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Health & Wellness Wednesdays

Dealing with Addictions

Taking Ownership Of Your Decisions

I recently had dinner with a friend who tends to lean more to the right wing. He was talking about taking ownership of your decisions for people who are struggling with addictions.

While I don’t agree with his stance on some other issues, I do tend to agree with him on that point.

He is a business owner in the city I live in and he was talking about how our tax dollars are being spent on things like safe injection sites and sending out emergency workers to continue saving the lives of the same people who continue to overdose.

His thoughts are that the marginalized people who are on the streets should be brought somewhere safe where they can go through an addiction recovery program. He thinks that they should be given some sort of productive job that gives back to society while they are getting clean.

But most of all he believes that until each person starts to take ownership over their own decisions, that they will just continue to fall back into their old patterns.

Addiction and choice - It’s a conversation with many subtleties in today’s world. I do believe that our modern scientific approach has somewhat absolved people of any responsibility. We call something an addiction and say that we are powerless over our addiction. 

Yet the millions of people who have successfully gone through recovery programs would probably tell you that while they might be powerless on their own, that with support and surrender, that they have choices and decisions to make that ultimately lead them down one path or another.

It’s a complicated topic and one with many different opinions - so I’m curious about your opinion. Do you believe that addicts have a choice or that they are powerless?

Interesting Fact #1

Almost 21 million Americans have at least one addiction, yet only 10% of them receive treatment.

SOURCE

Interesting Fact #2

About 25% of people who use illicit drugs develop an addiction.

SOURCE

Interesting Fact #3

In 2020, the federal budget approved for drug control was nearing $35 billion.

SOURCE

Quote of the day

“There are all kinds of addicts, I guess. We all have pain. And we all look for ways to make the pain go away.” ― Sherman Alexie

Article of the day - How an Addicted Brain Works

Addiction is now understood to be a brain disease. Whether it’s alcohol, prescription pain pillsnicotinegambling, or something else, overcoming an addiction isn’t as simple as just stopping or exercising greater control over impulses.

That’s because addiction develops when the pleasure circuits in the brain get overwhelmed, in a way that can become chronic and sometimes even permanent. This is what’s at play when you hear about reward “systems” or “pathways” and the role of dopamine when it comes to addiction. But what does any of that really mean?

One of the most primitive parts of the brain, the reward system, developed as a way to reinforce behaviors we need to survive—such as eating. When we eat foods, the reward pathways activate a chemical called dopamine, which, in turn, releases a jolt of satisfaction. This encourages you to eat again in the future.

When a person develops an addiction to a substance, it’s because the brain has started to change. This happens because addictive substances trigger an outsized response when they reach the brain. Instead of a simple, pleasurable surge of dopamine, many drugs of abuse—such as opioids, cocaine, or nicotine—cause dopamine to flood the reward pathway, 10 times more than a natural reward.   

The brain remembers this surge and associates it with the addictive substance. However, with chronic use of the substance, over time the brain’s circuits adapt and become less sensitive to dopamine. Achieving that pleasurable sensation becomes increasingly important, but at the same time, you build tolerance and need more and more of that substance to generate the level of high you crave.

Addiction can also cause problems with focus, memory, and learning, not to mention decision-making and judgement. Seeking drugs, therefore, is driven by habit—and not conscious, rational decisions.

Unfortunately, the belief that people with addictions are simply making bad choices pervades. Furthermore, the use of stigmatizing language, such as “junkie” and “addict” and getting “clean,” often creates barriers when it comes to accessing treatment. There’s also stigma that surrounds treatment methods, creating additional challenges.

Though treatment modalities differ based on an individual’s history and the particular addiction he or she has developed, medications can make all the difference. “A lot of people think that the goal of treatment for opioid use disorder, for example, is not taking any medication at all,” says David A. Fiellin, MD, a Yale Medicine primary care and addiction medicine specialist. “Research shows that medication-based treatments are the most effective treatment. Opioid use disorder is a medical condition just like depression, diabetes or hypertension, and as with those conditions, it is most effectively treated with a combination of medication and counseling.”

Question of the day - Do you believe that addicts have a choice or that they are powerless?

Dealing with Addictions

Do you believe that addicts have a choice or that they are powerless?