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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Time.com: Addiction Treatment, Not Based on Science, Science or Medicine


By Maia Szalavitz, health writer at TIME.com


Addiction is typically characterized as a disease by experts and government officials. Yet, unlike most known diseases, the treatment of addiction is not based on scientific evidence nor is it required to be provided by people with any medical education — let alone by actual physicians — according to a new report.
The 586-page tome, which was published by Columbia’s National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA), is based on large surveys of treatment providers, people who suffer from addiction and those in the general public, as well as a review of more than 7,000 publications on addiction.
It finds that most addiction care is administered by “addiction counselors” for whom there are no national standards of practice. It finds also that 14 states don’t require any education or licensing at all for addiction counselors. The risks to those seeking treatment can be dire: California is one of the states that allows uncredentialed providers, for example. In a recent case in that state, a sexual predator was found to be offering “intimacy therapy” to addicted teenage girls; treatment consisted of sex with him. Without oversight, there’s no way to stop people from preying on vulnerable people under the guise of addiction care.
Only six states require addiction counselors to have a minimum of a bachelor’s degree; just one requires a master’s degree, according to the CASA report. The main qualification for treating addiction in this country is having suffered from the disorder oneself — a standard of care that would be considered absurd if any other medical condition were involved.
Moreover, addiction treatment providers are typically not held accountable for their patients’ outcomes: the report found that nearly half of all patients with illegal drug problems are referred to treatment by the criminal justice system and, of course, it is the patients, not the counselors or program directors, who go to prison if they fail.
The new publication is not free of CASA’s tendency toward hyperbole, however. It overstates the breadth of the addiction-treatment problem in the U.S. by arguing that anyone who takes any illegal drug needs help. The report makes the exaggerated claim that 16% of the U.S. population suffers from addiction (this includes cigarette smokers) and that an additional 32% are engaged in “risky” substance use.
The report’s estimates do highlight some inherent problems in the definition of addiction, particularly in the proposed definition slated for the upcoming revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5)the standard manual used to diagnose all mental disorders. The new DSM-5 definition, which collapses addiction under one diagnosis, instead of the current two, may well result in widespread overdiagnosis, opponents of the new definition say.
In the current DSM, addiction is described under two diagnoses: the short-term and less severe “substance abuse” (a classic case would be a college binge drinker who outgrows the behavior), and the chronic and more dangerous “substance dependence” (classic case: a full blown alcoholic). DSM-5 would define all alcohol and other drug problems as substance-use disorders, which would be further characterized as “mild” “moderate” or “severe.”
The DSM-5‘s definition of “severe” substance use disorder will replace what was formerly known as addiction or dependence. That means that anyone who uses a drug but will never have a chronic problem would be diagnosed as “mildly” addicted — a condition that most people would see as akin to being “mildly” pregnant.
The CASA report points out that even under the current diagnostic rules, the lack of professional training of most treatment providers means that severity is rarely assessed adequately. Most people are therefore slotted into one-size-fits-all programs, typically based on the 12 steps of Alcoholics Anonymous. Such programs advocate total abstinence, a tack that offers little help to the majority of people whose problems aren’t severe, since they need guidance on moderation.
The dominance of the 12-step approach also leads to a widespread opposition to change based on medical evidence, particularly the use of medications like methadone or buprenorphine to treat opioid addictions — maintenance treatments that data have shown to be most effective. Other medications that are known to treat alcohol and drug addiction, such as naltrexone (reVia, Vivitrol), are also underutilized, while philosophical opposition to the medicalization of care slows uptake.
To fix these problems, CASA recommends a more careful definition of addiction and substance-use problems (note to the center: start with your own), as well as the requirement that all treatment providers be licensed as health-care organizations. CASA calls for national standards for accreditation of such care and for all physicians to receive required education about substance-use disorders in medical school.
The report notes that only 10% of people with substance-use problems seek help for them: given its findings about the shortcomings of the treatment system, that’s hardly surprising.
Maia Szalavitz is a health writer at TIME.com. Find her on Twitter at @maiasz. You can also continue the discussion on TIME Healthland’s Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIMEHealthland.


Read more: http://healthland.time.com/2012/06/26/addiction-treatment-in-america-not-based-on-science-not-truly-medical/#ixzz1z9Tfksgq

Monday, June 18, 2012

Bill O'Reilly: The Media Glamorizes Pot

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Thank You Director Kerlikowske!


I am incredibly thankful for the statements U.S. Drug Czar Kerlikowske made about recovery in his latest speech when he said previous federal drug policies were a three-legged stool, with criminalization, prevention and treatment serving as the foundation for national policies. Now there will be a fourth leg – recovery.


Sobriety is a right, not a privilege and we have to start treating it like that.  Therefore, I am glad to hear U.S Drug Czar Gil Kerlikowske encourage people to talk about their recovery.  Speaking out about addiction is one of the most important things I have ever done for my recovery.  It is my recovery, as addiction is a disease both social and physical that grows in silence and in the dark.  A lot more people would find long-term recovery from addiction if we had better social perception of what it means to be sober.  But then it also doesn’t help that we have 38,000 laws  that prevent people who struggle with addiction from getting the help they so desperately need.  


In my recovery, I have learned that being drug-free is the greatest gift of life.  I also learned after I watched my father die of cancer that there may come a time in my life where I will be forced to make a choice and that choice will be between struggling or dying in pain or dying out of pain like my father did.  As a cancer patient he had no longer been treatable, was brought under hospice care and was starved and fed a morphine drip for three months until the good Lord took him.  It was horrible to see him go this way.


It made me realize how precious life is and that every day, I want to live it in a healthy way and see it in clear view and do every thing I can, not to take my recovery for granted.  Recovery has given me so much.  

For more on Director Kerlikwske’s remarks visit:  latimes.com




Thursday, June 7, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

Open Letter to the City of Los Angeles 

Public Safety Committee

By Alexandra Datig of Nip It In The Bud USA

June 7, 2012

Dear Honorable Members of 
the Committee on Public Safety:

The City of Los Angeles Committee on Public Safety should follow the direction of the Planning and Land Use Committee and ban medical marijuana dispensaries in the city.  Since the passage of California Proposition 215, the Compassionate Use Act of 1996, the drug lobby has established much false promise regarding medical use of marijuana.  At its inception, Prop. 215, a state law, has been in conflict with federal law, causing reckless rebellion and lawsuits against government entities who looked to restore order from the blight and illegal activities marijuana dispensaries have brought to Los Angeles communities.

Much damage has been done and worst of all, the notoriety marijuana has gotten in the press and in the community, has raised the curiosity of young people.  This is the real tragedy and we are not seeing marijuana advocates and the drug lobby speaking out against youth use.  The only thing dispensary operators and the drug lobby care about is their agenda, regardless of the message it sends to young people.

Medical marijuana advocates confront the City of Los Angeles with 70 lawsuits brought by marijuana dispensaries, crime and endless minutia and harassment.  The marijuana dispensaries must go!   The city cannot afford to keep meddling and negotiating with these federally illegal establishments that have no regard for the message they are sending to young people.  Therefore a vote to ban dispensaries and storefront pot shops is urgent.  The City must act now!

Sincerely,


Alexandra Datig

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Los Angeles is left with No Choice other than a Ban on Medical Marijuana Dispensaries


The City of Los Angeles has had an enormous problem with medical marijuana dispensaries.  L.A. has been a national joke for several years now because it is said that the City has more marijuana dispensaries than Starbucks coffee shops.  

In a full council vote, to take place as soon as next week, L.A. is hopefully going to join more than 175 cities and 13 counties with banning the unsightly and troublesome pot shops. 

A look at some of the text in a proposed ordinance, approved by the City’s Planning and Land Use Committee, shows appalling evidence that this is a situation totally out of control and that something must be done about it.  According to Los Angeles City Clerk’s office records and a recent report by the Los Angeles Daily News, L.A. is also fighting 70 lawsuits brought by the marijuana drug lobby Americans For Safe Access and dispensary operators who were asked to close because most opened without the City’s approval.  

Here’s part of the Ordinance:

WHEREAS, commencing in 2007, according to local media reports and neighborhood sightings and complaints, more than 850 medical marijuana businesses randomly opened, closed and reopened storefront shops and commercial growing operations in the City without any land use approval under the Los Angeles Municipal Code (LAMC or this Code) and, since that time, an unknown number of these businesses continue to randomly open, close, and reopen in Los Angeles, each with no regulatory authorization from the City;

WHEREAS, the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) has reported that, as the number of marijuana dispensaries and commercial growing operations continue to proliferate without legal oversight, the City and its neighborhoods have experienced an increase in crime and the negative secondary harms associated with unregulated marijuana businesses, including but not limited to, murders, robberies, the distribution of tainted marijuana, and the diversion of marijuana for non-medical and recreational uses;



Lastly, in this CBS news report, one Councilman says he thinks the City’s plan for a “gentle ban” is heartless and that 100 dispensaries should remain open.  The gentle ban being that the city would allow a very limited number of legitimately and seriously ill patients to grow marijuana at home in a group of no more than three.  In my opinion, California Proposition 215, which was enacted by voters in 1996 is a bad law to begin with and should be taken off the books.  The L.A. gentle ban however is in accordance with what Prop. 215 suggests.  

City officials should always keep in mind, that marijuana is a federally illegal, banned substance under the Controlled Substances Act and that even a gentle ban is illegal in the eyes of the Federal Government.