More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Deni Carise

GET UPDATES FROM Deni Carise
 

Examining the Viability of Substance Abuse Treatment Today

Posted: 08/16/10 01:00 PM ET

Earlier this week, I was more than a little put off by Bankole Johnson's Washington Post editorial, "We're Addicted to Rehab. It Doesn't Even Work." It's interesting to note that this piece comes just six months before the release of his new book on medications that "conquer alcoholism," which will join countless other tomes that also claim to have the cure.

In his searing op-ed, Johnson, chair of psychiatry and neurobehavioral sciences at the University of Virginia, argues that there is little empirical evidence to suggest that substance abuse treatment programs are effective. Making sweeping generalizations, he points a finger at our country's treatment centers, including nonprofit providers, calling them both "ruinously expensive" and "divorced from state-of-the-art medical knowledge."

I take issue with these charges first and foremost as a scientist who has dedicated her career to studying the effectiveness of substance abuse treatment. In equal measure, I disagree with Johnson's allegations as a person in long-term recovery who might not be here were it not for the treatment I received.

Johnson calls substance abuse a devastating disease, yet he fails to acknowledge the limitations of treating a condition that is chronic by nature, like diabetes and hypertension. When evaluating the effectiveness of a particular medication for diabetes, treatment providers don't expect their diabetic patients to be "cured" after one treatment, nor do they define success as never having another sugar crisis. Similarly, defining successful substance abuse treatment as one that produces 100 percent abstinence for the rest of a person's life is a naïve and useless benchmark. However, if we define success as learning to manage your condition and gaining the support needed to do so, there are literally hundreds of controlled studies documenting the effectiveness of various forms of treatment. And they meet FDA levels of effectiveness.

As for Johnson's claim that substance abuse treatment is "too costly for most people," this is simply not the case. The two programs he mentions, Promises and Hazeldon, are geared toward individuals of higher socioeconomic status. However, there are many programs in our country that serve those with more modest means. When I entered substance abuse outpatient treatment in 1984, I paid just five dollars for each counseling session I attended. I later found out that the remainder of my treatment costs had been covered by the federal block grant. At Phoenix House, where our programs receive both state and federal funding, some clients stay with us even when they have no funds to cover their care. Many other non-profits do the same. Listing two expensive programs as if they are representative examples does not convey the wide range of treatment options available to people from all walks of life.

Johnson primarily aims his criticism at AA and it's true that not every substance abuser who enters AA will achieve long-term recovery. Likewise, not every diabetic who tries a particular medication will achieve long-term recovery from diabetes. As with other chronic conditions, there are many evidence-based treatment methods for substance abuse--not just the 12-step model. To discredit an entire spectrum of care that has worked for hundreds of thousands of people--and has been backed by scientific research--is to ignore the facts. It says to those of us who work with substance abusers each day that our efforts to help them are futile. And it says to those who need treatment that there is no real help available. That's inaccurate and irresponsible.

I'm certainly not dismissing the benefits of incorporating medication into substance abuse treatment. That would be irresponsible as well. But research has shown that meds alone will not produce a cure and traditional "rehab" components such as group counseling are equally important. Dr. Johnson himself runs a treatment program that includes cognitive behavioral therapy in addition to pharmacology. So why can't he acknowledge that any and all empirically-proven methods of helping people with this disease need to be included in their treatment options?

Maybe it's simply the fact that presenting a more balanced op-ed piece wouldn't sell as many books.

 
Earlier this week, I was more than a little put off by Bankole Johnson's Washington Post editorial, "We're Addicted to Rehab. It Doesn't Even Work." It's interesting to note that this piece comes just...
Earlier this week, I was more than a little put off by Bankole Johnson's Washington Post editorial, "We're Addicted to Rehab. It Doesn't Even Work." It's interesting to note that this piece comes just...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 10
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
03:56 PM on 09/11/2010
I think education and knowledge is the key to recovery. 12-step programs can help a person understand many things like where/why they are powerless, what they can't control, defense mechanisms, character flaws, reflection their own actions and on the people they have hurt, making a personal inventory ect.. But when it comes down to it, no one can help anyone (or force someone) who doesn't think they have a problem, need help or want it. I think treatment programs such as NA or AA only help someone acknowledge that they have a problem. It's like treating a *symptom* without understanding the real underlying disease/issue. Addiction/substance use/abuse is a *symptom* of something greater and the individual did found some relief in using the wrong substance. Addiction, pain management and mental illness have one very common factor - they are diseases the patient can't prove diagnostically. Therefore the individual with substance abuse *symptoms* need to want to change and the healthcare provider needs to want to listen so they can help that person. Addiction diagnosis is too much of an excuse for the individual to continue to justify relapse without knowing or understanding why...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ali Rockwood
06:36 PM on 08/18/2010
access to treatment is not only difficult to come by bc of money, but also bc of stigma. addicts need help and families that are so traumatized by shame are reluctant to even admit that there is one among them who can't control their using habits.

free and low-cost treatment is hard to find unless the addict manages to get into 'the system' or has access to good-quality insurance and happens to be employed in an industry, by a company where an admission of substance abuse wouldn't be job-threatening.

i searched 6 months for a local treatment center for my sister, one that i could get her into w no criminal record, no medical diagnosis of substance abuse, and no money. i failed to find one before a combination of pills and booze effectively ended her life.

four years later she is heavily sedated to keep her arms from flailing so bad they have to be strapped to her bed, and bc she suffers powerful, frequent seizures. she is on a feeding tube, subjected to experimental treatments without her consent- for she is unable to give it, suffering from constant infection and illness, her head and teeth so misshapen she is unrecognizable, her eyes lack ability to focus on any object.

drug abuse is epidemic, but there really isn't much help out there for a great many addicts. they are on their own because their disease is just too ugly to admit.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
05:31 PM on 08/17/2010
12 step programs and their true believer supporters are more than happy to convince the person who just quit that their success is all due to the Twelve Steps.. ..and provide testimonials and a support group with catchy sayings to back it up.
This is almost entirely coercion. Not curing.
The12 step cure rate is about the same as spontaneous quitting.. Meaning that the "cure" is hardly working. What is happening is people are falling into conversion groups and gambling by putting their life in under influences that are not tied to actual facts but are filled with exaggerated tales of cure and success when the record does not show anything of the sort. What you can find.. like with TM (meditation) there is a lot of skewed slanted studiesthat try to bolster false success.
12 step is an indoctrination program originally based on the same principles as the Oxford Group and Moral Rearmament.
Bill Wilson conceded that most of the 12 steps came from The Oxford group "and no where else".

Another conversion group the Moonies also got it's start with Buchanan, the Oxford group and Moral Rearmament.
09:03 PM on 08/17/2010
What a bunch of crap! 12-step helped my recovery, but so did cognitive behavioral therapy and attending college and getting my BA in substance abuse counseling. In addition every self help book that I bought that I got ONE IOTA of helpful information helped. Another person making a massive over generalization. You cannot measure any cure rate to any group, treatment, technique or therapy with any certain validity. Dude, 12-step, at least in this part of the country is one of the worst run indoctrination progams in the history of the planet. If you stop going, they don't care. No one follows you home or makes you do anything. Grow up and bury your axe in the back yard.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
02:55 PM on 08/18/2010
Ah a testimonial ..
I assume the reasons you did not just quit on your own -are your own .
I totally stand by what I say regarding the poor cure record and origins of 12 step programs.
Your going off is not convincing me that you have been greatly helped by any program or education
01:37 PM on 08/17/2010
I agree that Johnson was too hard on 12-step recovery approaches and ignored the evidence that people who get involved and stay connected with them tend to do better than those who do not. That stated, diabetics are offered other forms of treatment when one form of treatment doesn't work. You fail to acknowledge the fact that close to 90 percent of treatment programs are based on the 12 steps and, when people relapse, they are often told it's they who failed (not the program) and are sent back to the very programs that didn't help them in the first place. Sometimes, they're "not ready" - but many times, it's because they don't connect with the 12 steps, and those people are rarely told about alternative ways to recover. Johnson also talks about outcomes of addiction treatment. Well, another major problem with treatment programs, is that it's next to impossible to find out what their outcomes are. If I needed to have a procedure done on my heart, I'd want to know what my heart surgeon's success rate is with that procedure. If addiction is a life-threatening disease, then patients have a right to know about a treatment program's outcomes.
11:25 AM on 08/17/2010
I attended a rehab funded by the Wood County Ohio Dept. of Health and a non-profit halfway house. Both stressed 12-step programs for continuously managing the disease of addiction and because of those programs I am alive and have been continuously sober for almost 6 years, now. I don't know anything about Mr. Johnson, but I know a bit about recovery, and mine wouldn't have happened if it wasn't for treatment and AA.

http://stark-raving-sober.blogspot.com/
12:47 AM on 08/17/2010
I think you and i both know that no book and no rehab will stop someone who doesn't want to stop. Only when the desire and willingness are there, can an addict stop his behavior. Whether it's a $30,000 rehab or a $40 book, its naive to think that either one is the "magic" cure. It takes constant vigilance and abstinence to maintain a life time of recovery from addiction.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
09:21 PM on 08/18/2010
Excellent comment.....and a voice of reason
I`m surprised that in the US the 12 step programme takes a lot of criticism, in my homeland it has been very successful in helping many alcoholics in recovery
your comment that the person has got to WANT to change is spot on......no magic cures and lifetime of vigilance are the only way forward
11:50 PM on 08/16/2010
Deni... 1984 is dead and gone. Rehab is big money... it helps a few who want the help... but it is Camp Snoopy for the majority... and the "professionals" often need more help than the patients. Somebody really should be concerned about the co-ed treatment centers that look the other way when the 'sex addict' is canoodling with the 18 year old ED patient. Yuck.