Sober Living by the Sea Blog

Monday, May 12, 2008

Men Are More Likely To Crave Alcohol When They Feel Negative Emotions

This probably comes as no surprise, but men and women tend to react to stress differently. A study of emotional and alcohol-craving responses to stress has found that when men become upset, they are more likely to want alcohol than women. Women on the other hand, have greater rates of depression and some types of anxiety disorders than men.

This is the type of pattern that we have addressed at Sober Living by the sea by creating separate programs for men and women, and particularly find it helpful to create a gender specific environment during the first 30 or 60 days of primary treatment. Our Landing and Sunrise Ranch facilities for men provide structured, highly supervised support for males who are chemically dependent. Our Rose and Victorian House for the treatment of Eating Disorders able to create nurturing and supportive environments for females, allowing them to work on their women's issues with other women in recovery in a safe and intimate environment.

The recent study was authored by the Yale University School of Medicine and was conducted by exposing over 50 adults to role playing activities and closely monitoring their response. The role playing was conducted as "imagery scripts" which were divided into these categories: stressful, alcohol-related, and neutral/relaxing. All role playing was conducted in separate sessions, on separate days, and in random order. The results of the research concluded that women are more likely to feel sad or anxious after a stressful experience and men are more likely to drink alcohol as a result of a stressful experience.

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Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Addiction - Is it a disease or a moral failing?

I am going to re-post Dr. Kevin McCauley's reponse to a recent article on slate.com written by Sally Satel and Scott Lilienfeld claiming that Addiction is Not a Disease.

The most important question there is about addiction

A response by Dr. Kevin McCauley, M.D. to the article posted on Slate.com "Medical Misnomer: Addiction isn't a brain disease, Congress"

The question of whether or not addiction is really a disease is the most important question there is about addiction, and the reputation of addiction medicine rests upon its ability to provide a coherent answer. One of the major projects at our institute is to investigate the possibility of such an answer.

Her odd association with an ultra-conservative think thank (The American Enterprise Institute) notwithstanding, Dr. Satel’s monograph “Is Drug Addiction a Brain Disease?” is the best-articulated argument against the conceptualization of addiction as a disease (it can be found at http://www.eppc.org/publicatio​­ns/bookID.19/book_detail.asp)​. Likewise, Dr. Lillianfeld’s effort to expose semantic mistakes in psychology is commendable. However their views on addiction reveal fundamental mistakes regarding the nature of addiction and the experience of the addicted patient.

On the question of language, the authors claim that characterizing addiction as a brain disease appropriates language used to describe conditions such as multiple sclerosis and schizophrenia. Yes, and rightly so. Our modern concept of disease – the “Disease Model” – emerged from Germ Theory over a century ago, and evolved such that today it can be defined as a physical, cellular defect or lesion in a bodily organ or organ system that leads to the expression of signs and symptoms in the patient. This is a very rigorous standard for disease (it is also the standard demanded by Dr. Thomas Szasz, another opponent of the conceptualization of addiction as a disease).

For most of the last century, it has not been possible to fit addiction to this standard. That has changed. The organ involved in addiction is the limbic brain (specifically the ventral tegmentum and nucleus accumbens/extended amygdala). The defect is a stress-induced/genetically predisposed dysfunction of the limbic dopamine system (specifically a hedonic dysfunction – a broken “pleasure sense”). And the symptoms of greatest importance are 1) loss of control, 2) craving, and 3) persistent drug use despite negative consequences. Addiction meets the standard definition of disease better than multiple sclerosis and schizophrenia, two diseases whose pathophysiologies are far less elucidated. This is why medicine can claim, with confidence, that addiction is a disease.

On the question of personal agency and choice, the authors’ complain that calling addiction a “disease” undermines personal agency and our concept of free will. This is not, however, a problem with addiction. The standard definition of disease as it is used in medical practice today strips patients of their power of choice and hands that power to the doctor. In exchange, the patient gets to enter the sick role – a helpless, compliant role, and one relieved of responsibility. So the problem of addicts claiming that they have a disease and must be absolved of responsibility for their behavior is not a problem with addiction. It’s a problem with our standard definition of disease. Most of the authors’ trouble in calling addiction a disease stems not from whether or not addiction fits our standard definition of disease (it does), it stems from the problems inherent in the Disease Model itself.

As for choice, in addition to being a broken hedonic system in the brain, addiction is also a disorder of volition. Craving states cause a selective hypofunctionality of the prefrontal cortex. This is visible on neuroimaging scans such as functional MRI. The area of the brain of particular interest is the ventro-medial prefrontal cortex, an area of the brain that assesses future consequences. It is hard to underestimate the importance of these findings. They imply that choice is a variable quantity during some brain disease states. The exciting opportunity here is to figure out how choice really works. How is it realized in the brain? What are the conditions under which it best operates? And how do we set those conditions so that addicted patients can exercise free will according to their true values?

The authors may be correct in their assertion that these neurological scans may not mean all that their proponents say they do. But they do mean something. At the very least, the activity visible on these scans correlates with conscious experiences such as craving. This evidence, while preliminary, cannot be ignored. Entire fields of scientific research are based on less.

On the question of stigma, the authors support the idea of considering addiction a moral failing. They believe the stigma against addicts is good, and that shame motivates people to stop using drugs. The correct answer here is “sort-of.” Stigma motivates drug and alcohol ABUSERS to get sober. When faced with the negative consequences of their drug use, the abuser can bring these negative consequences to bear on their decision-making. But stigma, or shame, or the threat of prison or death, will not work to change the behavior of addicts because the limbic brain equates drugs with survival at a very deep and unconscious level of brain processing. In light of this and the failure of the “consequence appreciating” areas of the cortex, the utility of stigma and punishment in the motivation of addicts is dubious. When craving kicks in, the drug comes first. The addict literally believes that the best way to stay out of jail is to get high (secure survival) now, and deal with the consequences later. This is the most fascinating and frustrating feature of addiction: negative consequences have no effect on the pattern of drug use. If you really are dealing with an addict, punishment doesn’t work.

As it stands in addiction medicine today, there is no way to tell the difference, not with definitive certainty, between the really bad drug abuser and the not so bad drug addict. The conflation of these two populations – abusers and addicts – creates much confusion. The promise of these neuroimaging scans is that they may someday be able to detect the minute differences in brain activity that differentiate the abuser from the actual addict.

In the meantime, we would do well to remember the long and painful history in medicine of labeling the behavior of people we didn’t like as “badness,” only later to learn something new about the way the brain or body works and realize that these behaviors were, in fact, symptoms – of a disease process. How do we know we are not making the same mistake again with addicts? The risk of being terribly wrong suggests caution. It is a strange specialty of medicine that uses shame as a therapeutic modality or stigmatizes patients to promote health. In fact, medicine’s contribution to the concept of justice lies in its ability to reveal the difference between those behaviors that are, in fact, symptoms, and those that are truly bad. Doctors cultivate an intuition – a “sixth sense” – that tells us: but for the disease process, the patient would not act this way. I get that feeling when I look at addicts.

Lastly, on the question of spiritual change the authors cite the experience of Jamie Lee Curtis as an example of how many addicts enter recovery. In Ms. Curtis’ case, she never went to treatment to get sober; rather she had a spiritual experience and relied solely on her attendance at A.A. meetings. But what got her sober? Was it the shame of some stigma or punishment hanging over her head (a stick)? Was it the reward of a promising career in film (a carrot)? Or was it the fact that she found something that was deeply, personally, emotionally meaningful - in her case, a relationship with God?

These deeply personally meaningful things – which will be individual to each person (“God as he/she understands Him”) – have the power to break the hold of craving. They are spiritual. They restore the function of the prefrontal cortex, and with it the addict’s power to choose meaningful things over drugs. The task of addiction treatment is to teach the addict stress coping tools to decrease their craving, while at the same time helping them find the one thing that is a little more meaningful (a little “higher in its power”) than drugs or alcohol. Or food, or sex, or gambling. A.A. does this nicely, but none of this comes to the patient overnight. Treatment that understands addiction as a disease can be indispensable as well.

So is addiction a disease? Yes. Do addicts need to take responsibility for managing their addiction? Certainly. But so do all patients. So do patients with multiple sclerosis and schizophrenia. The problem I have is in holding one group of patients more responsible than other groups of patients. Most people will take responsibility to the exact extent that they know how, or are supported. That is what good medicine is all about.

Kevin T. McCauley, M.D.

Monday, May 5, 2008

Roughly a Quarter of All Drivers in Some States Drove Under the Influence of Alcohol in the Past Year

New Nationwide Report Estimates that also reveals that 6-7 percent of adults in several states and the District of Columbia drove under the influence of illicit drugs at least once in the past year.

A first-of-its-kind national report reveals that 15.1 percent of the nation’s drivers age 18 and older drove under the influence of alcohol at least once in the past year. The report says that in some states the levels are far higher – about one in four drivers.

Nationwide, an estimated 30.5 million people aged 12 or older drove under the influence of alcohol at least once in the past year according to the report by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).
Driving under the influence ranged from a low of 9.5 percent in Utah, to highs of 26.4 percent in Wisconsin, 24.9 percent in North Dakota and 23.5 percent in Minnesota.

The report also shows that nationwide nearly one in 20 adult drivers aged 18 or older drove under the influence of illicit drugs such as marijuana/hashish, cocaine/crack, inhalants, hallucinogens, heroin or prescription drugs used nonmedically.

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), there were almost 16,700 deaths in 2004 caused by accidents related to driving under the influence of alcohol. Overall, driving under the influence of alcohol and illicit drugs is among the leading sources of preventable death by injury in the United States.

“This report highlights the enormous public health risk posed by this problem – one threatening the lives of many Americans every day,” said SAMHSA Administrator Terry Cline, Ph.D. “By highlighting the scope and nature of this problem in each state we can help communities best use their efforts and resources to address this preventable menace.”

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Thursday, May 1, 2008

Continuing Care Protocol at Sober Living by the Sea

If and when a client is returning to their home after completing treatment, they receive a lot of options for continued care. This is where Sober Living by the Sea's twenty three year history benefits the clients because we have a nation wide network of reputable addiction professionals.

I have been tracking the continuing care process and it is quite a production for every client, but it is worth it because we care so much about our client's reaching that one year milestone of sobriety or abstinence from their eating disorder.

Prior to discharge, the Continuing Care Coordinator and the Case Manager will arrange for IOP (intensive outpatient treatment) in the hometown community, followed by meeting with a counselor/therapist specializing in substance abuse, on a weekly basis for support and for someone to check in with about issues arising during this transitional time. We equip every client with several options for addictionologists, therapists, prescribing psychiatrists, outpatient facilities, sober living homes, and of course a directory of twelve step meetings in the area where they are returning.=

Of course, SLBTS is unique in that we offer several levels of continuing care. We are actually a destination for clients to pursure extended continuing care (after primary treatment at another facility). Some of our clients have come from a 30 day treatment to extend their care in an open community with us to practice living sober. Many of our clients come for their first treatment into Newport Beach which has the world's most vibrant recovery community. Of course with several gender specific primary treatment facilities in Sober Living's Newport Beach campus, we also do our fair share of caring for clients from detox through the 1 year mark. Our men's treatment facilities include the Landing for Men, a men's drug rehab right on the beach, and also in the California Foothills we have Sunrise Recovery Ranch for men, which is a very highly supervised and spiritual 12 step based treatment center for addiction in a beautiful location.

For women, we have the Rose of Newport Beach, which is a beautiful and exclusive women's rehab right on the beach in Orange County. Also, for Eating Disorders we have The Victorian for Eating Disorders which is the west coast's premier treatment program for anorexia, bulimia, and compulsive overeating.

Either way, a powerful milestone is 1 year of recovery which is the best prognosticator for long term recovery. The best case scenario for achieving this is to gradually step down in care, from 90 days of residential, to Extended Work/School Program, where an additional 90 days is spent going to school or working during the day and returning to SLBTS to continue their care in the evenings. A further step might be to move out to a sober living home and continue to attend SLBTS in the evenings. All the while, continuing to meet with a case manager weekly and continuing with drug testing.

I like to recommend that a client continue to meet with a therapist weekly until they have 2 years of sobriety. Of course, during this time, the client would continue to attend meetings, meet with their sponsor, and continue step work. I say it is always better to stay in treatment longer from the start, than to go it alone too soon, then have to start all over again if your way doesn’t work out.

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