sure that we're supporting them in figuring out how to communicate and

support their child struggling with a substance use disorder.

We offer our services in a primary care clinic which allow us to address both the physical

and the mental health needs of all of our patients and their families.

We offer primary care.

We offer assessment and diagnosis of substance use disorder.

We treat patients with medications for alcohol and opioid use disorder.

We offer our patients therapy and recovery support.

In addition, we screen our patients for HIV and hepatitis C and link them to treatment

as needed and also link them to psychiatry care if indicated.

Some additional components of the substance use disorder treatment that we offer at CATALYST

may include monitoring for drug use with urine drug testing, offering overdose education

and naloxone for patients and their families, and also offering recovery support through

outreach services.

We have found that a lot of our patients have barriers that are related to social issues

such as housing and transportation, and we recognize that it's critical to address those

issues too if we want our patients to meet the recovery and have the recovery that they

want.

Substance use disorder services offered to teens and to young adults are different than

those services that are offered to older adults.

Some of the key differences are that oftentimes involvement of family is critical to the success

of a teen and a young adult with a substance use disorder.

It's also important that we recognize that peers play a major role in the lives of teens

and young adults, and for some teens and young adults, they may rely on their peers more

than their family.

Part of the work that we have to do is to help them find sober networks of friends so

that they can find ways to enjoy activities without substances.

Another component of treatment that's different is that some of these teens and young adults

may have dropped out of school are having trouble finishing school.

In order for them to go on, to get the job that they want, and again, have the lives

that they want and the full recovery, means that our services have to address getting

them back into school or helping them finish school or finding employment.

An additional key difference between treating adolescents and young adults compared to older

adults is that we have to sometimes go into the community to find them where they are.

Older adults may be more likely to actually come to a clinic or come to a program to receive

treatment.

But teens and young adults have a lot of ambivalence.

They may not want to go to the doctor's office.

So part of the work we do is going to find them where they are, which might be in schools,

might be in community centers, or in other places where teens and young adults congregate.

We've all heard a lot about the increase in opioid related overdose deaths in the United

States.

But you may be wondering, "How do those relate to adolescents?"

Well, there's some good news and some bad news.

Some of the good news is that prescription opioid use among adolescents continues to

decrease, and we know that from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health and the Monitoring

The Future study, both surveys that are conducted among youth every year.

However, there was a study that came out in 2016 that looked at opioid related poisonings

in youth during the time period where we've seen opioid deaths rise in adults.

In that study, there was 176% increase in opioid related admissions for poisonings in

15 to 19 year-olds.

There was also a data brief released by the National Center on Health Statistics in the

middle of August 2017 that showed a significant increase in overdose deaths from opioids among

teenagers in the last couple of years.

Then you may wonder, "Well, what's going on with young adults?"

We know that young adults use substances at higher rates than other age groups and that

holds true for opioids as well.

From 2002 to 2013 there was 108% increase in past year heroin use in 18 to 25 year-olds.

However, we also know that opioid related overdose deaths are lower in emerging adults

or young adults compared to older age groups.

Driving home the point that intervening early with this group is really important so that

we try to prevent those deaths later on in life.

Teens and young adults use opioids for a lot of the same reasons that they may decide to

try other substances.

It might be because it's sensations seeking and they like the high that they get when

they try a pill.

It might be because they're feeling depressed or hopeless, and taking the opioid relieves

that feeling that they have.

It may also be because they're bored and it's what their friends are doing and so that's

why they decide to do it.

It can be difficult to engage an adolescent or a young adult in treatment, and that might

even mean it can be difficult for them to remember to come in.

There are a couple of things that we do in our program that we think increases the likelihood

that our patients will show up for their appointments and for their care.

One of the things that we do is we do a lot of reminder calls.

We'll do multiple reminder calls.

We also will tell our patients that if they're having trouble with transportation, we'll

help subsidize that, and so we might give them a public pass for public transportation

or try to help pay some of their parking fees as well.

In addition, for patients who might not have access to food, we'll try to make sure that

they have access to snacks or other meals when they come to the visit.

And for some patients who may be trying to visit family who are far away, we may even

pay for a bus ticket.

All of these things we feel like are important to demonstrate to our patients that their

engagement with us is important and that we also recognize that they are more than just

their disease and have other things going on in their lives, and really showing them

that we recognize that unless we're addressing those it's going to be hard for them to show

up.

Treatment for opioid use disorder in adolescents and young adults really falls into two buckets.

One is behavioral health treatment and that can include different kinds of manualized

but evidence based therapy like cognitive behavioral therapy, motivational enhancement

therapy, and the adolescent community reinforcement approach among others.

Importantly, any kind of behavioral health treatment that's offered to adolescents and

young adults should also involve the family and should include family therapy and potentially

support for families like mutual help groups.

Best practice currently calls for medication to be added to behavioral therapy for patients

who have opioid use disorder.

What I often tell my patients is that the medication is going to help calm their brain

down so they're able to focus on the recovery, but that it's going to be really hard to talk

about their depression or anxiety or think about relapse prevention and how they can

not go out and use again if they're having a lot of cravings.

And that's what medication can do.

But that it's really important the patients also engage in behavioral health treatment

because it takes a lot of work to get sober and getting extra help from trained professionals

is going to lead to better success for them.

With adolescents and young adults it's critical to intervene early because we're trying to

prevent the downstream effects of longstanding addiction.

That means that we're trying to prevent transmission of HIV, of hepatitis C, of complications from

injection like skin infections or infections in the blood stream or the heart, and we know

that some of these medications can help prevent those diseases from occurring.

We're also trying to ensure that adolescents and young adults are able to stay engaged

with school or work, with their other goals that they have with their life and that medications

can help them to do that.

Although there have been fewer studies conducted in adolescents and young adults compared to

older adults, the evidence that we do have shows that treatment with these medications

does work.

Importantly, a statement from the American Academy of Pediatrics came out in 2016 and

recommended that providers offer medication treatment to adolescents and young adults

with opioid addiction.

This statement from the American Academy of Pediatrics was the first statement of its

kind from a pediatric organization recommending treatment with medication for opioid use disorder

in adolescents and young adults and represented a real paradigm shift in how we're thinking

about caring for this age group with opioid use disorder.

Oftentimes we hear from patients and families and sometimes other treatment providers that

medication should be used as a last resort.

However, when we think about other chronic illnesses like asthma or diabetes we would

never wait until someone hit bottom before starting treatment.

We think that it's important to offer medication for opioid use disorder to adolescents and

young adults as soon as we have a diagnosis.

There are three medications that we use to treat opioid use disorder in adolescents and

young adults.

Two of the medications, methadone and buprenorphine, work by controlling withdrawal symptoms or

treating the withdrawal symptoms someone may have after stopping opioid use.

They also help control cravings that people have for using the drug.

For example, if someone is spending a lot of time sort of thinking about how they're

going to go get heroine, taking methadone or taking buprenorphine helps take away some

of those thoughts.

Methadone and buprenorphine also go to that opioid receptor and sit on it really tightly.

So if someone tries to use heroin or another opioid while they're taking their medication,

that heroin or other opioid isn't able to cause a high.

Naltrexone works a little bit differently.

Naltrexone goes to the opioid receptor and sits on it and blocks any other opioid from

coming and causing a high.

Naltrexone doesn't necessarily help with cravings with all patients but it helps for some.

You may have heard of naloxone or NARCAN.

This is the medication that's used to reverse an acute opioid overdose and is being distributed

to people who use drugs and also to family members and anyone else who may be around

someone who's at risk for an overdose.

Naloxone can be given different ways.

It can be given as a spray in the nose and can also be given intramuscularly, and once

administered it can reverse an opioid overdose and save a life.

In addition to medication and behavioral healthcare it's important to recognize that there may

be other barriers to care that teens and young adults may be facing, and these are related

to social issues they might be having.

A lot of our patients are faced with homelessness or housing insecurity, might have a hard time

accessing healthy food, might also have hard time with transportation and being able to

get around to their appointments or to school or to their jobs.

We recognize that it's going to be really hard for them to do all they need to do to

get sober if we're not also addressing their needs.

The CATALYST program is a multidisciplinary program at Boston Medical Center that developed

because Boston Medical Center has this long history of taking care of adults with substance

use disorder and primary care and does an excellent job in doing that.

They care for patients in primary care and the emergency department and in OB and obstetrics.

There was really a gap though in terms of the services that were being offered to adolescents

and young adults.

We recognize that that was actually a gap that was felt across our city.

So CATALYST was created to address the need of ongoing substance use in adolescents and

young adults.

We have a team that's composed of physicians, social workers, nurses, program manager.

We also work really closely with our child and adolescents psychiatrist.

Importantly we have added a recovery coach to our model which is a little bit different

so that individual has a background in what's called, recovery coaching and can address

patients specific needs to their recovery in addition to their social determinant.

We see patients in both the adolescent center of Boston Medical Center and also in adult

primary care.

So we're able to match our patients to sort of where they fit developmentally.

When a patient calls or a family member calls or we receive a referral for a new patient,

we set up an appointment with a physician and a social worker so we can do a first visit

and an assessment of what's going on with the patient.

We then, the following week develop a treatment plan.

We meet every week as a team to talk about what's going on with our patients and there

we'll discuss new patients and ongoing issues with existing patients.

We feel like the team base approach that we have is really important.

I think another really important part of our model is that there we try to have basically

no hierarchy and everyone's really contributing to the treatment plan in an equal way.

We recognize that addiction is a complicated disease and although it's a brain disease

there are a lot of other things going on in that person's life that need to be addressed.

That each team member's specific training is there to be able to address those different

issues.

We started seeing patients in the CATALYST program in May of 2016.

At this point we are putting together a database so that we can start to track out outcomes

because we recognize that there's so few programs like this in the United States that it's important

that we figure out what we're doing well but also different things that we need to do to

improve so that we can share our models with other programs.

I'm gonna talk about some of the biggest challenges that we face in treating teens and young adults

with substance use disorder.

The first is ambivalence.

So the teenage years and young adulthood is really characterized by ambivalence and difficulty

in making decisions.

So we find that it can be very difficult to engage our patients and have them agree with

us that they may need treatment for their substance use disorder and this can be a huge

barrier to care.

Another significant challenge that we face everyday in our work is the stigma associated

with both the disease of addiction and the medications that we're using to treat addiction.

This can be ... make it difficult to get patients to come into care for the first place or it

can make patients and families resistant to accepting the kind of treatment that when

we wanna offer them.

The third challenge that we see commonly and this is particular to my practice are issues

around social determinant of health.

So such as housing and employment, school issues, transportation, being able to pay

for bills.

We've heard from our patients and their families time and time again that if those basic needs

aren't being met, it's really hard for them to focus on their recovery.

So we do everything that we can in our program to try to address those needs, but we're an

outpatient based program and there are limited resources.

There are different ways that you can involve parents and family members and treatment for

a substance use disorder with their teen or their young adult.

We invite all parents or family members into visits and sometimes have family meetings.

This is of course done with the permission of the patient.

The patients can provide guidelines for how those visits are gonna go and what information

is gonna be shared.

But we try to explain to our patients that it's really important and it's really critical

to their success to have their families involved as much as possible.

We also provide referrals for families to mutual help groups which really means support

groups that are led by other parents and family members who have loved ones who are struggling

with addiction, or to family therapy.

In our program, we plan to start parent groups and so these are gonna be educational sessions

for parents and other family members who are affected by substance use, specifically targeted

for those who have loved ones not willing to engage in treatment.

It can be a lot to be telling a 18 or 19 year old that they have a chronic illness that

they're gonna be living with for the rest of their life.

Once they start to hear that message, they may not wanna come into clinic to receive

treatment.

What we try to do is we tell our patients from the start that we're there for them no

matter what.

We try to identify other things that are going on in their lives that might be challenging.

So issues around school or a job or with transportation and sometimes by addressing some of the other

challenges that they have going on in their life we're able to then engage them in treatment

for their substance use.

When caveat to this is that when we're taking care of patients who are less than 18 years

old, sometimes other challenges come up and because of their age.

So for example, if we have a patient who is 16 and we know that that person may is injecting

heroine or other opioids and is really at acute risk, then sometimes we may have to

break confidentiality and engage other agencies to assure the safety of that child.

It's really important when working with teens and young adults who have substance use disorder

or who are using substances, to spend a lot of time building trust and building rapport.

A lot of these teens and young adults might be coming from families where there are issues

around communication or they might have a lot of other experiences in their life where

their trust was broken.

So spending some concentrated time, really explaining, reassuring and demonstrating through

having open doors, calling back quickly, having other members of the team sort of address

their other social needs, can make a real difference in terms of engaging with them.

I think it's also important to recognize with teens and young adults because they may be

ambivalent.

That they might not show up initially to an appointment or they might stay engaged and

then drop out of care.

But we have also found that by giving them this message that we're there no matter what.

That a lot of our patients, even if it's been a couple of months will come back to us and

they will tell us and their parents will tell us, that they felt that it was important to

come back to us because we were safe, we had told them that no matter what was going on,

this was a place that they could come to.

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