Approach addiction as what it is, a chronic brain disease

The addiction treatment industry’s focus on the 12 Step approach needs an update. More on science based treatments for addiction that ADDRESS THE BRAIN, with a call for your action at the end.

4
minute read
By Harold Clifton Urschel III, M.D., M.M.A.
Chief Medical Strategist, Enterhealth

Addiction: The 3rd leading cause of death in the U.S.

The Washington Post recently reported that the mortality rate for white men and women ages 45-54 with less than a college education increased markedly between 1999 and 2013. That marks a sharp, and shocking, reversal in decades of progress toward longer lives.

The culprit cited by the originating study from the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences was drugs, alcohol and suicide.

Even as the death rate for all causes of death has declined 43% between 1969 and 2013 – including strokes, heart disease and cancer – addiction has gained the dubious honor of third leading cause of death in the United States. This is a disease that modern medical science has proven to be a chronic brain disease. However, decades of stigma have forced our treatments to fail based on moral precedent.

The industry’s rejection of scientific treatments

Since the 1930s, the U.S. alcohol treatment system has relied heavily, and often exclusively, on the 12-step approach, predominantly because alcoholism has been viewed as a result of moral failings. The most popular and traditional treatment based on the Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) 12-step program, followed by 90 AA meetings in 90 days, has an 80% failure rate. I wonder what other industry could post such poor results and still enjoy such widespread adoption. I also wonder what other chronic brain disease would earn the suggestion of “talk and prayer” as the best possible treatment.

While AA and other behavioral treatment approaches are an essential part of addiction recovery, this can’t be our only weapon in a war that, according to the Post article, has resulted in half a million deaths.

In every other major medical illness, diabetes, cancer and heart disease, the clinical teams treating these illnesses immediately embrace and adopt every major new scientific breakthrough. Instead the addiction community often rejects new scientific treatments, and continues to enforce the sham belief that a support group by itself is able to treat a life threatening, chronic brain disease. This is just plain wrong. People are dying because of this close-minded approach.

3 major discoveries about the brain and addiction

Scientific research has validated three (3) major discoveries in the field of addiction treatment:

1.  Addiction is a chronic, medical disease affecting the brain;

2.   50% of those addicted to alcohol or drugs also suffer from co-occurring psychiatric disorders, i.e. a mental illness such as anxiety, depression, schizophrenia or bipolar disorder; and

3.   Science has developed medications to help control cravings and address the healing of brain injury that can transform the alcoholic’s chances for successful sobriety from 20% to upwards of 75-80% long-term.

A great deal of alcohol and drug-induced brain damage takes place in the prefrontal cortex where abuse forces deep emotional connections between using and pleasure that the brain “remembers.” These connections make it difficult for those with addiction to resist using based on very real and powerful primal urges that can take more than a year to reset.

We often ask the addict, “Why?” when it seems so obvious how damaging their behavior is. The simple answer is that their brains are broken – injured, impaired, malfunctioning.

Addiction treatment models should reflect the science!

Could the ever growing rate of our loved ones afflicted with this increasingly fatal disease be caused by an outdated model that limits real treatment to the acute level, instead of striving for the most effective medical results? Would we abide such complacency for victims of other debilitating brain diseases like Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s? Substance abusers may have made a bad choice, but should we not seize the surest opportunity for success when they make the right choice to seek treatment?

Once we begin treating addiction as a chronic brain disease, we’ll see a meaningful rise in our treatment success (and survival) rate that will help stave the fatality and economic consequences of this epidemic. Better outcomes are a result of the right environment, caring employees trained in the latest science, doctors with enough time to provide proven medical treatment, and skilled therapists proficient in dealing with the highly complex brain disease caused by addiction, and often compounded by other behavioral disorders.

Isn’t it better we get there before another half a million people fall victim?  Science has shown us the way to successfully treat this illness. The medications and treatments are safe and available. The handful of treatment centers that actually put the latest scientific research findings into practice are achieving that 75-85% long term success rate for alcoholism, heroin and even methamphetamine addiction.

Let’s get the word out.  Our addiction treatment industry is broken, but we don’t have to stand for it. Demand the latest science be brought to the service of your addicted loved one.

About the author
Dr. Urschel is Co-Founder and Chief Medical Strategist for Enterhealth, one of the finest residential and outpatient treatment programs in the nation. Known as one of the country's foremost authorities on substance abuse and addiction, Dr. Harold Urschel is the author of the New York Times best seller, “Healing the Addicted Brain.” He is a coveted speaker on substance abuse and the latest treatments of the chronic brain disease of addiction on both the local and national stage.
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