Sex addiction rehab

Sex addiction rehab – like that of ESPN’s Steve Phillips – can provide help for serial cheaters

A beautiful family, financial security, an enviable career – in other words, the seemingly perfect life. Yet for high-profile men like actor David Duchovny and fired ESPN analyst Steve Phillips, an addiction to sex ended in a highly publicized stint in rehab. Their addiction is no different from other forms of addiction, experts say, wrecking relationships, destroying families and causing losses, pain and heartbreak.

Oh, it’s not an addiction? What’s more mood-altering?

Editorial: Who needs drug courts?

Editorial: Who needs drug courts? | Philadelphia Inquirer | 10/17/2009

The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers conducted the two-year study that says drug courts too often suck up a community’s drug-treatment funds to use on nonviolent criminals like Britt Reid, who may have their own resources to deal with their addictions.

Meanwhile, other defendants, including men arrested for domestic violence whose acts are clearly related to their addictions, are denied entry into a drug-court program that would address their drug or alcohol abuse.

“Too often, the criteria and process for admission into drug court is guided by tough-on-crime politics, focusing on first-time or nonviolent offenders, with little consideration of smart-on-crime approaches that target those most in need of treatment,” said the defense lawyers’ report….

Millions struggle, lack access to substance abuse treatment

In September, the country observed National Alcohol and Drug Addiction Recovery month. The observance highlights the societal benefits of substance abuse treatment, the contributions of treatment providers and promotes the message that recovery from substance abuse in all its forms is not impossible.

According to a U.S. Health Department survey, 23.1 million Americans need specialized treatment for a substance abuse problem, but only approximately 10 percent, or just 2.3 million people, get help.

Millions struggle, lack access to substance abuse treatment

Q&A: Does Methadone Detox Work?

Methadone has three medical uses: pain control, maintenance and detox.

Maintenance

In maintenance programs, the addict is given measured doses of a less-intoxicating drug that will allow him or her to function better — take care of business, hold down a job, etc.

While this form of treatment, using Methadone, is popular due to government programs, most addiction professionals consider it unacceptable, as it does nothing to help the person recover from the addiction. Continue reading

South Florida pain-clinic doctors also treating drug addicts

State regulators stripped Dr. Michael I. Rose’s power to write prescriptions two months ago, after health officials found that the pain-clinic doctor had prescribed enough painkillers to put one patient “at risk of death from overdose.”

The health department findings are all the more alarming given the North Miami physician’s other specialty: drug-addiction treatment.
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/southflorida/story/1402574.html

These people are unprofessional, unethical scumbags. Someone needs to hook ‘em, then let them find out what it’s like to shake out.

Why 12 Step Will Not Work

Why 12 Step Will Not Work

…it’s the American way, that pioneering spirit, the rugged individualist, the one who made it to the top. Frank Sinatra sang “I did it MY way.” Not only do we, as a people, want to do it our way, we want instant gratification, and anything that does not fit those two important criteria will not be accepted….

Seeking Freedom From Addiction On A Tiny New York Farm

“…The farm is run by recovering addicts and alcoholics from New York City, men whose various addictions, and repeated relapses, have left them sickened and homeless. Called Renewal Farm, the patch of land boasts neat rows of vegetables and bright flowers, as well as two greenhouses fashioned out of thick sheets of plastic.

The men’s days are split into two very different parts. They tend the farm, lacing the air with locker-room banter and gentle ribbing. And then they exorcise their worries and voice their hopes at St. Christopher’s Inn, a hilltop rehabilitation center nearby where they sleep.

The men’s lives are shot through with such contrasts. …”

At a Tiny New York Farm, Seeking Freedom From Addiction – NYTimes.com

Growing need for drug abuse counselors

WMU News – Growing need for drug abuse counselors

“The whole field is shifting to a paradigm called ‘recovery oriented system of care,’ ” Simpson says. “That goes away from the old model of just doing acute care and then putting the person back on the street, to a conceptualization of understanding that in fact substance abuse, and especially substance dependence, is a chronic condition. It is a relapsing condition, and it can repeat over time. So we have to look at a lifetime type of event.”

Can you commit an alcoholic or other drug addict?

In most jurisdictions, the police or a mental health professional can have people who are found to be a danger to themselves or others committed for a brief period of observation (usually 48 – 72 hours). Then the court can decide to commit them for further treatment, or not.

Most jurisdictions also have provisions for family members to commit for observation, under limited circumstances. You should call your local health department for direction to the correct channels.

You should also know that the great majority of treatment facilities are not locked down, and patients are free to leave (against medical advice, of course) at any time.  They may face penalties for doing so, however.

Question: How long would it take the average person to recover from a heroin addiction?

There is no “average person” when it comes to drug addiction, but we can make some generalizations.

Recovery from addiction depends upon a wide range of conditions: the degree and length of the addiction, the detox protocols used, the emotional and psychosocial factors affecting the addict, the quality of treatment, aftercare and support (including treatment of codependency issues in close family members, either therapeutically or by attendance at self-help meetings), and the desire of the addict to become and remain clean and sober.

We could guess that an individual who is successful at staying clean and free of ALL drugs ( including Methadone and Suboxone, after initial detox), would be able to handle most routine activities, jobs, etc. at between 9 months and two years, if they have good supports.

If the person continues with their program of recovery, support groups, and any necessary treatment for psychological problems not directly related to the addiction, they could in many cases be back in mainstream society in two to three years.

Continued recovery is contingent upon cleaning up the chaos in our lives caused by the addiction and any preexisting conditions, maintaining a healthy, relatively stress-free life, and avoiding circumstances that might tempt us to use.

Question: How long is alcohol detectable in hair?

Hair tests for alcohol consumption actually test for ethyl glucuronide, a metabolite of ethyl alcohol. It is always present in hair when alcohol has been used, and is never present otherwise, hence it is a positive test for consumption of alcohol.

The length of time it can be read in the hair is, theoretically, at least, dependent on the length of the hair. Hair grows at roughly 1/2 inch per month, so hair 12 inches long could be tested back for two years. It is probable that damage to the hair from chemicals such as bleaches and dyeing agents could affect the accuracy of the testing in longer hair, but in shorter hair the test is accurate to acceptable levels for legal use.

ETG testing is normally used to (a) determine if alcohol has been used recently; or (b) establish a pattern of continuous alcohol use for the purpose of diagnosing alcoholism. Short of shaving your entire body, there is no way to avoid the results.

A Comment Worth Reading

Dan was kind enough to comment on the Post Acute Withdrawal Syndrome article I wrote some time ago.  You can read the article here. I so liked the way he expressed himself on the issue of store-front detox docs, that I asked if I could use his comment:

Dan, on May 18th, 2009 at 18:32 Said:

I succumbed to the Madison-Avenue hyperbole spewed by a storefront Suboxone-peddling physician. This doc assured me that my years of opiate abuse/dependency would dissipate in a mere two weeks with this wonder drug. Granted, while on Suboxone I felt wonderfully well; afterwards, however, my spirits crumbled as I began to feel worse than I had during the peak of cold-turkey withdrawal. Of course, he dutifully advised me that I was experiencing PAWS – and for an additional $800 in cash I could enjoy another two to four weeks of Subox. I gallantly and charmingly declined.

My relapse was all but inevitable. Eights months later (after a literal drive-by intervention) I entered a medical detox facility and then was assigned to an intensive outpatient program three times per week, three hours per day for 24 sessions – attached thereafter to a one-year aftercare program. This process has been life-changing for me. And right now we are “working” on the skills and strategies to understand and soberly cope with PAWS. Who woulda thunk? The group’s facilitator is an LADC who focuses a huge amount of therapy time on helping her clients understand PAWS and its propensity for leading to relapse. Not only does she make us dig deeply to uncover our original motives for “using,” she guides us and prompts us to do the work necessary to cope during recovery.

There is hope out there. To all who now suffer, understand the pain – instead of trying to cover it. In so doing, you improve greatly the chances that your tomorrows will be improvements upon your “today.” Indeed, this, too, shall pass.

My Most Positive Thoughts to All –

Dan

Is the ridiculous “War on Drugs” Nearly Over?

White House Czar Calls for End to “War on Drugs”

http://www.truthout.org/051409S?n
Gary Fields, The Wall Street Journal: “The Obama administration’s new drug czar says he wants to banish the idea that the US is fighting ‘a war on drugs,’ a move that would underscore a shift favoring treatment over incarceration in trying to reduce illicit drug use.”

A couple of remarks about the infallibility of 12-step programs

Let me say at the outset that I am a firm believer in AA, NA and the other 12-step fellowships, just in case no one has noticed. They saved my life, the life of my wife, and of my best friend, his wife, my son-in-law and many of the other people who are most important to me.

However…

It worried me early on, and continues to worry me nearly two decades later, how some people in the rooms seem afraid to allow their knowledge of alcoholism — not their program, but alcoholism — to progress beyond the middle of the last century. Continue reading