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TREATMENTS OF
ALCOHOLISM
Alcoholism can
destroy the life of an alcoholic and devastate the alcoholic's family. But it also has overwhelming consequences for
society. Consider these statistics from
the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence:
*In 1988,
alcoholism and problems related to it cost
the United States an estimated $85.8 billion
in mortality and
reduced productivity;
*Fetal alcohol
syndrome, caused by a woman's drinking
during pregnancy, afflicts five thousand
infants a year;
it costs about $1.4 billion
annually to treat
the infants, children and adults
afflicted with
FAS;
*More than twenty
thousand people die annually in
alcohol related
car accidents. (Institute of Medicine,
1989)
Clearly alcoholism harms society in numerous
ways and it is in society's best interest to find effective treatments for
alcoholics.
The primary goal
of all treatments for alcoholism is to get the alcoholic to stop drinking and
refrain from abusing alcohol in the future.
The paths to this goal are diverse.
Several factors - biological, social and psychological - influence why
an individual becomes an alcoholic. So
treatments vary, depending upon why the alcoholic drinks and what the physician
or
therapist
believes is the best method for recovery.
Some treatments focus on the physical addiction of alcoholism. Others emphasize the alcoholic's social or
psychological cravings.
Alcoholics Anonymous and Rational Recovery are
two support groups that help alcoholics recover. Other alcoholics benefit from one-on-one
therapy with counselors, who may help patients understand drinking and change
their behavior. Finally for some
alcoholics, the most effective treatments are those that combine medical
treatment with counselling. Such
treatments enable the alcoholic to more easily break the physical addiction to
alcohol as they evaluate their social and psychological reasons for drinking. Two of these treatments are: Nutritional Therapy and Network Therapy.
Nutritional
Therapy
"Alan Dalum
was 37 years old and thoroughly convinced he was soon going to die. Dalum was not dying of cancer, heart disease
or any other illness from which one can leave the world with dignity. Dalum was dying of alcoholism." (Ewing,
1978) Just when he lost all hope for
recovery, Dalum discovered a center that emphasized the importance of
biochemical repair in alcoholism recovery using nutrients and herbs. Upon learning that Minneapolis, where he
lived, had one of the only programs in the country that employed such methods,
Dalum decided to give the Center's six - week, outpatient program a shot.
The Health Recovery Center (HRC) in
Minneapolis claims a 74 percent success rate (patients still sober one year
later) and differs from conventional programsin several significant ways. First, it focuses on uncovering and treating
physiological imbalances that may be causing alcohol cravings and throwing the
entire body out of whack. For example:
hypoglycemia is a common imbalance found in up to three quarters of
alcoholics. The center's philosophy is
simple "Until the body begins getting the essential nutrients it needs,
recovery cannot begin." (Ewing, 1978) They believe that no amount of talk
will stop the cravings, anxiety, depression, mental confusion and fatigue that
result from alcohol's biochemical and neurochemical damage. "There is not time to obsess over past
traumas when you're dying of a major disease.
Why do people persist in believing that the damage done by excess
ingestion of alcohol can be undone with psychological methods alone?"
(Ewing, 1978) The Health Recovery Center
is devoted to the restoration of bodies, minds and spirits that have been
ravaged by alcohol.
Such restoration begins the moment a new
patient walks through the door. After
the staff physician takes a thorough medical history and performs the initial
physical exam, the patient is hooked up to an IV solution, out of which drips
high doses of ascorbic
acid (vitamin C,
a powerful detoxifier), calcium, magnesium, B vitamins (which help eliminate
withdrawal symptoms), evening primrose oil (a natural anticonvulsant) and a
full spectrum of amino acids including glutamine (an alternative form of
glucose that significantly diminishes cravings). While conventional programs frequently numb
new patients with drugs like Librium and Valium to help ease withdrawals (and
later must wean patients off of them), HRC's formula is entirely natural. "The sum total of it all is that people
go from consuming half a quart of alcohol a day to consuming none at all -
without drugs." (Ewing, 1978)
Following the IV,
HRC patients are supplied with bottles of the vitamins and minerals they have
been deficient in for so long and put on a diet that is free of sugar, salt,
caffeine and most importantly, nicotine.
This is because tobacco is cured with cane, beet and corn sugars, which
may not only cause intense cravings in those with hypoglycemia (and render them
incapable of getting the condition under control), but may also stimulate
allergic/addictive reactions in those sensitive to sugar and corn, two of the
most common hidden food allergies.
"Sensitivities to corn, yeast, barley and other foods commonly
found in alcoholic beverages are the reason some patients cannot stop
drinking." (Ewing, 1978)
In the ensuing
six weeks, HRC patients meet once weekly with a nutritionist, once weekly for
individual therapy with one of HRC's five certified counselors,
and daily for
group sessions, at which they talk openly about such subjects as anger, humor
and insecurity. Such sessions are
purposely not like conventional twelve step meetings, at which participants are
expected to talk about the power they believe alcohol has over their lives. Rather, both the group and individual
sessions focus on the here and now.
"We call it rational management therapy. First we make a list of the client's goals,
long and short term, and map out ways they can achieve them. We decide together what they need to work on
and we try to get them to do things that will make them feel good about
themselves."
(Ewing, 1978)
In sharp contrast
to the AA approach, HRC counselors try to instill in patients the belief that
they are in control of their destinies, that they have power over alcohol
rather than the other way around.
Network
Therapy
Twenty years ago,
Marc Galanter was appointed as a career teacher in alcoholism and drug abuse by
the National Institute on Mental Health.
Galanter found nothing on the technique of resolving a drinking or drug
problem for a patient who came to the doctor's office.
Since then,
researchers in addiction have begun to develop a systematic understanding of
how drug and alcohol dependence wreak their effects on thinking and
behavior. But there are still very few
descriptions of a comprehensive approach that the therapist can apply to
addicted patients. "Few therapists
venture beyond recommending to alcoholics that they attend AA or take a long
break from job and family and go away to a rehabilitation hospital."
(Stepney, 1987)
Marc Galanter
developed an approach that engages the support of a small group - some family,
some friends - to meet with the substance abuser and a therapist at regular
intervals to secure abstinence and help with the development of a drug free
life.
The majority of
Galanter's patients (77 percent) achieved a major or full improvement. They were abstinent or had virtually
eliminated substance use and their life circumstances were materially improved
and stable.
Marc Galanter
named his therapy network therapy.
Family and peers become part of the therapist's working team, not
subjects of treatment themselves.
"Social supports are necessary for overcoming the denial and
relapse that are so compromising to effective care for the substance abuser."
(Stepney, 1987) Together, the group
develops a regimen to support the recovery, one that includes individual
sessions as well as meetings with this network.
The therapist continues to meet with the network while the abuser
focuses on ways to protect continued
abstinence and on the psychological issues that would allow the achievement of
full recovery. As time goes on, the
abuser's abstinence is secured, the network sessions are held less frequently
and individual therapy continues.
"A social network is apparently a necessary vehicle to stabilizing
the cognitive components of patients' recovery, to allow them to deal with the
reality they need to see and to provide the support essential for accepting the
new reality." (Newman, 1987)
The purpose of
network therapy is then to create an atmosphere that will allow an alcohol or
drug abuser to experience relief from distress by participating and
moving towards a
drug free outlook. After initial
sobriety has been achieved, network sessions often acquire a social quality.
In order to act
out a pattern of behavior that is clearly self-destructive, addicts must adopt
a pattern of denial. This denial is
supported by a variety of distorted perceptions: "persecution at the hands of employers,
failings of a distraught spouse, a presumed ability to control the addiction if
wanted." (Newman, 1987) This
cognitive set is not only unfounded, but it is also at variance with the common
sense views of the drug free family and friends. Because of this, intimate and positive
encounters with them in the network produce an inherent conflict between
addicts' views and the views of network members. The addict must resolve this conflict, or
cognitive dissonance, in order to feel accepted in the group. The network therefore creates an ongoing
pressure on the addict to relinquish the trappings of denial.
Typically,
addicts deal with this conflict by defensive withdrawal, but if their network
is properly managed, cohesive ties in the group will engage them and draw them
into an alternative outlook. Gradually,
they come to
accept that their distress can be relieved by a change in attitude, as denial
and rationalization are confronted in a supportive way. Over time, engagement in the network allows
an addict to restructure the perspective in which the addiction has been
couched.
For addicts, both
healthy and faulted attitudes have
long coexisted in conflict with each other and
the cognitive dissonance produced by these contradictions
has driven them into a defensive stance.
In a proper, supportive context, a constructive
view premised on abstinence and on acknowledgment
of the harmful nature of drug use can
emerge. Addicts can experience a
"conversion" of sorts,
perhaps gradual, but real nonetheless.
(Johnson, 1980)
There is hardly
any disorder more complicated and difficult to treat than alcohol/drug
dependence. Perhaps because alcohol
dependence is so complex, it has attracted various professions and approaches,
each having its own notion of etiology and treatment. The point is that treatment needs to be
conceptualized for the patient as a long term process of years with the
principle task for recovery being to provide the most effective treatment for a
given person with a given problem. But
until and unless researchers find a specific biological cause and cure for
alcoholism, treatments will continue to vary, depending upon the alcoholic and
the therapist.
References
Ewing, J. (1978).
Drinking. Chicago: Nelson Hall
Institute of
Medicine. (1989). Broadening the Base of
Treatment for
Alcoholic Problems. New York: Bergin
Publishers Inc.
Johnson, V.
(1980). I'll Quit Tomorrow. New York:
Harper & Row.
Newman, S.
(1987). It Won't Happen To Me. Toronto:
General
Publishing Co.
Stepney, R.
(1987) Alcohol. New York: Aladdin Books
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