Drug Rehabilitation Treatment
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Similar to other diseases and illnesses,
drug addiction can be overcome with top quality treatment, increased research efforts, and prevention. As serious as drug addiction
is, fortunately it can be treated. Drug rehabilitation treatment programs commonly use a mixture of therapy and counseling AND doctor
prescribed medications to help drug addicts stop their abusive behavior.
In most instances, the first step employed in the drug rehabilitation treatment process is detoxification, a process which
lets the body rid itself of drugs while monitoring and managing the withdrawal symptoms in a safe environment.
What is Drug Abuse?
Drug abuse, also known as substance abuse, can be defined as the excessive and repeated use of a drug in order to escape reality,
feel pleasure, or avoid difficulties, regardless of deleterious, unhealthy, and destructive effects.
The substance that is abused can be an illegal drug such as morphine or crack, inhalants
such as industrial solvents or various glues, or prescription drugs used inappropriately such as abusing codeine or percocet.
Drug abuse is typified by the dysfunctional way in which it takes over a drug dependent person's life, disrupting his or her
relationships and daily functioning at school, home, or work, adversely affecting his or her peace of mind, and experiencing recurring
drug-related legal problems.
Drug addiction can be physical, psychological, or both. Physical addiction refers to the physiological effects of drug
abuse and is characterized by tolerance, defined as the need to take increasing amounts of the drug in order to feel the initial "buzz" or "high"
and withdrawal symptoms that occur when the addict suddenly discontinues drug use.
Psychological addiction, conversely, refers to the cravings and subjective feelings the addict has in order to experience
sensations of well-being and euphoria. For example, taking a drug in order to "cool down" or to overcome the discomfort of a painful
situation are illustrations of psychological dependence.
Regrettably, the more that drug abuse starts to affect and control a person's life, the more likely it is that this person has a
serious drug problem.
Ironically, the individuals who are actively involved in drug abuse are typically the last persons who are aware of their
destructive drug-related behavior and their own symptoms of abuse.
| With continuous drug abuse, the addict begins to crave the feelings of well-being or euphoria that taking the
drugs has elicited. Since this pleasant feeling is so overwhelming, the addict is motivated to continue taking drugs. |
Drug Rehabilitation Treatment: An Overview
Similar to other diseases and medical conditions, drug addiction can be
overcome with professional treatment, prevention, and increased research. By providing more people with access to competent treatment,
the costly drain on society and the physical, financial, and emotional burdens drug abuse places on families can be significantly diminished.
To be sure, the current research literature has uncovered solid evidence that successful prevention and quality drug
rehabilitation treatment programs result in substantial reductions in HIV, crime, unwanted pregnancy, strokes, child abuse, strokes, cancer,
traffic fatalities, and heart disease. Not only this, but effective drug rehab treatment improves an individual's job performance,
quality of life, and health while at the same time diminishing involvement with the criminal justice system, family dysfunction, and drug
abuse.
Drug rehabilitation treatment programs usually use a combination of counseling, education, and therapy as well as
doctor-prescribed medications to help an individual abstain from substance abuse. Statistically speaking, while most drug addicts need
professional assistance in order to recover from their disease, addiction researchers have demonstrated that with support and productive
treatment, many drug addicts are able to refrain from drug abuse and re-establish their lives.
| Addictions lead to habitual behavioral problems, take an inordinate amount of the addict’s time, activity, and
energy, are openly disapproved by the community, and are typified by a gradual obsession with the activity or
substance. |
Drug Rehabilitation Treatment: Withdrawal Symptoms
When a drug addict suddenly discontinues taking drugs, he or she almost always experiences withdrawal
symptoms. Essentially, drug related withdrawal symptoms are responses by the addict's brain and body to the lack of the drugs to which
they had become adapted.
Depending on the drug in question, some of the more common withdrawal symptoms are as follows: nausea, irritability,
depression, vomiting, anxiety, headaches, rapid heart rate, and insomnia. It is interesting to point out that even with competent
medical treatment, it can take the body days or weeks before it returns to "normal" after these symptoms have manifested themselves.
A number of various techniques exist for treating drug withdrawal symptoms. While many, if not most of these treatment
approaches use doctor-administered medications, a number of therapies, to the contrary, do not.
Indeed, according to research literature, often, the safest way to treat mild withdrawal symptoms is without medications.
Such non-drug detoxification methodologies employ screening and extensive social support and counseling throughout the withdrawal
protocol.
| There is a natural basis of addiction and we need to get away from the concept that only bad or weak or diseased
people have problems with addiction. |
Traditional Forms of Drug Rehabilitation Treatment
There are numerous traditional drug rehabilitation treatment approaches that are fairly well established and widely
available. The following drug rehabilitation treatment protocols and programs, all of which are considered "mainstream" approaches,
will be discussed: Detoxification, Behavioral Treatment, Therapeutic Medications, Outpatient Treatment and Counseling, Residential
Treatment Programs, and Family and Marital Counseling.
Detoxification
Detoxification is the process of letting the body rid itself of drugs and toxins while managing and monitoring the withdrawal
symptoms in a safe atmosphere. Drug detox treatment is usually done under the supervision of a medical doctor and is, in the vast
majority of cases, the first step used in a drug rehabilitation treatment protocol. Detox procedures typically include closely
monitoring the individual's vital signs, therapeutic counseling and support, and doctor-prescribed medications.
Detoxification is almost always the first step in drug rehabilitation treatment because of the following: until there are
no drugs in the person's body, withdrawal can cause intense craving for more drugs. In addition, and equally as critical, while a
person is in a drug induced state, he or she is not completely ready to involve himself or herself in the therapeutic and educational components
of the drug rehabilitation treatment process. Stated more precisely, until a person successfully goes through the detox process, he or
she is simply not ready for successful drug rehabilitation.
| Continued use of the addictive substance induces adaptive changes in the brain that lead to tolerance, physical
dependence, uncontrollable craving and, all too often, relapse. |
While it would appear to be logical to state that ALL drug addiction rehab would necessitate medical detox, this is not the
case. That is, some drugs require medical detox while others do not. For instance, opiates, such as methadone and heroin,
prescription medications such as Vicodin, Xanax, Codeine, Percocet, and Oxycontin, and alcohol require medically monitored and managed
detox. Other illegal drugs, such as crack, marijuana, crystal meth, and cocaine, conversely, do not typically necessitate medical
detoxification. Often, however, there is a powerful sense of psychological dependence related with these latter mentioned illegal drugs
that requires a period of medical monitoring and stabilization.
There are many ways to perform drug detoxification. These different detox therapies depend on the treatment methodology, the
philosophy that lies beneath the treatment that is employed, and the drug that has been abused. Interestingly, the more effective and
productive detox centers provide counseling and therapy during and after detox. This typically helps the individual identify and work
through his or her social and/or emotional problems that he or she may be experiencing.
Due to the necessary medical monitoring involved in this process and the relatively long time frame for this procedure, most
medical detoxification programs are part of a residential, inpatient, drug rehab program.
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Withdrawal syndrome is a group of symptoms manifested by individuals who stop taking drugs or alcohol after a pattern of
continuous and excessive consumption. These symptoms can range from mild to moderate to severe and include both
psychological and behavioral aspects.
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Withdrawal Symptoms
Withdrawal symptoms are the result of abruptly quitting or significantly reducing drug use after heavy and long-term
use. The following represents some of the more typical drug related withdrawal symptoms:
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drug craving
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-
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- insomnia
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vomiting
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- shaking or the shakes
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abdominal cramping
- agitation
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diarrhea
-
sweating
- anxiety
-
nausea
Behavioral Treatments
Behavioral treatments include such approaches as 12-step programs, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, and Motivation Enhancement
Therapy.
| The coping mechanisms typically used by codependents are denial (I deny, change, or minimize how I truly feel),
low self-esteem (I value others' approval of my feelings, actions, and thinking over my own), compliance (I am afraid to express
my own opinions and feelings, especially if they are different), and control (I become resentful when others refuse my
help). |
12-Step Drug Rehabilitation Treatment Programs
- Co-Dependents Anonymous (CODA) is a 12-step support program for people who manifest an inability to involve themselves in and maintain
meaningful, functional relationships.
- Nar-Anon is a 12-step support program for family members, relatives, and friends of addicts.
- Alcoholics Anonymous is a mutual support program for recovering alcoholics that is based on the 12-steps of recovery that are used to
stay sober.
- Narcotics Anonymous is a 12-step program for people who have a major drug problem. Membership is open to all drug addicts,
regardless of the specific drug or drugs that have been abuse.
- Alateen is a 12-step program for youth whose parents are problem drinkers.
- Al-Anon is a 12-step support program for family members and friends of problem drinkers.
Motivation Enhancement Therapy (MET)
Motivation Enhancement Therapy (MET) is a systematic therapeutic approach that is, from a treatment perspective, almost
diametrically opposed to the different 12-step drug and alcohol programs in that it uses motivational strategies to elicit the addict's own
change mechanisms. Some of salient characteristics of MET are the following:
- Receiving clear advice to make healthy changes
- Therapist empathy
- Providing the client with a number of alternative change options
- Providing feedback regarding the personal risks or damage associated with the abuse
- Emphasis on taking personal responsibility for positive change
- Helping the client achieve self-efficacy or a sense of optimism.
| The overriding plan of action when experiencing a possible drug or alcohol overdose situation is this: Do
not take chances when someone's life is at stake. If you suspect that a person is overdosing on drug or alcohol, get
immediate medical assistance, even if the person is underage. |
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
There are several forms of cognitive behavior therapy. The majority of them, however, share the following
characteristics:
- CBT is based on stoic philosophy. CBT does not tell clients how they should feel. Rather, this form of therapy focuses on
helping clients learn how to think more logically and effectively.
- Homework is a central feature of CBT.
- CBT theory and techniques rely on the Inductive Method. This method has clients look at their thoughts as hypotheses (or suggested
explanations) that can be tested and questioned. If clients discover that their hypotheses are incorrect, they can then change their
thoughts and feelings to be more in line with reality.
- CBT is structured and directive.
- CBT uses the Socratic Method that is based on the asking of questions for insight.
- CBT is based on an educational model that views most emotions and behavioral reactions as learned responses. Thus, the therapeutic
goal in to help the client unlearn undesirable reactions and emotions and replace them with new and more positive ways of feeling and
reacting.
- In CBT, a solid therapeutic relationship is necessary but not the primary focal point for effective therapy.
- CBT is a mutually shared effort between the therapist and the client.
- CBT approaches are based on the cognitive model of emotional response. That is, if we change the way we think, we can act and feel
better, even if the situation doesn't change.
- CBT usually has therapeutic sessions that are briefer and fewer in number than most other forms of therapy.
| People who are experiencing drug or alcohol withdrawal symptoms should not treat these symptoms at home.
Instead, they need to seek medical assistance immediately so that their doctor, emergency room personnel, healthcare provider, or
urgent care center personnel can assess the severity of their withdrawal symptoms and suggest the best option for treatment. |
Therapeutic Medications
In this therapeutic approach, medical practitioners administer medications to treat drug dependency. Many substance
abuse practitioners and researchers claim that long-term addicts who cannot sustain abstinence should receive doctor-prescribed medications for
treating and controlling their withdrawal symptoms. Another critical advantage of treatment that utilizes therapeutic medications is that
addicts are less likely to experience possible brain damage and/or seizures when they receive therapeutic medications for their dependency.
Medications Used to Treat Drug Withdrawal Symptoms
The most frequently used therapeutic medication to treat the withdrawal symptoms associated with a variety of drugs is Klonepin,
a drug which helps minimize physical withdrawals. Buprenophex, an anticonvulsant, is also employed to a great extent when treating
drug withdrawal symptoms. In a word, both of these medications have been proven to provide much needed relief for substance abusers who
suffer from drug related withdrawal symptoms. In most instances, drug detox takes between three and seven days and requires the constant
supervision and monitoring by professional healthcare practitioners.
Klonepin and Buprenophex, however, are not the only medications that help relieve withdrawals. Indeed, with respect to
heroin withdrawal, for instance, a drug known as "clonidine" helps block some of the physical withdrawal symptoms. Opiate agonist drugs
such as methadone are also used for heroin withdrawal. In a similar fashion, clonidine is the most prescribed therapeutic medication
for the reduction of the physical withdrawal symptoms related to prescription drugs. In addition and not unlike heroin treatment,
progressively decreased doses of methadone can also be employed to reduce the intensity of the withdrawals that commonly occur when prescription
drugs are suddenly discontinued. It needs to be emphasized, however, that this latter treatment approach is typically more effective when
it is administered in inpatient, residential, rehab as opposed to outpatient rehab treatment.
And finally, it can be mentioned that methadone is also used as a replacement therapy for opiate addiction.
| While many addiction experts view addiction as a disease, many others in the addiction community see this view as
out-of-date and leading to less than optimal treatment. |
Outpatient Drug Rehabilitation Treatment and Counseling
There are many approaches to counseling that teach substance abusers how to become more aware of the circumstantial and emotional
"triggers" of their drug abuse. Armed with this information, drug addicts can then learn different ways in which they can control and
cope with situations that do not include the use of drugs. These types of alcohol treatment therapies, unlike detox methodologies, can
be provided on an outpatient (or on an inpatient basis).
| Ironically, while alcohol, barbiturates, nicotine, opioids, and benzodiazepines have received a lot of documented
evidence regarding their ability to cause physical dependence, other “similar” substances such as most antidepressants,
beta-blockers, and cortisone, however, are not considered addictive. |
Residential Drug Rehabilitation Treatment Programs
If the individual's withdrawal symptoms are excessive, if a person needs drug and/or or alcohol overdose treatment, if there's a
need for drug AND alcohol addiction treatment, and if support-oriented and outpatient programs such as the different 12-step drug and alcohol
programs are ineffective, the person frequently needs to enroll into a residential drug rehab treatment facility or a hospital and receive
inpatient rehabilitation. Such programs are typically targeted for drug addiction inpatients and commonly include doctor-prescribed
medications to help the addict get through detox and overcome his or her drug related withdrawal symptoms in a harm-free manner.
Family and Marital Counseling
Since the rehabilitation process is so intimately related to the support the substance abuser receives from his or her family, many drug
rehabilitation treatment protocols include marital and family counseling as primary components in the treatment process. Such
therapeutic methodologies, furthermore, may also offer addicts essential educational and community resources, such as parenting classes, job
training, financial management classes, legal assistance, and childcare courses.
| It is the combination of the unattainable initial euphoria and the need for relief from the painful and
uncomfortable withdrawal symptoms that lead to compulsive drug use and abuse. |
Alternative Drug Rehabilitation Treatment Methods
Although the research findings are inconclusive, there are several alternative drug addiction treatment approaches that are
becoming more accepted and available.
Some of these "nontraditional" therapeutic methods are perceived as "natural" forms of drug rehabilitation treatment and include
the following: "Drumming out Drugs" (a type of therapeutic approach that features the utilization of drumming by addicts), various
supplement, vitamin, and mineral therapies, and the holistic and naturalistic treatment protocols used by Traditional Chinese
Medicine. A more "revolutionary" approach regarding alternative substance abuse treatment, however, involves giving drug dependent
person's such as crystal-meth and cocaine addicts substitute, less dangerous and less addictive drugs.
As encouraging as these alternative treatment approaches are, additional research efforts are needed in order to verify their
effectiveness and to establish whether or not they provide lasting treatment success.
| With continuous drug abuse, the addict begins to crave the feelings of well-being or euphoria that taking the
drugs has elicited. Since this pleasant feeling is so overwhelming, the addict is motivated to continue taking drugs. |
Drug Rehabilitation Treatment: Conclusion
Despite the fact that a cure for drug addiction has not been found, a number of drug rehabilitation treatment approaches,
however, have been created and implemented that help substance abusers recover from their addiction. It should come as no surprise,
therefore, that a multitude of drug rehabilitation treatment information has become available, both online and offline.
As people try to sort through this mountain of information, some of them cry out for answers and ask the following question
regarding treating drug addiction: "What is the most effective long-term drug rehabilitation treatment?" Similar to most
long-lasting illnesses and diseases, there are different levels and degrees of "success" related to drug rehabilitation treatment. For
instance, some substance abusers, after treatment, abstain from abusing drugs--period. Other drug dependent individuals, on the other
hand, experience relatively long periods of abstinence after receiving treatment, and then suffer a relapse. And still other drug addicts cannot
stop using and abusing drugs for any sustainable period of time, irrespective of the quality or type of treatment they have received.
Not surprisingly, all of these treatment outcomes happen with every known type of drug rehabilitation treatment. Even
considering the fact that the "magic bullet" of drug rehabilitation treatment does not currently exist, one thing, however, is clear regarding
drug addiction recovery: the longer a drug addict abstains from abusing drugs, the more likely he or she will be able to remain sober
and possibly avoid the need for additional drug rehabilitation treatment.
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| Codependency is a pattern of habitual self-defeating coping mechanisms. Codependency is typically a result
of living in a house with someone who suffers from alcoholism or drug addiction. In these dysfunctional homes, there are
three messages that are not explicitly stated but nevertheless, reinforced everyday by unhealthy actions, behaviors, and
beliefs. These three messages are: don't trust, don’t talk, and don't feel. |
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