Friday, December 31, 2010

Salt Lake City's New Roads Treatment Centers is Launching a New Pornography ... - Benzinga

New Roads Treatment Centers is expanding its addiction-recovery programs to include a pornography addiction treatment program.

Orem, Utah (Vocus/PRWEB) December 31, 2010

After their first successful year of treating drug and alcohol addiction, New Roads Treatment Centers has seen a growing need for a pornography addiction treatment program and is launching this new program with the start of the new year. The center is also opening a non-profit entity that will help raise money to pay for individuals that need treatment and cannot afford it.

An overwhelming ten percent of adults admit to having an online pornography addiction.* With Internet use becoming more readily available on cell phones, lap tops and other wireless devices, it is reasonable to assume this number will continue to rise. The center has seen a great need for a program to treat this particular addiction. They have set up a group program dedicated to utilizing therapeutic culture, science based treatment, and a licensed, caring staff to help individuals on all levels, who are struggling with pornography or substance addiction.

Just like drug and alcohol addiction, pornography addiction is an addiction that must be treated physically, emotionally, and mentally. To aid the New Roads Treatment Centers with their new program, they have recently hired three new therapists; Sage O'Brien, LSAC, MSW, CSW; Jordan Harmon, CSW; and Aubrey Riddle, LCSW. In addition, they have had new training to aid them in understanding and treating pornography addiction. The entire staff, both clinical and support staff, just completed intensive DBT training from the DBT center of Michigan. DBT is a Dialectical Behavioral Treatment therapy program. Which, in recent years, has been used to treat a broad range of symptoms, including: mood disorders (depression & bipolar), anxiety disorders, eating disorders, substance abuse, self-harm in teens, and couples and relationship conflict.

“Though these issues can be overwhelming for individuals and families I have consistently been reinforced in my belief of the resilience of the human spirit and the reality of healing. I find great satisfaction in growing as a person as I am privileged to join with others who are on their own path of growth.” -Jordan Harmon, CSW

New Roads Treatment Centers offers a group of programs dedicated to utilizing therapeutic culture, science-based treatment, and simple caring to help individuals recover from addiction and emotional pain. Their staff is empathetic, respectful, and knowledgeable. More importantly, they understand and respect the sensitive, confidential, and private nature of treating the disease of addiction. Through each step of the program New Roads' clients achieve a sense of accomplishment and a renewed positive outlook on life and freedom from addiction. Feeling trapped behind the pornography or sex addiction is something that millions of individuals suffer through every day. With work and dedication there is treatment and complete recovery from these behaviors.

*http://www.safefamilies.org/sfStats.php

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For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2010/12/prweb8040850.htm

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Talking taxation: Mass. takes stock - Boston Globe

There wasn’t a drop of beer, wine, or liquor to be found at yesterday’s event to celebrate the impending repeal of the state’s short-lived tax on alcoholic beverages.

A half-dozen Massachusetts liquor and wine store owners gathered at the site of the Boston Tea Party to symbolically pour bottles of wine into Boston Harbor, in anticipation of the 6.25 percent sales tax’s midnight expiration.

In deference to the environment, though, the bottles contained only water.

In November, voters repealed the surcharge, which had been in place for just a year after being promoted by lawmakers as a way to raise money during the recession.

Officials have estimated the repeal will cost the state more than $100 million.

But many shop owners, especially those who do business near the New Hampshire border, have complained of losing more business to the Granite State, which does not have a sales tax.

“I don’t know many taxes that have been repealed in Massachusetts,’’ said Jeff Cirace, who owns V. Cirace and Son Inc., a wine shop in Boston’s North End. Standing on the Congress Street bridge, Cirace poured from a bottle that once held B.R. Cohn cabernet.

At his side Tina Messina, owner of Wine Connextion in North Andover, held up a bottle that was formerly home to Beaulieu Vineyard Reserve Tapestry.

“With a wine like this, you’ll be able to save $1.50 now,’’ Messina said as she dumped her water into Fort Point Channel.

A small group of protesters attempted to have a sobering effect on yesterday’s gathering — they carried signs that read “Alcohol is a drug’’ and “Less taxes = Less lives saved.’’ A portion of the alcohol tax funds addiction treatment programs, and some worry services will be curtailed.

“People don’t quite understand where the money goes,’’ said Samantha Terry, 24, from Winthrop, who said she is living at Meridian House, an East Boston treatment center, as she fights an addiction to prescription pills.

“I spiraled out of control and needed help,’’ Terry said. “This program has given me a better understanding of this disease and helped me get my priorities straight.’’

John McGahan, president of the Gavin Foundation, which helps alcohol and drug addicts recover, organized the protest. He said the future of the state’s 500 in-patient slots for alcoholism treatment is now “a big unknown.’’

“Everything is subject to cuts, but these are people we are talking about, not widgets,’’ McGahan said.

Frank Anzalotti, executive director of the Massachusetts Package Stores Association, noted that public health programs were funded long before the alcohol tax was enacted.

“This was not a necessary tax,’’ he said.

Rick Gordon, a third-generation spirits seller and owner of Gordon’s Fine Wine and Liquors in Waltham, said it is difficult to quantify how much alcoholic-beverage business was lost because of the sales tax.

To avoid paying more, Gordon said, some of his customers got creative. “People would gather together in the neighborhood and make runs up north.’’

Now, however, Massachusetts shop owners say they are expecting 2011 to be more prosperous, especially for those who sell expensive wines.

“A lot of customers have been deferring purchases until the tax came off,’’ said Leonard Rothenberg, president of Federal Wine and Spirits in Boston. “January will be strong.’’

© Copyright 2010 Globe Newspaper Company.

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Thursday, December 30, 2010

Hearst-Shaw won't play Lohan in film - UPI.com

Published: Dec. 30, 2010 at 2:44 PM

NEW YORK, Dec. 30 (UPI) -- U.S. socialite and model Lydia Hearst-Shaw says she has no plans to play troubled starlet Lindsay Lohan in a film.

Lohan, star of "Mean Girls" and "The Parent Trap," is undergoing court-ordered treatment for alcohol and drug addiction at a California rehabilitation facility following probation violations for a 2007 driving under the influence conviction.

Screenwriter Charles Casillo recently told the New York Post Hearst-Shaw would play a Lohan-like "bratty movie goddess in and out of rehab."

However, Hearst-Shaw is denying she's attached to star in the film called "Dogs in Pocketbooks."

"Just so we are all clear, my hair is red because I am the new face of Schwarzkopf color," UsMagazine.com reported Thursday Hearst-Shaw said via Twitter. "I am a model. I dyed my hair to front the campaign. ...

"As for any theatrical roles I am currently filming Two Jacks directed by Bernard Rose. My next project is Catwalk by Tony Hickox," Hearst-Shaw added. "Thank you all for your messages of encouragement during my transition into acting. I truly love and appreciate it. At this time I am not officially signed onto any other projects. Thank you."

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Pain Clinics Contribute to Prescription Drug Problem

The idea of a pain clinic is to provide the necessary treatment to individuals suffering with chronic pain. The problem is that they also create an opportunity for the foundation for addiction. A recent WBIR article focused on this growing problem.

One individual highlighted the reality associated with pain clinics and addiction. While she experimented with drugs as a teenager, full blown addiction did not settle in until she needed to visit a pain clinic after two back surgeries.

She sought help from her doctor for the pain, but after several doses of pain medication, he became concerned about her use and turned her away without another prescription. The withdrawal she endured was beyond her capability to handle on her own.

As a result, she turned to a pain clinic to find the medication she needed to simply get through the day. Such facilities can be found in nearly every part of every town in East Tennessee. Patients seek out these clinics to receive treatment for a full range of maladies from back pain to fibromyalgia.

According to Derryle Smith, group supervisor at the Drug Enforcement Agency, pain clinics do serve a purpose. And, there are legitimate clinics that serve a patient need. The problem is that rogue doctors and rogue prescription pain clinics exist, providing access to controlled medications to those who should be provided access to addiction treatment.

Work is being done to try and weed out rogue clinics that feature rogue doctors who may be abusing the system. Until that time, diligence is necessary to reverse the trend.
 

Pain Clinics Contribute to Prescription Drug Problem is a post from: Drug Addiction Treatment

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Addiction to Painkillers a Dirty Secret in Professional Sports

The aggressive nature of contact sports takes its toll on the body, leaving many players to cope with chronic aches and pains. In order to manage sports related injuries, the use of painkillers such as Oxycontin, Vicodin, and Percocet has become more common. Financially, there is a lot riding on sporting events, and one injury can ruin a person’s career. Even in the midst of dealing with serious injuries, professional athletes are feeling the pressure to perform.

Prescription narcotics are part of the opioid family, which includes drugs like morphine, codeine, and heroin. They work by preventing pain messages in the nervous system from reaching the brain. Similar to other drugs, they also produce a “high,” which is one of the reasons they are often abused. Athletes can build up a tolerance to the drugs, leaving them wanting more to produce the desired effect.

While many colleges don’t tolerate illicit drugs such as marijuana or performance enhancing drugs such as steroids, they often overlook the potential dangers of prescription painkillers. This type of pill addiction can lead to dependency and crime and can be a gateway for other drugs. Worse, it can result in overdose and death.

The NCAA does conduct periodic surveys of college athletes in a variety of sports to monitor drug use among players. They ask about all sorts of drugs, except for prescription painkillers. Because prescription narcotics are not banned, they don’t ask about them at all.

A real problem at college campuses across the U.S. is not only the use of prescription narcotics to numb pain, but how the students are getting the medications. A study of volleyball players in Salt Lake City, Utah conducted by sports medicine doctors revealed that many who were popping pills got them from sources other than doctors – most likely from friends, on the street, or online. In fact, the study showed that as many as 61 percent were getting their prescription meds without the assistance of a physician.

The NFL also has many players and retirees talking about their addictions. In 1996, Brett Favre, then quarterback for the Green Bay Packers, sought help for his addiction to Vicotin. Randy Grimes, former lineman for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, also came forward in 2009 to talk about his addiction to prescription pain medication.

Before seeking treatment, Grimes was popping upwards of 30 pills a day. Many of these players’ illnesses were not properly dealt with at the time they were incurred, leaving those like Grimes to cope with painkiller addictions that caused even worse problems in the long run. Now the NFL is denying any claims to medical or behavioral assistance.

As long as the love of sports continues to remain a favorite American pastime, the safety and health of the players continues to be a community liability. Other alternatives to pain management need to be explored so that our beloved sports icons aren’t left struggling with addictions after the game is over.

Addiction to Painkillers a Dirty Secret in Professional Sports is a post from: Drug Addiction Treatment

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Substance Use and Delinquent Behavior Among Serious Adolescent Offenders - Youth Today

December 29, 2010 by John Kelly

Data from the Justice Department’s long-term Pathways to Desistance study do not establish a causal link between serious juvenile offending and substance use, but it does suggest a frequent connection between the two.

The study followed more than 1,300 serious juvenile offenders for seven years after their first conviction. Data collection concluded this year, so the majority of the findings have yet to be published, but the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention issued a bulletin on the study’s findings about substance use yesterday.

During the baseline interviews for the Pathways study, which began in 2003, more than a third of males (37 percent) and females (35 percent) in the sample were found to have a diagnosable dependence on drugs and/or alcohol. Many of those who did not have a clinical addiction were using drugs or alcohol in a way that could lead to such: 48 percent of the juveniles said they used more than one drug in the previous six months.

Preliminary analysis of the data suggests that drugs are a better predictor of offending than offending is of drug use. “Substance use and offending in this model are significantly related to each other in the same time period and across time periods,” the bulletin stated. “However, these preliminary analyses demonstrated that substance use predicts offending in the next time period more consistently than offending predicts substance use.”

Pathways data also suggests that treatments for substance abuse did lower drug usage, but only the programs that involved the juvenile’s family were successful in lowering future offending.

Few juveniles actually lived with their families at the time they received drug treatment.  Only 10 percent of the Pathways sample reported receiving drug or alcohol treatment at a community-based program; 56 percent of the Pathways’ juveniles reported receiving substance abuse treatment while at a residential program.

Click here to read the bulletin.


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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Rapper DMX Sentenced to Mental Health Treatment - RantRave | Published Opinion.

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DMX Released for Concert and Lands in Prison On December 20th, Rapper DMX was moved to the Flamenco Mental Health Unit at Alhambra by the Arizona Department of Corrections. Arizona is the last place you want to end up in jail. With a sheriff who thinks everyone who ever graces a pair of cuffs is guilty, and a staff that implements his stripping of civil rights, I was surprised to read that they moved DMX from the prison to the mental health wing. DMX's real name is Earl Simmons (no, he's not related to Russel Simmons). He also goes by "X".I think that his story can hopefully serve to help others, if he is actually treated in the mental health wing at Alhambra. There are so many inmates who plead with mental problems, and even those with significant mental health histories get refused, so the kind act by Judge Christine Mulleneaux may be the life-saving sentence for DMX. This incarceration marks his 13th time behind bars, but that does not include the trail of felony and misdemeanor charges across the country.It should be noted that he was reportedly arrested for taking a "swig" of alcohol while he was doing a concert in Scottsdale. Court documents list several charges, but keep in mind that Arizona attorneys file as many charges as possible so that something will stick. He was on probation and involved in an 18 month treatment program when he was giving a pass to go do the concert. The alcohol rehab program failed DMX by letting him out to go to a concert. If he was not done then he should not have been released. The treatment facility ought to accept some responsibility for THEIR poor choices that contributed to his arrest. Someone with his severe drug history should not have been released early, especially not to do a concert.DMX: Black and White Jail Stripes to Mental Health Straight JacketDMX has gotten angry and threatened violence when his mental health was questioned by reporters in the past. The Arizona Judge who ordered his movement within facilities apparently thinks that DMX has an undiagnosed mental condition. On top of the bipolar disorder possibilities, DMX has a cocaine problem and likely a drinking problem. His jail mug shots from the latest arrest clearly show weight differences in his face and the eyes of someone troubled. As different mug shots have been taken the progression of a body returning to some sort of health state is seen. I applaud moving DMX to the mental health facility. Arizona has one of the most destructive jail systems, little in the way of rehabilitation, and a horrible mental health system. While DMX does make enough money to pay for his own mental health care outside of jail, he wont do it because he denies having mental health issues. Denial fuels any other behaviors and lands him in trouble, a common scenario among men and women who are not in the spotlight.The barrier is the stigma associated with mental illness. This barrier and denial is stronger in black communities and there is a disparity among black men who seek and get proper mental health treatment. Most people who are mentally ill have denial around their illness and without some type of acceptance it makes it very difficult to move toward treatment. Although people might look at the arrest record of DMX and claim he should just go to prison, it should be obvious by now that jail is not working. His arrests in the past likely stem from drug use and probation violations. People who have substance problems along with mental illness tend to violate their probation conditions, especially if they are not complying with treatment. He is a good example that money does not buy a way out of mental illness, and for as much as he probably tries to stay out of trouble, he finds it because of untreated mental illness.DMX as a Mental Health Role ModelI hope to follow up on DMX and find that he has been evaluated and is being treated for his underlying mental health condition. As a black rapper, he could set a huge example for other young black men and women. With his music, he has the unique opportunity to reach the minds of many people around the world, of all ages and races. Accepting treatment for mental illness is the best thing that he can do for himself and his fans. Mental illness does not discriminate. Just because he was moved to a mental health facility doesn't mean that he has been found insane. Most people with mental illnesses do not know that is what is fueling their behavior. I hope that he takes advantage of the opportunity that he has by being moved out of the jail and into the mental health wing. In a previous interview from the Phoenix jail DMX talks about Arizona being "God's country" because of its beauty, and that he met the devil there as well. The only way to beat the devil that people meet on cold Phoenix streets is to get well. He talked of wanting to be a preacher. He is. He has his music as a pulpit, let him send a message of acceptance and help break down barriers to mental health treatment for all, but especially for black men. I hope that his fans give him an outpouring of support to accept the opportunity for mental health help that is in front of him. He will be a better man, son, friend, rapper, writer, and all around better if he gets help. Otherwise, we'll eventually be writing about his overdose or murder, or an extended prison sentence in Arizona that will take him out of his life and prevent an future music and career.
*DMX YouTube Videos are both interviews with Fox 10 news. The DMX videos are about a year apart and the 2nd one in an interview from the Maricopa County jail in Phoenix, where the Sheriff dresses male inmates in pink to try to humiliate them.

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Alcohol behind almost all murders in Queensland, figures reveal - Herald Sun

ALMOST every murder committed in Queensland during the past year was suspected to involve alcohol, crime statistics show.

It comes as police investigate a death at a park in Cairns at the weekend, which is also believed to be alcohol-related.

Homicides were up to 56 in 2009-10 compared with 49 the previous year, and only six did not involve alcohol or drugs.

The National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre said Australians were among the world's worst abusers of alcohol, with few seeking help to curb its impact on their health.

Research shows almost one in five will experience problematic drinking, while 4 per cent become alcoholics.

"One reason for the lack of treatment is that alcohol problems still have a terrible stigma about them," researcher Professor Maree Teesson said.

"People are much less likely to want to own up to a problem with alcohol than they are about other physical or mental illness yet their abuse of alcohol has serious consequences."

These included fights, licence suspensions, taking time off work, child neglect and getting into trouble with the police.

Prof Teesson and fellow researchers analysed data collected from almost 9000 Australians aged 16 to 85 for the National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing in 2007.

She said most were young men but very few would seek any form of professional help.

The snapshot of alcohol disorder and dependence showed that a third of Australian men would have a drinking problem at some point in their lives – about double the rate of alcohol abuse among women.

Married people and those from a non-English-speaking background were less likely to have a problem with alcohol.

Men born during the 10 years to 1987 were 1.7 times more likely to drink at risky levels than men born the previous decade.

More than 40 per cent of those with alcohol problems also reported a mental illness, while comparison with a similar study done 10 years ago showed no improvement.

"Alcohol problems are most common in young men, so we need better strategies for young Australians," Prof Teesson said.

Additional reporting AAP

 

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Monday, December 27, 2010

Narconon Explains: Addiction On Rise Amongst Senior Citizens

As the baby boomer generation gets older, concern is raised whether or not the current health care system can handle the onslaught of the elderly population struggling with addiction and provide drug rehabilitation to those in need. 

The baby boomer generation, the group of 77 million babies born between the years of 1946 and 1964, was the first generation to become involved with widespread drug abuse. This group, born during the post World War II, will start turning 65 this year.

In a report released in 1995 by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Applied Statistics reported that approximately 49 percent of baby boomers had ever used illicit drugs. Today, many of these people continue to struggle with drug or alcohol addiction.  Now, as the largest-ever American generation reaches the senior age, concern is raised whether the current drug rehabilitation programs can handle the high number of senior citizens with addictions.

"This is not a teenage problem. This is not a college-level problem. This is a problem that is existing in today's boomer population," said Carol Colleran, author of Aging and Addiction: Helping Older Adults Overcome Alcohol and Medication Dependence.

The Department of Health and Human Services reports that in the last decade the number of drug treatment admissions for people age 50 or older has more than doubled.  Experts are concerned that current drug rehabilitation programs have been developed for the younger addicts and may not be able to handle the different circumstances presented by older adult addicts.  

"[The baby boomer generation] has a tremendous amount of responsibility on their shoulders. They have the responsibility of aging parents, they have the responsibility of their children," Colleran explained. "Plus, they have their own relationship with their spouse."

Older substance abusers tend to be more physically and psychologically unstable. They are also more likely to be intolerant to diagnosis and treatment.

One drug rehabilitation program, Narconon Arrowhead, believes they have the answer to the crisis on hand.

“The Narconon Arrowhead drug rehabilitation program is fully able to handle any case of drug addiction regardless of age,” explained Derry Hallmark, Certified Chemical Dependency Counselor and Senior Director for Expansion for Narconon Arrowhead, “We have thorough experience with every demographic, ranging from young to old and have one of the highest success rates in the country for permanent recovery from addiction.”

Narconon is one of the largest and most successful drug rehabilitation programs in the world and, with a 70% success rate, has helped thousands of addicts find permanent sobriety.

“It is never too late to seek out help for your drug or alcohol addiction,” adds Hallmark. “We have counselors available 7 days a week that can help..”

For more information on Narconon program or to get drug rehabilitation help for an addiction for yourself or a loved one contact Narconon Arrowhead today at 800-468-6933.


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Genetic Variant Increases Risk of Severe Cocaine Abuse in Whites

A new study has found that nearly one is five white individuals carries a genetic variant that significantly increases his or her odds of severely abusing cocaine. This variant, which is characterized by tiny gene mutations, changes the brain’s response to the rewarding effects of substances such as cocaine. Ohio State University researchers found that carriers of the variant were more than three times more likely to be susceptible to cocaine abuse, which can lead to overdose and death.

The researchers found the mutations in more than 40 percent of autopsy brain samples taken from white people who had died of a cocaine overdose. Of white people who didn’t use drugs, only 19 percent had the mutation. One in five samples from the drug-free group had the variant, compared with one in two to three samples from the cocaine-using white individuals and one in eight African Americans. (The gene variant is less prevalent in African Americans.)

The study found that the mutations affect the way in which the brain reacts to the neurotransmitter dopamine (which is released in the brain after certain activities, including using cocaine). Previous studies have shown that cocaine blocks dopamine transmitters from absorbing dopamine after it is released in the brain, which leads to a feeling of euphoria that the brain eventually associates with cocaine and causes drug cravings.

This is the first study to find a strong connection in brain tissue between the mutations and severe cocaine abuse. However, many questions remain, such as whether the mutations increase the risk of someone trying cocaine in the first place, or whether they strengthen the brain’s drug craving, which leads to severe abuse.

Wolfgang Sadee, senior author of the study and a professor of pharmacology and director of the Program in Pharmacogenomics at Ohio State University, said that their study shows that the gene mutations may impact cocaine abuse, and could help researchers discover new therapies for a range of psychiatric disorders that involve dopamine.

No test currently exists to see whether people are carrying the mutations. Sadee and colleagues are currently examining how these mutations could affect the response of carriers to drugs that act on the gene.

Source: Science Daily, Genetic Trait Could Triple Odds of Whites’ Susceptibility to Heavy Cocaine Abuse, September 22, 2010

Genetic Variant Increases Risk of Severe Cocaine Abuse in Whites is a post from: Drug Addiction Treatment

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Substance abuse treatment admission rates show dramatic shifts from 1998 to 2008 - Examiner.com

Drug treatment admission rates, as well as types of drugs involved during the period of 1998 to 2008 shows dramatic shifts says a new study out by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, (SAMHSA).

The study is from the State Admissions to Substance Abuse Treatment Services, and the data derived from SAMHSA's Treatment Episode Data Set, (TEDS) 1998 - 2008. This is a system where drug treatment centers nationwide report their information.

Drug treatment admissions rates have basically remained static from 1998 to 2008 at about 770 admissions per 100,000 persons. However, these admission rates demonstrate striking variations by region. "For example, the rate of admissions for alcohol as the primary drug has declined by 15 percent nationally.   However admission rates for alcohol in West North Central states (Ark., Iowa, Kan., Minn., Mo., N.D., Neb. and S.D.) remained the same," reports newswise.com.

The problem is that while admission rates for alcohol as the primary drug have been declining, or remained stable, illicit drug use treatment admissions were rising, and continue to do so.

One interesting piece of information is there was a consistent pattern in every region of admission rates for "...marijuana use which rose 30 percent nationally.  From 1998 through 2008, marijuana treatment admission rates were highest in the West North Central and Middle Atlantic states (N.J., N.Y. and Pa.), reported newswise.com.

Many of these marijuana treatment admissions, however, are likely originating from the criminal justice system.

An alarming piece of info during this 11 year period is the opiate treatment admission rates, other than heroin, (and mostly from prescription narcotic pain relievers), that blasted off to an astonishing 345 percent increase nationwide.

According to newswise.com, "The new study shows that increased admissions for pain reliever abuse occurred in every region of the nation and were highest in the New England (Conn., Mass., Maine, N.H., R.I. and Vt.) and the East South Central states (Ala., Ky., Miss. and Tenn.)."

All across the country the rate of illicit drug use, (mostly from prescription drugs) has been rising, and being reported on as well, so this does not come as any surprise.

Treatment admissions for heroin actually declined by about 3 percent during 1998 to 2008, but don't let that fool you. In many states heroin admission rates have risen, especially in the Middle Atlantic states and New England.

Facts about drug and alcohol use amongst teenagers alone:

Now those statistics are alarming, and a sad commentary on the mostly ineffective drug education efforts taking place. That's not to take anything away from the fine folks who are in the trenches trying to make a difference in these figures, but there is obviously a huge problem out there still, and it appears to be getting worse, especially with tweens, and teens.

Cocaine admissions, on the other hand, have declined nationally by 23 percent. The Middle Atlantic states still have the highest rates of cocaine treatment admission through the period of 1998 to 2008.

These studies have major implications for concentrating resources. As SAMHSA Administrator Pamela S. Hyde, J.D. stated, “This study provides insight into the regional nature of substance abuse by highlighting the shifting trends in the reasons for admission to substance abuse treatment,” reported newswise.com.

There has been a dramatic rise in illicit drug treatment admissions, particularly for marijuana, and prescription drugs. This study highlights the problems, and continued needs for treatment, earlier intervention, and recovery support services.

According to Gil Kerlikowske, Director of National Drug Control Policy, “Drug addiction is a disease that requires the same kind of evidence-based, public health remedies called for with any chronic disease,”reported newswise.com.

Whatever your thoughts are regarding whether drug addiction is a disease, or not, the fact remains that not enough is being done for those already addicted, those thinking about, or already experimenting with drugs, as well as the children who someday may step into their shoes. Funding cuts in many states, and communities have impacted treatment services, and educational efforts those areas.

The Obama Administration, however, has "...requested an increase of $137 million for FY 2011 to expand access for drug treatment programs across the United States,” according to newswise.com. It is a paltry sum, especially when you factor in about 23 million people who have a substance abuse problem in this country.

It is a start though.

 

Full TEDS report: http://wwwdasis.samhsa.gov/teds08/teds2k8sweb.pdf

Related publications and information from SAMHSA: http://www.samhsa.gov/

 

In the flow...

 

 

 

 

For Parents: If you are struggling with a child who has a drug problem, visit The Partnership for Drugfree.org "Time to Get Help" where parents share their stories, and learn from those that are dealing, as well as dealt with the problems of drug abuse and addiction of a loved one.

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Sunday, December 26, 2010

Betty Ford Center: Celebrity rehab's most famous faces - Examiner.com

Southern California's most famous rehab facility is the current home of Hollywood's most recent bad girl, but Lindsay Lohan is just one of many Hollywood stars that have called the Betty Ford Center home.  The Rancho Mirage clinic that specializes in chemical dependency issues and drug addictions has hosted dozens of some of Hollywood's most famous faces through the years. 

The world renowned Betty Ford Center, like other rehabilitation centers, has almost become a rite of passage for today's stars, along with celebrity sex tapes and reality shows catering to those whose stars have started to dim.

The almost thirty year old clinic is highly regarded in both its treatment programs and its confidentiality agreements, which makes it a popular place for celebrities who want to keep their addiction issues under wraps.

Here's a list of some of the Betty Ford Center's most famous faces.

1.    Robert Downey, Jr. - this star has said that he has been addicted to drugs since the innocent age of 8.  He has battled serious addictions to cocaine, heroin among other drugs and has checked himself into multiple drug rehabs including The Betty Ford Center over the years to combat his addictions.

2.    Drew Barrymore - this former child star entered for the first time at age 13 for drug and alcohol abuse and then returned back at 14 after an attempted suicide.

3.    Keith Urban - spent three months in 2006 at the center alcohol issues. 

4     Johnny Cash - entered the facility for treatment of painkillers, amphetamines and sleeping pills in 1983 after an ulcer-related surgery.

5.    Chevy Chase - was treated for a painkiller addiction in 1986.

6.    Ozzy Osbourne - the former lifelong drug addict entered in 1984 for alcohol and cocaine abuse.

7.    Elizabeth Taylor - a prescription pill addiction and alcohol issues sent this star for treatment in 1983 & again in 1988.

8.    Stevie Nicks - the Fleetwood Mac singer checked herself into the clinic twice, once in 1987 for a 30-day stay to kick cocaine and again in 1993 for an addiction to painkillers.

9.    Anna Nicole Smith - treated for Vicodin and alcohol in 1996.  Continued to abuse drugs until her death in February 2007.

10.  Liza Minnelli - was a patient in 1984 for Valium and alcohol.

11.  Billy Joel - the piano man himself entered the facility in 2005 for an addiction to alcohol.

12.  Jerry Lee Lewis - he stayed for a short 2 day stint relating to alcohol and drugs and then decided he could quit on his own.

13.  David Hasselhoff - one of youtube.com's most watched video stars, he entered the program in 2002 for alcohol addiction.

14.  Bobby Brown - no stranger to serious drug abuse and trouble with the law, Whitney Houston's husband checked in for drugs and alcohol in 1995.

It's great to see a celebrity able to admit to an addiction, because as they say, the first step is admitting that you have a problem.  The Betty Ford Center worked for some, it didn't for others.  Addiction is a lifelong process and something that must be taken day by day, hour by hour and minute by minute.

Lindsay Lohan has the ability to overcome this disease and she can do it.  Just ask Robert Downey, Jr.

What do you think?  Will Lindsay fare better or worse than the celebrities listed above?  Does she have enough of a support system to help her take it day by day?  Leave your comments below!

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Saturday, December 25, 2010

Is there an addiction treatment beyond drug rehab centers? - NewsFormatics.com

Posted on 25th December 2010No Responses
Is there an addiction treatment beyond drug rehab centers?

recovering from drug addiction– Recovering from drug addiction needs commitment, strength and right guidance. To help drug addicts in removing their problem of drug addiction, a large number of drug rehab centers and alcohol rehab centers have opened. Drug rehab centers aid drug addicts in recovering from drug addiction in a healthy way without any kind of side effects. Various drug treatments and alcohol treatments are given to the drug addicts by the experts of the rehab centers keeping in mind the situation of the drug addicts. At drug treatment center and alcohol treatment center, you can actually see the positive changes in the drug addict after the recovery from drug addiction. At Drug Treatment Centers, a variety of drug rehab programs and alcohol rehab programs are given in various forms that meet the spiritual, physical, and psychological requisites of each drug addict. An environment of motivation, enthusiasm and confidence is provided at the rehab centers, so that a drug addict can build up his or her will power, again. During the drug treatment and alcohol treatment at the drug treatment center& alcohol treatment center, various hazardous chemicals are removed from the body of the drug addict. The removal of harmful chemicals from the body, accumulated in it due to drug addiction, aids in improving and maintaining the normal functioning of body. To maintain the moral of the drug addict, various kinds of counseling are given to the drug addicts at regular intervals. These types of regular counseling aid drug addicts in building their strength. In addition to all this, the counseling given at the rehab centers is intensive as well as comprehensive that are designed keeping in mind the drug addicts’ physical and mental situation. With the drug treatment at rehab centers, the drug addicts lead a normal as well as healthy life.


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Lindsay Lohan’s a suspect in attack on Betty Ford staffer

By janice

Actress Lindsay Lohan is under investigation for misdemeanor battery for allegedly attacking a female staffer at the Betty Ford Center, where a Beverly Hills judge ordered the actress to stay for violating probation.

Palm Desert officers are completing an investigation into the Dec. 12 incident and will turn it over to Riverside County prosecutors to decide whether the actress should face criminal charges.

The incident also could be determined to be a violation of the terms of her probation in her 2007 drunk driving arrest, which could send her back to jail again. Under the terms of her probation, the “Mean Girls” actress is required to obey all laws. Read more….

Related posts:

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  2. Lindsay Lohan rebounds with “Ugly Betty” guest role
  3. Cops: Suspect boasted about gas station attack
  4. Lindsay Lohan Wants to Open Her Own Rehab Centers
  5. Aiken drug bust nets arrests

The entry 'Lindsay Lohan’s a suspect in attack on Betty Ford staffer' is filed under Celebrity Drug Rehab. You can follow any responses to 'Lindsay Lohan’s a suspect in attack on Betty Ford staffer' through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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Friday, December 24, 2010

More Dallas Co. Teens Seek Heroin Treatment - 33 KDAF-TV

Brianna Bryant is a sophomore at Booker T. Washington High School. She said she is well aware of her peers using heroin.

"There's lots of people in DISD that I have heard of on drugs," Bryant said.

The number of heroin addicts seeking treatment in Dallas County has nearly doubled, and, according to the Greater Dallas Council of Alcohol and Drug Abuse, many of those are teenagers.

"I feel like [heroin's] offered more," Bryant said. "And, I feel like it's more around the streets, more than anything."

The number of teens being treated in Dallas County increased from 33 in 2005 to 215 this year.

{URSCHEL, 17:23:26} "Heroin's one of the most dangerous drugs out there."

Dr. Harold Urschel is an addiction expert and author of Healing the Addicted Brain.

Urschel said heroin is on of the most dangerous drugs available.

"Even if you're not sure if you're addicted," Urschel sai, "you should go to a doctor to get a professional evaluation. You shouldn't just take your friends' opinion on whether you're addicted, or your parents opinion. The earlier you get treated, the easier the treatment is, the faster you can get off of it and the better chance you have at having a great life."

Bryant blames DISD students using drugs on stress.

"I feel like kids do it, because there's a lot of stress from school," Bryant said, "or it could be a lot of stress from family problems. I think it just comes out of stress."

Urschel said drug dealers are making heroin stronger, cheaper and easier to use, all of which make it more appealing and addicting to teenagers.

"It actually overpowers you and becomes very addicting very quickly," Urschel said. "Treating teens with heroin addiction is a little bit different than treating adults and usually the family has to be involved a lot more."

DISD parent Ket Sosonekhio said parents should take responsibility for keeping their children free of drugs.

"Keep informed of your kid," Sosenkhio said. "What they're doing, how they're doing. Always ask them what's going on. Sometimes, if you stay quiet, it's not good."

To combat the growing heroin problem, Dallas County has created adolescent programs at more than 20 drug abuse treatment centers.

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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Narconon Offers Solution for Non 12 Step Rehabilitation

Moving away from the more traditional 12-step approach, Narconon Arrowhead has found a solution for drug addiction in 2011.

Oklahoma- Many people look at those with a drug addiction as morally weak. They see the addiction as a social problem.   They find it hard to understand how people can become addicted to a substance which destroys the addict’s body and life.  The actual truth of the matter is that drugs affect both the body and the brain. Drugs cause compulsive behavior from the addict. Once a person develops this compulsive need to seek out and use drugs or alcohol, the addict cannot simply quit abusing the drug or alcohol without successful rehabilitation.

According to a recent study done by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 23.6 million people, aged 12 or older, needed treatment for an illicit drug or alcohol abuse problem.

Fortunately, we know much more about how drugs affect the body and the brain. Effective rehabilitation programs have been developed to help people stop abusing drugs and return to a normal life with sobriety.

Today, more and more drug rehabilitation programs are popping up around the country.  Some rehabs offer traditional 12 step approaches while others offer non 12 step rehabilitation.  

“Finding the right drug treatment program can be difficult,” says Derry Hallmark Certified Chemical Dependency Counselor and Senior Director for Expansion for Narconon Arrowhead. “But if you know what to look for it is very possible to find a program that gets positive results for permanent recovery from addiction.”

Narconon Arrowhead, a non 12 step rehabilitation program has proven to be successful in rehabilitating those struggling with drug or alcohol addiction.  With a 70% success rate, Narconon has found a unique approach toward drug rehabilitation which has gotten positive results with addicts since the 1960’s.

“If you know someone struggling with drug addiction, Narconon is the place to go for help,” says Hallmark. “Our program specializes in all types of drug and alcohol addictions and we have counselors on hand 7 days a week that can do confidential assessments with clients.”

For more information on getting help for you or someone you know through Narconon Arrowhead’s non 12 step rehabilitation program contact Narconon today at 800-468-6933 or log onto www.stopaddiction.com.


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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Alcoholics May Stop at One Drink With Help From Lundbeck Anti-Abuse Drug - Bloomberg

The first pill designed to curb a person’s urge to have more than a few drinks at a sitting is undergoing tests in Europe, promising doctors and public-health authorities a new approach to fighting alcoholism.

The drug, nalmefene from H. Lundbeck A/S in Valby, Denmark, blocks brain signals that make activities such as sex and drinking feel good. Should trials succeed, the medicine may win clearance in Europe as early as 2012, becoming the first new alcoholism treatment approved there in more than 15 years.

While the drugs now sold are used to prevent relapses after people quit drinking, nalmefene is aimed at reducing consumption without the abstinence that Alcoholics Anonymous and other treatment programs say is necessary. This less-strict approach may drive more abusers to seek treatment for the first time, said Adron Harris, director of the University of Texas at Austin’s Waggoner Center for Alcohol & Addiction Research.

“A major problem among alcohol abusers is that many are not interested in seeking treatment, perhaps because they do not want to accept the goal of complete abstinence,” Harris said.

The drug’s effects may prove greater on public health than on Lundbeck. Peter Welford, a London-based analyst at Jefferies International Ltd., said nalmefene may have peak sales for alcohol dependence of about $60 million a year, in 2018. That’s equivalent to a fraction of the $2.57 billion in total revenue for the company last year.

Welford’s estimate was held down by uncertainty over what price Lundbeck could demand and whether health-care providers would embrace a drug-based approach to treatment, he said.

‘Gold Mine’

“The market remains an untapped gold mine,” said Welford, who recommends buying Lundbeck shares.

Lundbeck fell 0.7 percent yesterday to 103 kroner in Copenhagen trading, giving the company a market value of 20.2 billion kroner ($3.6 billion). Of 17 Lundbeck analysts tracked by Bloomberg, 9 say investors should buy the shares, while 5 have “sell” opinions and 3 say “hold.”

Programs such as New York-based Alcoholics Anonymous, founded in 1935, require people to abstain. Choosing not to drink at all may be more effective than trying to curb consumption, according to a U.K. study published in March in Alcohol & Alcoholism, a journal of the London-based Medical Council on Alcohol. Drinkers who had sought treatment and abstained had fewer days of relapse when they imbibed too much, the researchers found.

“Many people make a decision to stop drinking,” said Peter McCann, a recovered alcoholic who is co-founder of Castle Craig Hospital, a rehabilitation clinic near Edinburgh. “They don’t need drugs to stop.”

Naltrexone Failure

It would be a great help to patients if nalmefene works, said Marvin D. Seppala, chief medical officer of Hazelden, the Center City, Minnesota-based treatment center whose abstinence- based approach has been adopted in more than 40 countries. Seppala said he is cautious about prescribing medicines without abstinence, having worked with patients who tried to curb intake by taking naltrexone, a generic drug not developed for that purpose.

Naltrexone cuts the desire to drink by blocking the release of dopamine, a brain chemical that generates feelings of pleasure. The drug is approved as a treatment for people who have stopped drinking, and has been taken experimentally to reduce consumption without quitting alcohol. The medicine didn’t help the patients curb intake, Seppala said.

“They were unable to do anything that would be considered beneficial, going from a liter a day of distilled spirits to two drinks short of a liter,” Seppala said in an e-mail interview.

Regulatory Stance

In September, the London-based European Medicines Agency, concerned that the all-or-nothing approach leaves millions untreated, included consumption-cutting medicines in its first guidelines to drugmakers on how to test experimental alcohol treatments. The London-based National Institute for Health & Clinical Excellence, or NICE, an adviser to the U.K.’s National Health Service, is considering new guidelines that recommend medication if other approaches fail.

There is a “critical need” for drugs to reduce drinking because alcoholism causes disability and contributes to suicide and accidents among young adults, said John Krystal, chairman of Yale University School of Medicine’s psychiatry department in New Haven, Connecticut, in an e-mail interview.

In the U.S., fewer than one in 10 overusers of alcohol gets treatment, the Bethesda, Maryland-based National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, or NIAAA, estimates. Nine of 10 Germans and 19 of 20 U.K. residents who abuse alcohol don’t get help, according to the Geneva-based World Health Organization.

Vodka Habit

A Danish man whose first name is Niels -- and who asked that his surname be withheld to protect his privacy and prevent embarrassment to himself -- was consuming a bottle of vodka a day, leaving his house only to get more, when his doctor persuaded him to quit drinking six years ago, he said.

Now 66, the former advertising executive said he takes Antabuse. The drug, known generically as disulfiram, reacts with alcohol to induce vomiting in abstainers who backslide and take a drink. His memories of alcohol’s effects remain vivid: waking up sweating and shaking, craving a drink, he said. He wishes he could have a single glass of wine and be able to stop there, he said in an interview.

Antabuse isn’t the only current treatment for alcohol abusers. Acamprosate, the active ingredient in New York-based Forest Laboratories Inc.’s Campral, appears to reduce the symptoms, such as anxiety and insomnia, that abstinence from alcohol can trigger. Campral won approval in France in 1987, before the European Medicines Agency was created in 1995, and U.S. clearance in 2004.

Licensing Arrangement

While the experimental nalmefene works similarly to naltrexone, it fits better on cells and lasts longer, said Antero Kallio, chief medical officer of Biotie Therapies Corp., in Turku, Finland. That company licensed the drug to Lundbeck in 2006, having been unable to pay for all of the clinical trials needed to seek regulatory clearance.

Lundbeck agreed to pay Biotie as much as 88 million euros ($115 million) if nalmefene meets development and sales goals.

In a 28-week study, Finnish men and women taking nalmefene cut the number of days on which they drank heavily by as much as 45 percent, to as low as 8.6 days a month, researchers from Biotie and the A-Clinic Foundation, a government-funded treatment provider based in Helsinki, reported in 2007 in the journal Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research. Patients getting a placebo cut heavy-drinking days by about one-third, showing an advantage for nalmefene.

‘Little by Little’

“Little by little, it decreases the craving for alcohol, and the person learns to control the alcohol problem,” said Hannu Alho, the independent coordinator of Lundbeck’s trials in Finland and the president-elect of the Calgary-based International Society of Addiction Medicine, a group of addiction specialists. “It’s a very much needed medicine.”

Lundbeck expects results as early as this month from trials of the drug in 1,850 people. Doctors would prescribe the pill on an as-needed basis. Patients who are worried about drinking too much could take it before their first glass, Lundbeck said.

“We’re not talking about the people on the bench in the park,” Anders Gersel Pedersen, executive vice president of drug development, said in an interview at Lundbeck’s headquarters in Valby, a district of Copenhagen. “We’re talking perhaps about people working in this building here.”

Lundbeck plans to seek European approval for nalmefene in 2011, and is in talks with potential partners who could market the medicine, Chief Executive Officer Ulf Wiinberg said Nov. 3.

Rival Treatments

Rival treatments in development include Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly & Co.’s LY2196044, and topiramate, a product that New Brunswick, New Jersey-based Johnson & Johnson, among others, is testing.

Lilly completed a 16-week study of LY2196044, part of the second of three stages of human testing needed for regulatory approval, according to a U.S. government website that tracks clinical trials. Lilly for competitive reasons hasn’t disclosed how the compound works, according to the company’s website.

Topiramate is the active ingredient in Topamax, which J&J sells as an anticonvulsant. Researchers say the medicine, which is approved to prevent seizures and migraine headaches, may help balance electrical activity in the brain. Vivus Inc. in Mountain View, California, is seeking U.S. approval of a diet pill called Qnexa that combines topiramate with phentermine.

Desitin, a closely held company in Hamburg, began selling a naltrexone-based product called Adepend in September.

Lundbeck can’t prevent people who have quit alcohol consumption from using nalmefene to resume drinking, said Mads Kronborg, a company spokesman. The pill isn’t being developed for that purpose, he said in a telephone interview.

‘Difficult’ Funding

A 2006 report by the U.K.’s NICE said finding treatment funding, either private or public, “has proved difficult.” While most U.S. states require health insurers to at least offer treatment, federal law may exempt larger employers, NIAAA said in its five-year strategic plan.

“Every physician knows that alcohol is bad for all parts of your body,” said Christian Haasen, a professor at the University of Hamburg’s Center for Interdisciplinary Addiction Research, who is also an independent investigator in Lundbeck’s nalmefene trials. Doctors will be “quite interested” in the Lundbeck drug, he said.

For now, it’s an open question that the product will work, the Waggoner Center’s Harris said.

“The controversy is whether recovering alcoholics can maintain moderate consumption without returning to harmful drinking,” Harris said.

To contact the reporter responsible for this story: Frances Schwartzkopff at fschwartzko1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Angela Cullen at acullen8@bloomberg.net

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Narconon Helps the Community During the Holidays

Narconon works to give back to McAlester through food drives and charity.

Oklahoma- The holidays are about help, and support; especially for those struggling with addiction. When one drug rehab opened its doors nearly forty-four years ago they carried this message, not only through rehabilitation but community prevention and action. Drug addiction affects more than 22 million people nationwide and although the key lies in rehabilitation, prevention is what will stop those from getting addicted in the first place.

On December 10th, employees from Narconon Arrowhead, one of the largest and most successful rehabilitation centers in the world went around McAlester and delivered food to those needing assistance this holiday season and showing support while delivering a drug free message.

“We were able to contribute to the well being of individual’s in our community,” said Danna Sue Pruett, Director of Field Activities at Narconon Arrowhead, “Through donations we were able to donate food, diapers, and hygiene items to the community.”

Pruett and Michael Ginsburg, from the Narconon Public Relations area, delivered twenty five bags to the McAlester Child Protective Services.  These items will go to helping children who have been taken into protective custody and several foster homes in the McAlester area.

“It was so nice to be able to help others and give back to the community during the holiday season,” says Ginsburg, “That is really what Narconon is about, helping others.”

Twenty five bags were also delivered to the Deep Fork Community Action which helps families that have been turned down for food stamps, families that are struggling financially, and the elderly. In addition, Narconon also delivered contributions to The Hope House of McAlester.

“All of these centers were very appreciative for the help,” says Pruett “Narconon is always looking for an opportunity to help the families in our community.”

Narconon works not only to help the people in their community, but they also work daily to help the people around the world struggling with drug addiction through their rehabilitation program.

For more information on Narconon Arrowhead or the Narconon program contact us today at 800-468-6933 or log onto www.stopaddiction.com


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Thinking About Drug Rehab?

Maybe you’ve come to a dead-end in your life, strung out on a daily basis, never being able to see things clearly, running into one stumbling block after another – all on account of your addiction to drugs. There comes a point in every addict’s life when it’s time to face up to reality. For some, that self-revelatory moment comes only after major negative consequences or tragedy. For others, it arrives much sooner. Whichever point you are at, if you’re thinking about drug rehab, there are some things you should know.

Effective Drug Rehab Requires Commitment

The most important point to recognize is that to be effective, drug rehab requires your total commitment. You can’t just go to a few meetings or enroll in a drug treatment program and give it a half-hearted effort and expect a miracle to happen. First of all, just attending a few meetings and not really paying attention is just wasting your time. You won’t get anything out of it – or not much that will penetrate your wall of defenses.

And enrolling in a drug treatment program only makes sense if you intend to be fully present and genuinely involved in the hard work it takes to get clean, learn about your disease, and how to overcome it.

In other words, if you’re thinking about drug rehab, only go further if you are going to give it your wholehearted commitment. Nothing else will do. Relapse rates for those quitting treatment before completion are extraordinarily high. Why bother if you’re only going to be part of that statistic?

But, if you’re serious about getting and staying clean, drug rehab may be your first and best possible solution.

Not All Drug Rehab Is The Same

There are many different settings where drug rehab is delivered. Some are in outpatient settings, others inpatient or hospital locations. Perhaps the best setting for treatment of chronic addictions is a residential drug treatment facility.

It’s important to recognize that while there are many different drug rehab treatment settings, the kind of treatment that’s available in these settings can vary widely as well. Not all drug rehab is the same.

There are short-term (30-days or less) residential drug treatment programs and long-term (longer than 30-days) residential drug treatment programs. These are also called inpatient drug rehab facilities.

There are drug rehab facilities that utilize the 12-step program approach or a non-traditional format. Some are religious-based while others are secular. Some make use of replacement drugs, while others are totally drug-free rehab.

Drug treatment centers and facilities may be located close to where you live or out of state. You may be able to get financial assistance to pay for the rehab or your insurance may cover most of it.

Look for a drug rehab program at a facility that specializes in treating your type of addiction. It doesn’t make sense to go to a treatment center if you have substance abuse and a co-occurring mental health disorder (such as post traumatic stress disorder or PTSD, major depression, bi-polar disorder, schizophrenia and others) if the staff isn’t trained in treating both. Such dual-diagnosis patients require coordinated, comprehensive and simultaneous treatment by highly qualified professionals.

You also want to choose a drug rehab facility that’s accredited and certified to provide drug rehab treatment in your state. Look for CARF-accredited facilities. The acronym stands for Commission on Accreditation for Rehabilitation Facilities.

How to Find a Drug Rehab Facility

There are several ways to find a drug rehab facility to help you overcome your addiction. You can ask your doctor for a referral. You can talk with friends and family members to see if they have had any experience with or know of a good treatment facility in your area. But it may not be convenient to speak with your doctor or you may be reluctant to bring the subject up with family or friends.

A better solution is to do your own research. Fortunately, there’s a great online tool available, the Treatment Facility Locator (http://dasis3.samhsa.gov/), maintained by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Use the locator to find private and public drug rehab facilities that are licensed, certified, and otherwise approved by state substance abuse agencies. There’s even a toll-free treatment referral helpline, 1-800-662-HELP.

How does the treatment facility locator work? There’s a map-based locator where you click on your state to bring up a page where you input your city and state (minimum information required) and then press “Continue.” The search will return listings of drug and alcohol treatment facilities within a maximum of 100-mile radius.

Each listing contains the facility’s name, address, contact numbers, distance, map-it feature and other information. Key to your research is the facility’s primary focus, services provided, type of care, special programs or groups, forms of payment accepted, and special languages/services.

Primary focus includes mix of mental health and substance abuse services or just substance abuse services. Services provided include substance abuse treatment, detoxification, buprenorphine services, halfway house. Type of care includes residential short-term (30 days or less), residential long-term (more than 30 days), outpatient, and partial hospitalization/day treatment. Special groups may include a number of different groups or just a few, including persons with co-occurring mental and substance abuse disorders, women, men, seniors and older adults, gays and lesbians, adolescents, residential beds for client’s children, and more. Forms of payment include self-payment, private health insurance, military insurance, Medicaid, sliding fee scale (fee is based on income and other factors), and payment assistance.

It’s a good idea to select a few facilities and then delve further into their websites (most URLs are included in the listing) to find out more about their particular treatment approach and other information you’ll need in order to make a decision.

How To Choose a Drug Rehab Facility

When it comes to actually deciding which drug rehab facility you want to go to, there are many factors that should come into play.

• Not the least of these is which one does your private health insurance cover, if any? But you should never dismiss your optimum choice of drug rehab facility simply because you think you can’t afford it or your insurance won’t cover it. If other factors are right for you and you really believe this is the best facility to help you in your goal to overcome drug addiction, inquire about payment assistance, sliding fee scale or other financial aid that may be available (or get a referral to a state or local agency that may be able to help).

• Think about what you need to do in order to overcome your addiction. Do you feel that it would be better to be close to home so that your family members are nearby and can visit when the time is appropriate – after you’ve completed detox and your counselor gives the okay for visitation?

• On the other hand, being too close to family may be just what you don’t need right now. There’s a good reason why some of the drug rehab facilities chosen for certain patients on the Intervention TV show (and others) are out of state. Some are far across country. That’s because with serious or chronic, long-term addiction to certain drugs, a complete change of venue is often considered beneficial. This may be your situation or it may just be that you’d prefer to be treated somewhere other than nearby your home.

• You also need to do your homework on the facility you think you’d like to go to. Find out about their success rate in treating patients with your kind of addiction. Also find out what’s included in the treatment program and what are extra-cost services. Something that’s very important to your ability to go into recovery following treatment is the availability of continuing care or aftercare services. These may be included in the cost of your treatment program or they may be additional cost. You need to know which it is, so that you can make your decision accordingly.

• Remember that if you don’t have access to aftercare counseling, you may have a harder time in recovery. Statistically speaking, the first 90 days of recovery (the time after treatment concludes) are the most critical for relapse. Without the benefit of counseling and participation in 12-step recovery groups, you’re more likely to relapse.

What’s Motivating You to Change?

It may seem like a casual exercise right now to think about whether or not you’ll go into drug rehab, but it really is the beginning to what may be your best chance at sobriety. You need to think seriously about what’s motivating you to make the change now.

• Is it because you’re being more or less forced to by your spouse, partner or parent?

• Has your employer given you an ultimatum – get treatment or you’re out the door?

• Have you been toying with the idea of rehab because you think it’s easy or the treatment du jour – having seen Hollywood celebrities in revolving-door drug rehab stories played out endlessly on TV?

• Have you lost everything – your home, family, job, car, friends – and feel like you don’t have any other option?

• Are you at the point where you admit that you have an addiction and want to do everything you can to overcome it?

You may have one or more of the aforementioned motivations for wanting to get treatment for drug addiction now. But to get the most out of any treatment program, you need to honestly and genuinely want to overcome your disease. That’s because treatment and doing the work to overcome addiction is tough. This is no cake walk. It’s not something that you can do in a weekend or teach yourself how to do. It just doesn’t work that way.

So, if you’re serious about getting help for your drug addiction and are thinking about drug rehab, you’re in the best position to move forward. Motivation and having the goal of sobriety are strong plusses to get you in the door of treatment and started on your road to recovery.

But it’s not everything.

Line Up Your Support

What is the situation like for you at home? Do you have a stable, loving family that will support and encourage your treatment and recovery? Will they also be willing to get family treatment or counseling so that they’re better able to understand the disease of addiction and learn how to help you in your recovery efforts? Or, do you have a dysfunctional family, no support at home, and it’s a living situation that you’d be better off not returning to?

Of course, there are many different types of family situations. Some are more fraught with tension and stress than others. There may be others within the close family unit that are also addicted and may not be ready or willing at this time to get treatment to overcome the disease.

The simple reality about your goal of recovery is that no one recovers alone. There are two support networks that most individuals in recovery rely on: family and 12-step groups. If you have the support and encouragement of your family, that’s a huge advantage. But, even if you don’t have family support, you do have the other support network – 12-step groups.

You will be introduced to the concept and participate in 12-step group meetings while you are in treatment (if your treatment facility utilizes the 12-step approach in drug rehab treatment). So, even if you don’t currently have a 12-step group that you attend, you’ll learn about how these groups function during treatment. When you complete treatment, your counselor will recommend that you continue participating in 12-step support groups for the forseeable future. You will at least need to consider going to 12-step meetings for the first year of recovery. Many in recovery continue to attend meetings for several years. They proceed from early recovery to stable recovery and take the opportunity to reach out and help others who are newly sober to get grounded in sobriety.

Get a jump on what you’ll learn in treatment by looking up 12-step groups in your area. You may wish to check out Narcotics Anonymous or Cocaine Anonymous, Methamphetamine Anonymous, Marijuana Anonymous, and so on. Look them up in the phone directory or do a Google or Bing search for them online. The good news is that there are 12-step fellowships for various drug addictions in every major city in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, as well as many foreign countries. In addition to in-person meetings, there are online meetings and telephone meetings, so you are never far from support when you need it.

Think About Your Future

You know where you stand right now with your drug addiction. That’s why you’re thinking about drug rehab. But it’s also a good idea to consider what your future will be like if you continue on your present path and don’t get help to overcome addiction.

Where do you see yourself in five or 10 years? How much will your drug habit have cost you financially, emotionally, physically? Who do you think will still stand by you then? Are you willing to risk losing everything that means anything to you for the sake of continuing your addiction?

Instead, picture your future in far different scenarios. Indeed, when you are in the final phase of active treatment, you will create a recovery plan for yourself that will begin to list things that you want to accomplish (your goals) in your life of sobriety. You might not be able to see very far into the future right now. In fact, you may believe that you don’t deserve to have anything of value or that you are worthless.

Every person has value and worth. The trick is to learn to accept this and maximize your potential. Drug rehab can help you in ways that you cannot yet imagine. It’s the first step on your road to recovery.

Are you ready to begin? It’s easier than you think to get started. In fact, just by reading this, you’ve already begun. Now, the next step is to take it forward and transform your thinking about drug rehab into going into drug rehab.

Thinking About Drug Rehab? is a post from: Drug Addiction Treatment

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