2. The Need for Treatment Programs
• 23.5 million persons aged 12 and older need treatment for
either an illicit drug or alcohol
• Only 11.2% of those individuals receive treatment from a
specialized facility
• The federal government allocates more than two-thirds of its
drug-control budget to law enforcement and interdiction
efforts, rather than treatment
3. Underlying Causes of Drug Abuse
• People in treatment for substance abuse:
• Disadvantaged in education and employment
• More likely to be male, Caucasian, aged 25 to 45
• Increasing trend toward veterans and the elderly
• The goals of a treatment program differ, depending on
whether drug abuse is seen as a medical problem, as a
breakdown in society, or as a personality weakness
4. Drug Courts
• Drug treatment courts combine the power of the justice
system with effective treatment services
• First drug court was established in 1989 for nonviolent drug
offenders whose underlying problem is substance use
• Offenders who complete substance abuse programs may
have their sentences dismissed or reduced
5. Profile of the Drug Abuser
• Most people in drug treatment :
• Caucasian males
• Average age at admission is 34
• Less than one-fourth are employed
• One third completed high school or a GED
• Many have mental health problems
• 30-40% of homeless population are drug abusers
• Most use more than one drug
7. History of Treatment
• Using drugs to treat drug abuse was common in early
treatment programs
• US Public Health Service established two hospitals to serve
the growing number of addicts in federal prisons
• The relapse rate of people released in the 1940s through
early 1960s ranged between 87% and 96%
8. Current Treatment Options
• Therapeutic community – a residential facility staffed by
former drug addicts
• Methadone maintenance programs – outpatient programs
in which opiate addicts receive methadone daily
• Detoxification – a medically supervised program to withdraw
from drugs on which they are physically dependent
9. Current Treatment Options
• Three immediate goals of detoxification:
1. To provide safe withdrawal from drugs
2. To provide withdrawal that is humane and protects the
person’s dignity
3. To prepare the person for ongoing treatment
• Self-help programs based on the principles of Alcoholics
Anonymous are growing in popularity
10. Benefits of Treatment
• Benefits of drug treatment:
• Less expensive than incarceration
• Reduced use of illicit drugs
• Decline in criminal activity
• More stable employment
• Reduced transmission of AIDS
12. National Treatment Improvement
Evaluation Study
• Reported benefits:
• Drug use declined from 73% before treatment to 38% one
year after treatment
• Increase in employment from 51% to 60%
• Decline in clients receiving welfare from 40% to 35%
• Drop in homelessness from 19% to 11%
• 53% decline in substance-related medical visits
• 56% reduction in people exchanging sex for drugs
• 51% drop in people having sex with an IV drug user
14. Treatment Issues
• Four pertinent issues in treating drug abuse:
1. Voluntary or compulsory treatment
2. Matching patients to the best treatment
3. Effectiveness of treatment programs designed for adults
for adolescent substance abusers
4. Programs to address female addicts
15. Voluntary Versus Compulsory Treatment
• Some studies show that volunteers fare better than those
required to be in treatment
• Other studies show that those required to receive treatment
make as much progress, as those who enter voluntarily
• The key issue could be how long the person stays in
treatment
16. Matching Patients and Treatments
• Questions to be addressed:
• Which treatment produces the best outcomes for a
specific group or person?
• Do members of certain ethnic or socioeconomic groups
respond similarly to certain types of treatment?
• Is the effectiveness of a specific program linked to age of
participants?
• Do females and males differ in their responses to
treatment?
17. Treating Adolescent Drug Abusers
• In 2009, in the US, 149,277 individuals aged 12 to 17 were
admitted to a drug treatment facility
• The primary drug of abuse was marijuana
• More intensive, longer programs (three months) are more
effective than short (two session) programs
• Teens who enter treatment do better academically than teens
who do not receive treatment
18. Women and Treatment
• Treatment programs for women are scarce
• Women substance abusers are more likely to have poor
family relationships and psychological health than men
• Even when treatment is available, many women are reluctant
to enter a program
• Women in female-only drug abuse treatment centers are
more likely to benefit from treatment
20. Problems Associated with Treatment
• Client Resistance to Treatment:
• Many treatment facilities are not readily available or
accessible
• A large percentage of clients lack insurance and cannot
afford the cost of treatment
• Policies and philosophies of some facilities deter drug
abusers from pursuing help
• Benefits of using drugs outweigh the disadvantages
• Clients think that legal authorities will be made aware of
their drug-taking behavior if they enter treatment
21. Problems Associated with Treatment
• Community Resistance:
• People do not want drug treatment centers in their
neighborhoods
• Concerned about more crime, more traffic, exposure of
children to bad influences, and lower property values
• NIMBY (not in my backyard) syndrome
22. Problems Associated with Treatment
• Continuing Drug Use:
• The goal of abstinence is often not realized
• Treatment of at least six months seems to be necessary to
reduce drug use significantly
• One study of adolescents in treatment reported that drug
usage declined somewhat ,but remained high
23. Problems Associated with Treatment
• Factors that contribute to relapse among alcoholics:
1. Negative emotional states such as frustration, anxiety,
depression, anger, or boredom
2. Interpersonal conflicts with a spouse, family member,
friend, or employer
3. Social pressure from a person or group of people
24. Problems Associated with Treatment
• Factors in Personnel Recruitment and Retention:
• Reluctance to work with drug abusers
• Undesirable locations of facilities
• Inadequate supply of applicants with professional
experiences and qualifications
• Fear of contracting AIDS
26. Treatment Programs
• Methadone Maintenance
• Treatment that involves the dispensing of methadone for
opiate addiction for more than 30 days
• Eliminates withdrawal symptoms and prevents euphoria
• Given orally, every 24 hours
• Effective only for heroin addiction
• Psychotherapy in conjunction with methadone yields the
best results
• Crime reduction and relapse rates improve with duration of
treatment
27. Treatment Programs
• Alternatives to Methadone:
• Extended-release form of naltrexone allows patients to be
treated on a monthly rather daily basis
• Levo-alpha-acetylmethadol (LAAM) works for three
days, but has side effects
• Other drugs that block the effects of opiates are
naltrexone, naloxone, clonidine, and buprenorphine
• Some narcotic addicts say that methadone withdrawal is
worse than going cold turkey
28. Treatment Programs
• Therapeutic communities (TCs)
• Drug-free residential settings where abusers reside for one
or two years
• Philosophy is that drug abuse is incurable, but can benefit
from behavioral intervention
• Stress group intervention techniques, especially
encounter groups
• Provide vocational and educational assistance and
improve the self-esteem of residents
30. Treatment Programs
• Outpatient Treatment:
• Most common form of drug abuse treatment
• Less disruptive and stigmatizing than inpatient treatment
• Ranges from counseling centers to halfway houses to
community centers
• Frequently is used after a client leaves methadone
maintenance
• Clients often go back to the environments that contributed
to their drug abuse initially
31. Treatment Programs
• Inpatient Treatment:
• Typically hospital based
• Expensive
• No more effective than intensive outpatient treatment
• Tend to be highly structured
• Group therapy and drug education are stressed
33. Treatment Programs
• Self-Help Groups:
• Members are bound by a common denominator such as
alcohol, gambling, food, shopping, or sex
• Largest self-help group is Alcoholics Anonymous (AA),
based on a 12-step model
• Offer fellowship and support
• Used in lieu of traditional therapies or after a person stops
other therapies
• Cost-effective for maintaining changes and preventing
relapse
34. Narcotics Anonymous
• Narcotics Anonymous (NA)
• Emanated from Alcoholics Anonymous
• Open to all drug addicts
• Principles of the NA recovery program:
• Admitting there is a problem
• Seeking help
• Engaging in a thorough self-examination;
• Confidential self-disclosure;
• Making amends for harm done
• Helping other drug addicts who want to recover
35. Alcohol Treatment
• AA advocates total abstinence, a view that is not universally
accepted
• Some treatments advocate a controlled drinking approach
in which the patient learns to drink in a nonabusive manner
• Drug therapy in the form of Antabuse (disulfiram) has been
used as well
36. Alcoholics Anonymous
• Started in 1935 by an alcoholic surgeon (Dr. Bob) and an
alcoholic stockbroker (Bill W.)
• Goals are sobriety and spiritual renewal
• Based on the premise that alcoholism is a disease over which
the person has no control
• Based on a 12-step plan
37. 12 Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous
1. We admitted we were powerless over alcohol—that our lives
had become unmanageable
2. Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could
restore us to sanity
3. Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care
of God as we understood Him
4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves
38. 12 Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous
5. Admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being
the exact nature of our wrongs
6. Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of
character.
7. Humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings
8. Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing
to make amends to them all
39. 12 Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous
9. Made direct amends to such people wherever possible,
except when to do so would injure them or others
10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were
wrong promptly admitted it
11. Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our
conscious contact with God as we understood Him
12. We tried to carry this message to alcoholics and to practice
these principles in all our affairs
40. Moderate Drinking
• Moderation Management (MM) is a controlled drinking model
of behavioral self-management
• Drinkers are taught to cope with peer pressure and situations
that tempt them to drink excessively
• The longer a person has been an alcoholic, the less likely it is
that he or she can return to social drinking
• The controlled drinking model is contrary to the disease
model
41. Medications
• Disulfiram (Antabuse)
• Acts as an aversive agent by interacting with alcohol in
such a way that the drinker becomes violently ill
• Naltrexone
• Reduces alcohol craving among heavy drinkers, but has
not been shown to result in abstinence
• Acamprosate
• Inhibits the craving for alcohol and food
Notas del editor
Figure 15.1 Percentages of Reasons* for Not Receiving Substance Use Treatment in the Past Year among Women Aged 18 to 49 Who Needed Treatment and Who Perceived a Need for It: 2004–2006
Should drug addiction be considered a medical or a legal problem?
The longer drug abusers stay in treatment, the more effective the treatment.