Archive for June, 2010

Peers Help Alcoholics in Many Ways

Social network variables in alcoholics anonymous : A literature review

Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) is the most commonly used program for substance abuse recovery and one of the few models to demonstrate positive abstinence outcomes.

Although little is known regarding the underlying mechanisms that make this program effective, one frequently cited aspect is social support.

In order to gain insight into the processes at work in AA, this paper reviewed 24 papers examining the relationship between AA and social network variables.

Various types of social support were included in the review such as

  • structural support,
  • functional support,
  • general support,
  • alcohol-specific support, and
  • recovery helping.

Overall, this review found that AA involvement is related to a variety of positive qualitative and quantitative changes in social support networks.

Although AA had the greatest impact on friend networks, it had less influence on networks consisting of family members or others.

In addition, support from others in AA was found to be of great value to recovery, and individuals with harmful social networks supportive of drinking actually benefited the most from AA involvement.

Furthermore, social support variables consistently mediated AA’s impact on abstinence, suggesting that social support is a mechanism in the effectiveness of AA in promoting a sober lifestyle. Recommendations are made for future research and clinical practice.

Research report; Groh DR, Jason LA, Keys CB. Social network variables in alcoholics anonymous : A literature review. Clin Psychol Rev. 2007 Aug 7.

12 Steps: A Spiritual Journey (Tools for Recovery)

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Brain Chemicals Trump Willpower in Addicts, NIDA Director Says

Understanding brain chemistry, not building up willpower, is the key to preventing adolescent alcohol and other drug addiction, according to Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA).

The Associated Press reported April 3 that Volkow said that adolescent brains are still developing and react differently to drugs than those of adults. Volkow, a researcher with a long history of exploring the brain circuitry involved in addiction, has been shifting some of NIDA’s research efforts toward examining how the brains of adolescents and people who don’t become addicted to alcohol or other drugs differ from the brains of those who do develop drug problems. “What is it that makes a person more vulnerable to take drugs or not?” said Volkow.

“Now we have Nora’s picture rather than a picture of fried eggs,” said Joanna Fowler, a former colleague of Volkow’s at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. “We can go beyond that knee-jerk picture of a brain to a real brain … If you can conceptualize (addiction) as a brain disease rather than a moral weakness or lack of willpower, you can more easily bring resources to bear.”

Former NIDA head Alan Leshner said Volkow has promoted the idea that addiction “has to be seen as a health issue as well as a criminal or social-justice issue. She has definitely moved neuroscience forward.”

Volkow said she always has been fascinated in the brain and issues of free will. She noted that the brain is not fully matured until the early 20s, with the frontal cortex — the brain’s cognitive and reasoning center — the last to be finished. Thus, for teens, “to stand up and say ‘I’m not going to do it’ is much harder than (for) an adult,” Volkow said.

Brain immaturity may also explain teen risk-taking and why scare tactics can backfire in drug prevention. “It is that notion of ‘I dare you,’” she said. “It may be appealing to an adolescent because they are seeking for danger in many instances.”

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Rates of Relapse to Alcohol Abuse

 

The Drinker by Cezanne Rates and correlates of relapse among individuals in remission from DSM-IV alcohol dependence: a 3-year follow-up.

< The Drinker by Cezanne

BACKGROUND: There is little information on the stability of abstinent and non-abstinent remission from alcohol dependence in the general U.S. population. The aim of this study was to examine longitudinal changes in recovery status among individuals in remission from DSM-IV alcohol dependence, including rates and correlates of relapse, over a 3-year period.

METHODS: This analysis is based on data from Waves 1 and 2 of the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC), a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults aged 18 years and older originally interviewed in 2001 to 2002 and re-interviewed in 2004 to 2005. The Wave 1 NESARC identified 2,109 individuals who met the DSM-IV criteria for full remission from alcohol dependence. Of these, 1,772 were re-interviewed at Wave 2, comprising the analytic sample for this study. Recovery status at Wave 2 was examined as a function of type of remission at Wave 1, with a focus on rates of relapse, alternately defined as recurrence of any alcohol use disorder (AUD) symptoms and recurrence of DSM-IV alcohol dependence. Logistic regression models were used to estimate the odds of relapse among asymptomatic risk drinkers and low-risk drinkers relative to abstainers, adjusted for a wide range of potential confounders.

RESULTS: By Wave 2,

  • 51.0% of the Wave 1 asymptomatic risk drinkers had experienced the recurrence of AUD symptoms, compared with
  • 27.2% of low-risk drinkers and
  • 7.3% of abstainers.

Across all ages combined, the adjusted odds of recurrence of AUD symptoms relative to abstainers were

  • 14.6 times as great for asymptomatic risk drinkers and
  • 5.8 times as great for low-risk drinkers.

The proportions of individuals who had experienced the recurrence of dependence were 10.2, 4.0, and 2.9%, respectively, and the adjusted odds ratios relative to abstainers were 7.0 for asymptomatic risk drinkers and 3.0 for low-risk drinkers.

Age significantly modified the association between type of remission and relapse.

Differences by type of remission were not significant for younger alcoholics, who had the highest rates of relapse.

Abstinence represents the most stable form of remission for most recovering alcoholics

CONCLUSIONS: Abstinence represents the most stable form of remission for most recovering alcoholics. Study findings highlight the need for better approaches to maintaining recovery among young adults in remission from alcohol dependence, who are at particularly high risk of relapse.

Research; Dawson DA, Goldstein RB, Grant BF. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2007 Dec;31(12):2036-45. Rates and correlates of relapse among individuals in remission from DSM-IV alcohol dependence: a 3-year follow-up.

 

          Motivational Enhancement Therapy Manual:
A Clinical Research Guide for Therapists Treating Individuals With Alcohol Abuse and Dependence

by William R. Miller

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Slogans for everyday life in AA

Slogans for everyday life and the ethical practices of Alcoholics Anonymous

Alcoholics Anonymous has developed an oral tradition for teaching people to alter their relation to their own desires and their own freedom fundamentally, teaching that is done through practice rather than through ideas.

Our study of AA’s innovative organisational tools for building long-lasting mutual-help groups shows that the same tools that build the organisation also exemplify and embody the organisation’s ethical worldview.

To that extent, AA’s group practices are worth studying not only from the point of view of learning about bottom-up, non-expert-led networks but also to shed light on the development of a popular pragmatist ethics in which little techniques – anonymity, the focus on the 24-hour cycle, etc. – deconstruct the Kantian distinction between means and ends.

This study of the everyday ethics of AA members argues that AA’s unique role in the history of popular ethical practices can be traced to several original features.

  • First, AA incorporates elements of the disease model of alcoholism while remaining fundamentally a spiritual programme, thus mapping an important hybrid terrain often ignored by students of medicalisation.
  • Secondly, AA was able to steer away from the political controversies about temperance, prohibition, and control of alcoholic beverages that had made the old temperance movement founder.
  • Thirdly and most importantly, AA uniquely managed to combine the once-in-a-lifetime experience of total transformation that is characteristic of religious conversion with the development of a series of slogans and mental techniques for dealing with the ‘trivial’ details of life.

This paper first outlines the hybrid terrain of AA, between medicine and religion, and then examines a few of the techniques that are at the core of AA’s success, including anonymity, the Higher Power, and the twenty-four hour cycle.

Valverde M. & White-Mair K. (1999), One Day At A Time and other Slogans for Everyday Life the Ethical Practices of Alcoholics Anonymous. Sociology (1999), 33:393-410

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Doctor drink mug of coffee in her office uid 1271749 Twelve-step facilitation (TSF) in non-specialty settings.

Participation in the twelve-step mutual-help organization, Alcoholics Anonymous, has proven to be an effective means of helping individuals with alcohol dependence achieve lasting sobriety.

Although many patients choose to attend AA of their own accord, clinicians’ facilitation of AA involvement ("Twelve-Step Facilitation" [TSF]) has shown to substantially increase the likelihood that patients will become engaged with these freely available resources.

Importantly, many individuals with alcohol dependence never seek help from addiction specialists, yet often encounter other health professionals due to alcohol-related physical or psychological problems providing an opportunity for intervention.

However, for clinicians who do not specialize in addiction treatment, knowledge about what AA actually is and does is often lacking, and confidence in implementing TSF strategies is low.

This chapter provides essential information for clinicians working in non-specialty settings who have little knowledge of, or experience with, AA or TSF, but who may wish to utilize proven strategies to augment existing interventions by helping educate, link, and engage patients with AA.

Detailed information on the origins and specific elements of AA is provided along with recommended TSF approaches and strategies to aid the non-specialist in building effective interventions for patients with alcohol dependence.

Kelly JF, McCrady BS. Twelve-step facilitation in non-specialty settings. Recent Dev Alcohol. 2008;18:321-46.

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Alcoholism a Woman’s Disease too

Alcoholism Is Not Just A Mans Disease Anymore

A new examination of data on similarly aged groups, compared across decades, has found substantial increases in drinking and alcohol dependence among women.

Increases were particularly notable among white and Hispanic women beginning with those born in the United States after World War II.

Cross-sectional studies, which collect information at a single point in time, generally find that young Americans report having more lifetime alcohol problems than older Americans, despite having had less time to develop these problems.  But these studies are hampered by the fact that people of different ages may remember or report problems to different degrees.  A new examination of data, collected on similarly aged groups one decade apart, has found substantial increases in drinking and alcohol dependence among women “ particularly white and Hispanic women“ beginning with those born in the United States after World War II.

Results are published in the May issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.

“By looking at two different cross-sectional surveys that asked the same questions in the same manner, but were conducted 10 years apart, we were able to compare, for example, 30 – 40 year olds in 2001 with 30 – 40 year olds in 1991, explained Richard A. Grucza, an epidemiologist at Washington University School of Medicine and the studys corresponding author.  Essentially, this allowed us to correct for the effects of age on reporting.  When we did this, we found that the tendency for young people to have higher levels of lifetime alcohol dependence clearly remained for women, although it disappeared for men.

Furthermore, added Shelly F. Greenfield, associate clinical director of the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment Program at McLean Hospital, prevalence surveys are inclusive.  “Epidemiologic surveys document the prevalence of an illness such as alcohol dependence in the entire population rather than just one segment of the population, such as those seeking treatment,” she said.  “This allows us to track trends in illnesses – including whether certain people are more vulnerable for a particular disease, at what age they manifest symptoms, and how quickly the illness progresses.”

For this study, researchers examined two large, national surveys: the National Longitudinal Alcohol Epidemiologic Survey (NLAES), conducted in 1991 and 1992; and the National Epidemiological Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC), conducted in 2001 and 2002.  They compared lifetime prevalence rates from the same age groups and demographics, while simultaneously controlling for age-related factors.

“We found that for women born after World War II, there are lower levels of abstaining from alcohol, and higher levels of alcohol dependence, even when looking only at women who drank,” said Grucza.  “However, we didn’t see any significant tendency for more recently born men to have lower levels of abstention, or higher levels of alcohol dependence.”  He added that these results shed more light on a “closing gender-gap in alcoholism,” showing that it is probably due to higher levels of problems among women, while men have been more or less steady in their levels of dependence.

Greenfield concurred.  “This is an excellent study that adds important information to the accumulating evidence that the gender gap between women and men in the prevalence of alcohol dependence is narrowing,” she said.  “One possible explanation is that between 1934 and 1964, the social acceptability of women’s drinking increased.  As it was more socially acceptable for women to drink, a greater number of them became drinkers.  Because women have a heightened vulnerability to the effects of alcohol – that is, greater blood alcohol levels at similar ‘doses’ of alcohol – we may therefore see a concomitant rise in alcohol dependence among those who ever drank.”

Grucza drew an analogy between women’s drinking habits and culture and immigration.  “Clearly there were many changes in the cultural environment for women born in the 40s, 50s and 60s compared to women born earlier,” he said.  “Women entered the work force, were more likely to go to college, were less hampered by gender stereotypes, and had more purchasing power.  They were freer to engage in a range of behaviors that were culturally or practically off-limits, and these behaviors probably would have included excessive drinking and alcohol problems.”

He noted that U.S. immigrants from cultures with conservative values vis-à-vis drinking tend to adhere to their own cultural norms, while their children are likely to adopt U.S. norms, which are comparatively lax regarding alcohol.

“We can think of U.S. culture as having been traditionally dominated by white men,” added Grucza.  “As women have ‘immigrated’ into this culture, they have become ‘acculturated’ with regard to alcohol use.  But Black women – who still have the lowest rates of drinking among the demographic groups we looked at – have a second barrier between them and the dominant U.S. culture, namely, their race, that may be keeping them from adopting the standards of the dominant culture with respect to alcohol use.”

Greenfield suggested that specially designed prevention programs that target female drinkers might help to lower drinking rates, and also delay the age of drinking initiation, which could help prevent later alcohol problems.  “It would also be helpful to educate women about the gender differences in metabolism of alcohol, and the associated heightened female vulnerability to alcohol’s adverse health consequences at lower doses than men,” she said.

Grucza agreed that interventions for women need further investigation.  “Whenever we see change in a disorder in the population, there is an opportunity to take a closer look at which risk factors for the disorder might be changing at the same time,” he said.  “The classic example of this would be the rise in lung cancer in the late 20th century, a time in which sales of commercially produced cigarettes also skyrocketed.  In this case, we obviously wouldn’t want to change the progress made by women over the last 50 – 60 years, but we can look at specific changes in their drinking behavior and start to speculate about what interventions might work.”

Richard A. Grucza, Kathleen K. Bucholz, John P. Rice, Laura J. Bierut. (May 2008). Secular trends in the lifetime prevalence of alcohol dependence in the United States: a re-evaluation.  Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research (ACER). 32(5): 763–770.

See also;

Counseling The Alcoholic Woman
by Joseph F. Perez

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Spirituality in Alcoholism Recovery

Spirituality in Alcoholism Recovery: A model of progression

The spiritual progression of 14 members of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) was studied using a transtheoretical approach, with object relations theory as a primary framework.

The subjects were aged 35-45, had a minimum of one year of continuous sobriety, and professed belief in the efficacy of the Twelve Steps.

The subjects participated in multiple-subject interviews and completed a questionnaire.

A six-stage model of spiritual progression was developed. It is noted that within AA, spiritual progression in recovery is based on application of AA’s Twelve Suggested Steps of Recovery.

  • stage one marks the beginning of recovery,
  • stages two and three address relationships with God;
  • stage four relates to subjects’ relationships with themselves;
  • stage five relates to subjects relationships with others;
  • stage six relates to maintenance of spirituality through application of the Twelve Steps.

Three case studies representing successful, moderately successful, and unsuccessful spiritual integration illustrate the experiences of alcoholics in working through AA’s Twelve Suggested Steps of Recovery.

The results of the study indicated that spiritual integration comprising a sound triadic relationship with God, self, and others is not easily attained.

Of the 14 AA members included in the study,

  • 9 have achieved spiritual integration;
  • 3 have achieved moderately successful spiritual integration, and
  • 2 have been unsuccessful.
Research report; McGregot, J.G. Spirituality in recovery: A model of progression. Dissertation Abstracts International, 63(2):509A, 2002.

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There is a culture clash between alcohol marketing and public health aspirations

It is of no coincidence that a number of recent Harm Reduction Digests have addressed the issue of the reduction of alcohol-related harm.

Despite the dominant focus on illicit drug use in the popular discourse, alcohol remains Australia’s number one drug problem, as it is in many other developed countries.

Munro and de Wever use the ‘four Ps’ of marketing:

  • product,
  • price,
  • place and
  • promotion, to critique the two decades industry self-regulation of alcohol marketing.

They conclude that if we are going to develop policies which effectively change Australian drinking culture to reduce alcohol-related harm, we need first to accept that the alcohol industry and the health field have separate and conflicting interests.

Research; Geoffrey Munro & Johanna de Wever. Drug and Alcohol Review, Volume 27, Issue 2 March 2008 , pages 204 – 211. Culture clash alcohol marketing and public health aspirations

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Alcohol and Public Policy: No Ordinary Commodity
by Thomas Babor

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Principles of Alcoholism and Recovery

Pill Backgrounds 0083 Alcoholism and addiction have several common threads with reciprocal recovery principles.

In their book, “Rethinking Substance Abuse,” editors William R. Miller and Kathleen M. Carroll to sum up what has been learned about the science of addiction. These are;

  • Drug Use is Chosen Behavior in the Beginning – for experimenting, peer pressure or otherwise its chosen at first.
  • Drug Problems Emerge Gradually – it takes time to become addicted.
  • Once Well Established, Drug Problems Tend to Become Self-Perpetuating – once the brain alters it number of drug receptor cells drug craving demands more of the same.
  • Motivation is Central to Prevention and Intervention – actively doing something toward change may be more important than the particular actions that are taken.
  • Drug Use Responds to Reinforcement. If you crave and use the drug use is reinforced.
  • Drug Problems Do Not Occur in Isolation, but as Part of behavior clusters such as mood disorders, school or work problems, legal problems, ill-health and family problems.
  • There Are Identifiable and Modifiable Risk and Protective Factors for Problem Drug Use – inherited and learned behaviour.
  • Drug Problems Occur within a Family Context – either dysfunctional family culture, genetics or parental drug use.
  • Drug Problems Are Affected by a Larger Social Context – social isolation is both a promoter and consequence; while bonding with someone else or a Higher Power may reverse the problem.
  • Relationship Matters in rehabilitation. That’s why Alcoholics Anonymous relies on a spiritual connection with another person or a Higher Power.

See also;

          Rethinking Substance Abuse: What the Science Shows, and What We Should Do about It
by William R. Miller and Kathleen M. Carroll

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Women and the Twelve Steps of AA

Women and the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous: A Gendered Narrative

This paper examines how women “work” the twelve steps of Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) from a gendered perspective.

Feminist critics of AA have

  • challenged the language of AA’s Twelve Steps,
  • the spiritual nature of the steps, and
  • the male-dominated culture of the Twelve-Step program.

This paper offers insight into how women in AA approach, interpret, and utilize the Twelve Steps to recover from alcoholism.

Through survey and narrative data, findings suggests

  • that women working AA’s Twelve Steps become empowered and
  • change for the better in spite of the male-dominated culture and language of the Twelve Steps and
  • regardless of the difficulty they may have encountered in completing these steps.

In particular, the first three steps-the “surrender steps”-

  • encourage women to let go of their alcoholic obsession and
  • begin a spiritual path of recovery.

Steps Four through Nine require

  • women to “clean house” and
  • get rid of old self-destructive ways so that they may develop a new and stronger sense of self.

Finally, on completing Steps Ten through Twelve, women

  • experience a spiritual awakening and
  • then, in turn, “pass on” what they have learned from the Twelve Steps to other women in the program.

Woven throughout these women’s experiences is

  • an acknowledgment of gender and
  • the role it plays in how they work the Twelve Steps.

In the end, these women express a sense of personal empowerment that is particular to a gender-specific orientation to the Twelve Steps of AA.

Research; Jolene M. Sanders, Women and the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous: A Gendered Narrative. Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly, Volume: 24 Issue: 3, 2006.

A Woman’s Way Through the Twelve Steps Workbook

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