Learning to change

    A Community Care award-winning project in Luton is helping
    people who have a problem with alcohol to change their behaviour
    and reclaim their lives. Natalie Valios reports.

    “Alcohol abuse is not a disease, but learned behaviour and if
    it’s been learned then it can be unlearned, says Breege Begley,
    project manager of the James Kingham Project. The project is the
    treatment side of Luton-based charity Alcohol Services for the
    Community.

    Rather than being an anti-alcohol agency, the charity believes
    in promoting sensible drinking. Its premise is based on a social
    learning model rather than the Alcoholics Anonymous disease model.
    The aim of the James Kingham Project is to provide a safe,
    supportive, non-drinking environment for people looking to resolve
    an alcohol-related problem. It also offers counselling to other
    family members, including children.

    In Bedfordshire alone there are 10,000 children living with
    parents with drinking problems. Most children referred to the
    project come via social services because their parents’ alcohol
    misuse has resulted in them being in care.

    “We give them a safe, comfortable environment of support with
    someone who understands them so they can offload how they are
    feeling,” says Begley.

    In these circumstances, the project may already be seeing their
    parents as clients. But it may be that they will never see them,
    because they have to want to come to the project themselves.
    Referrals come from social services, probation, health, GPs, or are
    self referrals.

    The project receives about 90 referrals every three months. Of
    these, assessments and care plans are put in place for about 60,
    the rest never make it that far. From these, about 15 might not
    turn up again.

    “But once we get people onto a structured programme that’s when
    we see a change in them,” says Begley.

    Those who never make it to the first appointment are generally
    repeatedly referred to the project.

    The model that the project works to is the cycle of change,
    which is split into five stages:

    • Pre-contemplation: the client may not realise there is a
      problem. Awareness needs to be raised of the existence of a problem
      and the possibility of change. Doubts needs to be raised about
      current behaviour;
    • Contemplation: ambivalence conflict – change is considered and
      rejected. Risks of not changing need to be emphasised as do reasons
      for change. Balance tips in favour of change – realisation that the
      benefits of change outweigh the costs and that change is
      possible;
    • Action: decide to do things differently, change lifestyle to
      break away from the habit and engage in actions to produce a change
      in the problem area. A clear goal, realistic plan, support and the
      rewards of change are all vital;
    • Maintenance: arguably the hardest stage. The challenge is to
      sustain change accomplished by action and prevent relapse. Constant
      vigilance and support is required to avoid relapse;
    • Relapse: when a person is unable to maintain the change old
      habits return. Sometimes this is due to changes in the person’s
      life. Maybe their support has been withdrawn or become less
      effective. Relapse is normal and does not necessarily mean a return
      to square one, they can resume the cycle.

    After the referral and initial contact, clients have an in-depth
    assessment so that the project gauges an overall picture of their
    drinking, their life, and the people around them. At a second
    appointment, the client and project worker draw up a care plan of
    services that the client feels would be useful. They can pick from
    a range of services including an alcohol awareness closed group;
    anxiety management; structured relapse prevention approach;
    self-help support groups, aromatherapy massage; and
    counselling.

    A structured programme is set for a 12-week period, which is
    reviewed once a fortnight or once a month. On top of the programme
    there is open house three days a week and a women’s day on
    Wednesday where workshops are designed to look at alcohol-related
    issues for women, for example assertiveness, personal safety,
    communication skills, parenting skills and health.

    Although there is no detox element to the project, clients can
    be referred to the clinical team which provides community or
    inpatient detoxification. If the project feels that a client needs
    residential rehabilitation, it can assess them and apply for
    funding from the local authority.

    It is clearly stipulated that clients must not drink on any day
    that they attend the programme. If their behaviour leads workers to
    suspect that they have been drinking or they smell of alcohol, they
    are asked to return another day. Clients themselves insisted on
    this rule, says Begley, because if they have made the effort not to
    drink they do not want to be next to someone who smells of
    alcohol.

    The project doesn’t, however, tell clients to stop drinking.
    “That’s their decision, we just give them the information so that
    they can make an informed choice,” says Begley. “If someone says
    they want to learn to control their drinking we will help them do
    that. Then if they come back and say that they can’t have
    controlled drinking, they have to stop, that insight into
    themselves works better.”

    Three quarters of clients may want to stop completely, and out
    of that about 60 per cent do so by the end of the programme. After
    the 12 weeks they can continue to use the project, and there is a
    development group which meets once a week for those who have
    successfully completed the programme.

    “It’s very hard to measure success in this field,” admits
    Begley. “If someone cuts their drinking from 200 units a week to
    50, they are still not drinking within safe recommended limits, but
    that is a success for them.”

    One client was drinking at least a bottle of spirits a day, now
    he is down to a glass of wine or a couple of pints if he goes out.
    His unit intake for the last three months has been between 10 and
    14 units a week.

    “I continue to see somebody on a monthly basis so that they know
    someone is there after the 12 weeks. As long as they know they have
    contact then they feel safe.”

    The client sees more women than men, but the client group is not
    your stereotypical single mother living in a deprived area at the
    end of her tether, or young man on income support, but includes a
    cross section of professionals as well as unemployed people.

    In fact, it was the project’s work with employees at the
    Vauxhall plant in Luton which won it the Community Care
    Award last year. The We Can Make It Work initiative came about
    after a Vauxhall employee attended the project because of his
    alcohol problem. A survey of his colleagues found that 78 per cent
    of respondents drank above the safe limits; half had missed work on
    at least one occasion because of drink; and one third were at work
    under the influence of drink or a hangover.

    This spurred the employee on to raising the issue of a joint
    approach. Vauxhall developed a formal link with the James Kingham
    Project and 70 workers have approached the link worker. Twelve
    staff have formally linked into the project, of these seven have
    reduced their alcohol intake and four are now abstinent.

    The fear is that this work will soon be undermined. The Vauxhall
    plant is due to close at the end of March 2002, and there will be
    redundancies. “There will be a big alcohol problem in Luton,”
    predicts Begley.

    “We have already seen it happening. We are getting some
    referrals from the plant again. And the link worker says the amount
    of employees who have approached him is unreal.”

    It looks as if the project is going to have its work cut out
    over the next year.

    Turning Point sponsored the Community Care Awards 2000
    drugs and alcohol category.

    Project Profile

    • Project: The James Kingham Project.
    • History: Alcohol Services for the Community began as a charity
      in 1979 with two workers. James Kingham was a local judge and a
      trustee of Alcohol Services for the Community. He was killed in
      1995 and when the project was set up in October 1996, the charity
      put his name to it.
    • Funding: From Luton social services department, Luton
      Probation, and Bedfordshire Health Authority. For 2000-1 it was
      £86,500.
    • Staff: Project manager Breege Begley, one full-time project
      worker, five part-time project workers, two volunteer counsellors,
      four volunteers, and an aromatherapist who is contracted in to
      offer aromatherapy massages to clients.
    • Clients: Anyone with an alcohol problem, as well as support for
      “significant others”, partners, children and friends affected by
      the drinking behaviour of someone close to them.
    • Contact: Breege Begley, Alcohol Services for the Community,
      26-30 John Street, Luton, Bedfordshire LU1 2JE. Tel: 01582
      723434.

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