The question of how to describe and categorize addiction has been the subject of several of my recent posts. Some people scratch their heads about why I care so much about whether we think of it as a disease. Bill White summarized the stakes well here: If AOD problems could be solved by physically unraveling … Continue reading Is it harmful to frame addiction as a disease?
Integrating MAT, Abstinence-Based Approaches to Recoveryย
An interesting discussion with a passionate advocate for MAT expansion and the most prominent advocate for the "new paradigm": What is the process for successfully integrating these 2 approaches? What are the biggest hurdles providers face when accomplishing this goal?Dr DuPont:ย The biggest hurdle is the staff reluctance, even the staff distaste, for the integration of … Continue reading Integrating MAT, Abstinence-Based Approaches to Recoveryย
What’s the relationship between recovery, collegiate recovery, and substance-free student housing?
https://twitter.com/KeithNHumphreys/status/1447351509658718210 As substance-free definitions of recovery are challenged, this article on Stanford's substance-free student housing community made me wonder if some recovering students will find more safety and support, and have more in common with fellow students in these communities than in collegiate recovery programs (CRP) that include students whose definition of recovery includes ongoing … Continue reading What’s the relationship between recovery, collegiate recovery, and substance-free student housing?
Headwinds for Recovery Community Self Agency
โ. . . the individual, family and community are not separate; they are one. To injure one is to injure all; to heal one is to heal all. โ from The Red Road to Wellbriety, 2002โ โ as quoted by William White, Recovery Rising Perhaps the most important insight in recent recovery history is that … Continue reading Headwinds for Recovery Community Self Agency
Spanning the Chasm Between Us
โI donโt even agree with myself 100% of the timeโ โ me It is a tongue in cheek self-quote. Cheap, but true and relevant to the piece. Perhaps you may even identify with it. Afterall, we all hold views that seem contrary or in conflict with each other. It is the essence of the human … Continue reading Spanning the Chasm Between Us
Towards More Compassionate Care for Not Just Another Medical Disorder
If effectively addressing addiction was easy and straightforward, we would have done so already. In reality, it is a multifaceted condition that defies narrow solutions. There are complex genetic and environmental factors that lend themselves more to a continuum of use, problematic use and addiction that is not consistent with either / or check box … Continue reading Towards More Compassionate Care for Not Just Another Medical Disorder
Thank you, Sara McGrail
The DrugWise Daily newsletter noted the passing of Sara McGrail. I never met Ms. McGrail and I didn't follow her work, but her name rang a bell. I knew I'd interacted with her years ago but couldn't remember the details. It turns out we interacted around some posts related to harm reduction in 2008. I … Continue reading Thank you, Sara McGrail
Thinking about “disease” as complex and multi-dimensional
The risk of transmission is complex and multi-dimensional. It depends on many factors: contact pattern (duration, proximity, activity), individual factors, environment (i.e. outdoor, indoor) & socioeconomic factors (i.e. crowded housing, job insecurity).Tweeted by Muge Cevik on September 21, 2020 One argument against the disease model of addiction is that it advances a narrow medical model … Continue reading Thinking about “disease” as complex and multi-dimensional
What we miss when we focus on opioid treatment and recovery
A version of this post was originally published in September 2019. It speaks to some questions about yesterday's post. This NPR headline demonstrates the problem with the concept of "opioid recovery" rather than "addiction recovery." Fortunately, there's been growing concern that advocates, policymakers, and media have too narrowly focused on the opioid crisis. Up to … Continue reading What we miss when we focus on opioid treatment and recovery
The historical essence of addiction counseling
If AOD problems could be solved by physically unraveling the person-drug relationship, only physicians and nurses trained in the mechanics of detoxification would be needed to address these problems. If AOD problems were simply a symptom of untreated psychiatric illness, more psychiatrists, not addiction counselors would be needed. If these problems were only a reflection … Continue reading The historical essence of addiction counseling
