“addiction and recovery are a reflection of the ecologies in which they are nested”

Yesterday's post about efforts to support recovery in San Francisco brought some of Bill White's blog posts and this video from the HBO Addiction series to mind. (The video is showing its age with respect to some of the language and content, but it conveys some very salient lessons that haven't changed.) https://youtu.be/WXxxcElL7Cs?t=94 From Bill … Continue reading “addiction and recovery are a reflection of the ecologies in which they are nested”

“doing damage control as best we can… but we’re out of ideas”

This article from the San Francisco Chronicle caught my attention this week. It illustrates the challenges big cities are facing with the combination of the behavioral health crisis, the aftermath of the pandemic's disruption, noncarceral responses to drugs, the lack of affordable housing, social responses that frame addiction as secondary to other problems, and the … Continue reading “doing damage control as best we can… but we’re out of ideas”

More on the NIAAA definition of recovery

Brian Coon posted a reaction to the NIAAA definition yesterday. I also recently watched the NIH webinar on the definition. “Recovery is a process through which an individual pursues both remission from AUD and cessation from heavy drinking. Recovery can also be considered an outcome such that an individual may be considered ‘recovered’ if both … Continue reading More on the NIAAA definition of recovery

partial recovery, full recovery, and “better than well”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NkC9aTreuQ8 Experiencing Recovery, 2012 Norman E. Zinberg Memorial Lecture, William L. White ...historically the mental health field has had a very well-defined definition of partial recovery but literally no definition, until very recently, a full recovery from severe mental illness. We now have long-term studies of the course and trajectory of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, … Continue reading partial recovery, full recovery, and “better than well”

What’s the pathway to recovery for medical patients?

A friend recently shared a research summary reporting that cannabis users are at higher risk of clots and limb amputation following a common surgery. Researchers at Michigan Medicine analyzed more than 11,000 cases from the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Cardiovascular Consortium, known as BMC2, to review patient cannabis use and postoperative outcomes for lower … Continue reading What’s the pathway to recovery for medical patients?

A consumer’s guide to research on substance use disorders

Reading about addiction and recovery can be overwhelming and confusing. Media reports and experts often make strongly worded statements that are contradicted by statements from other media sources and experts. Other times, they seem to negate or minimize the lived experience of people with drug or alcohol problems and their families. For example, it’s very … Continue reading A consumer’s guide to research on substance use disorders

Sentences to ponder: stigma reduction

Demonstrated solutions to alcohol and drug problems will do more to reduce the stigma attached to these conditions than will endless debates about the source of such problems. White, W. (2000). Toward a new recovery advocacy movement. (Photo credit: beware of pity by shawnzrossi)

Sentences to ponder: the roles of professionals and community

...I do want to suggest that something got lost along the road to professionalization. What got lost was a relationship between two people that transcended the roles of counselor and client. What got lost was our deep involvement in the community and in local communities of recovery. What got lost was our recognition of the … Continue reading Sentences to ponder: the roles of professionals and community