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Substance Abuse: Symptoms and Intervention

If substance abuse could be contributing to an employee's deteriorating performance, ignoring the situation won't help. It may be the employee who has an alcohol or drug problem or it may be a family member. No matter who has a problem, it will likely only get worse and have costly—and possibly disastrous—consequences for everyone unless some action is taken.

Recognizing the Symptoms

Clinical diagnosis of an alcohol or other drug problem is not the job of the supervisor, but work performance is. A key part of every supervisor's job is to remain alert to changes in employee performance and to work with employees who are having problems so that performance improves.

The following list of performance and behavior problems are common to many substance- abusing employees. However, it is important to remember that these symptoms do not necessarily indicate that the employee has a substance abuse problem.

Performance

Behavior

When and How to Intervene

When an employee's performance begins to deteriorate for whatever reason, the supervisor has the right and responsibility to intervene. The supervisor does not need to be an expert on alcohol and other drugs to intervene appropriately if substance abuse is suspected; the intervention should be focused on the performance problem.

Principles of Intervention

Maintain control of the conversation

Be clear and firm

Be supportive but avoid emotional involvement

 

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Required Statements | Last update: January 5, 2000 | webmaster@asbdc.ualr.edu