Churchill famously said that the US and Great Britain are two countries separated by a common language. Arguably TV and movies may have bridged the divide a bit, but nuances of language and spelling are not the only things that differentiate us; something I was aware of when reading Marc Galanter & colleagues' paper on … Continue reading God and recovery
Author: Dr David McCartney
Medical Students and AA
Part of my job is teaching medical students about addiction and recovery, something I enjoy. Like others, I encourage future doctors to attend mutual aid meetings as part of their education. A couple of studies with this theme recently caught my eye. In the first, 138 medical students attended an AA meeting and then wrote … Continue reading Medical Students and AA
Alcohol Services in the Pandemic
All of us working in the field of alcohol and drug treatment will likely be facing the greatest challenges we have ever faced. Scottish Health Action on Alcohol Problems (SHAAP), a partnership of the medical Royal Colleges and Faculties, has issued some new guidance for services which is well worth a read. Points that caught … Continue reading Alcohol Services in the Pandemic
Alcoholics Anonymous – the evidence
Does mutual aid work? If you are a member of a mutual aid group that you believe is keeping you sober or drug-free, then it's pretty much assured you will say ‘yes’. That’s understandably not good enough for researchers and some others. Nearly two decades ago, I asked a consultant addiction psychiatrist why he didn’t recommend … Continue reading Alcoholics Anonymous – the evidence
Residential Treatment and Medications for Opioid Use Disorder
An open paper published by the Journal of the American Medical Association this month berates residential treatment providers for not following guidance on the treatment of opioid use disorder (OUD). A study with impressive numbers (over quarter of a million admissions to residential treatment centres in the USA) seems to me to make some errors … Continue reading Residential Treatment and Medications for Opioid Use Disorder
How can AA possibly serve women?
Holly Whitaker, quoted in the Guardian newspaper, talks about AA and her impression that it doesn't have much to offer women: The programme’s guidelines, created in 1939, centre on appealing to a higher power and renouncing the ego. How, she wondered, could this possibly serve women or minorities who historically have been powerless? “These are … Continue reading How can AA possibly serve women?
Mutual aid – steaming ahead
I liked my fellow blogger – Austin McNeil Brown’s reflections on the role of the clinician in recovery: “Most recovery occurs through social relationships that have nothing to do with clinical technique” And his observation from lived experience: “So where did the majority of the momentum for my recovery come from if not through professional … Continue reading Mutual aid – steaming ahead
Family Recovery
I was reminded of how important it is to ensure the family members of patients/clients with addictions realise that they need to recover too. This blog by a doctor on the British Medical Journal's website captures the harrowing sense of loss as a partner's alcohol dependence takes hold and then the dawning of hope as … Continue reading Family Recovery
Smoking and Recovery
Smoking and other addictions go hand in hand. In treatment populations, it’s usual to find that about 80-90% of clients are current smokers, compared to, for example, 16% of the Scottish population and 14% of US citizens. Out of interest 25% of German adults smoke, 27% do in France and, incredibly, half of all Chinese … Continue reading Smoking and Recovery
Quetiapine Abuse
Quetiapine (branded as Seroquel in the US) is an antipsychotic drug used for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. It’s also prescribed off-license in the UK for anxiety. That means that some people with substance use disorders who don’t have a major mental health diagnosis end up on it. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence … Continue reading Quetiapine Abuse
