597 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
597 lines
32 KiB
Plaintext
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McDermott<EFBFBD>s Guide to Drug Treatment.
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(c) Peter McDermott, 1993
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(c) Lifeline Project, 1993
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This guide was first published by Lifeline Project, Manchester, UK.
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This electronic version may be freely distributed electronically or as
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hard copy. However, be warned that you are missing out on Mike
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Linnell<EFBFBD>s brilliant illustrations.
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Introduction/why do you want to get help?
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There are hundreds of different reasons why people decide they need help
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with a drug problem. Here are some of the most common ones:
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Your parents have sussed you out, so you want to get them off your back.
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Your boss has sussed you out, and you<6F>ve got to pay for your drugs somehow.
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Your partner says that they<65>ll leave if you don<6F>t <20> and it looks like they
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mean it this time.
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You<EFBFBD>ve been nicked again. Unless you can give the court something
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reasonable in your plea of mitigation, you<6F>re going to jail. Do not pass go.
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Do not collect a methadone detox on the way. The <20>200 isn<73>t going to be any
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use where you<6F>re going.
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You finally recognize that you don<6F>t have any control over your
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drug use. You want to stop for a while, or at least try to cut down, but you
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don<EFBFBD>t seem to have any control. Your willpower keeps on slipping, just long
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enough to break your determination. Given that you feel incapable of
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helping yourself, perhaps somebody else can help you.
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So, you<6F>ve just robbed the last twenty out of your dad<61>s wallet/wife<66>s
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purse/sister<65>s piggy bank, you<6F>ve shot, smoked or snorted all the gear, you
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need to do something before they find out and finally cut you off. They<65>ve
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been on at you for long enough to see somebody about the problem, but
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who do you see? There<72>s so many different places, all offering different
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types of thing. Do you need methadone? A detox? What about the black box?
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Accupuncture? Does it work? Before you sign your life away, you need to
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read McDermott<74>s Guide to Drug Treatment <20> the first no-bullshit Michelin
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guide for smackheads, crackheads, temazzie monsters and others in need of
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a temporary escape clause.
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A caution
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Before you decide to go to a drugs agency, there are a few things that you
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should know about drug treatment in the UK.
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If you go to see a doctor, a social worker or a probation officer, the person
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that you see will have received some training for the job. If you go to a
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drugs agency, there worker that you see is unlikely to have been trained as
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a drugs worker. They may have trained in another discipline but the
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amount that they actually know about drugs or drug problems varies
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immensely.
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This lack of knowledge will often permeate the whole of the agency. If the
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boss has very little drug-specific knowledge it is unlikely that he or she
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will insist on it in his staff. As a consequence, Britain has drug services
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that are typified by their lack of professionalism. The unstated position that
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is implicit here is, <20>they<65>re only drug addicts, anybody can deal with their
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problems<EFBFBD>, when in fact, too many drugs workers are unable to identify the
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issues even when they are spelled out for them.
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The expansion of drugs agencies over the last ten years or so has been
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fueled by political pressures and the availability of money, rather than any
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proven success at addressing a particular problem. Much of what drug
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services do is about justifying their existance or building empires and
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securing salaries, rather than addressing problems effectively. That said,
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there are many good, committed workers out there who will do their best to
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help you, and even the ones who aren<65>t can be useful if you learn how to
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work the system and play the game.
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The key thing to remember though, when it comes to drugs services, is the
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principle <20>let the customer beware<72>.
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Who are you doing it for?
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When you begin to think about getting some kind of help for a drug
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problem, you need to think about what it is exactly that you want to do and
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why. When people are asked why they first enter drug treatment of any
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kind, the first bunch of reasons in the list above are much more common
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than the last. A drug problem is something that depends largely on
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definition. For many people, their only problem is how to get enough
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drugs, or enough money to pay for them.
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Fair enough. this booklet is not trying to force anyone to stop using drugs.
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Drugs are cool, exciting, and they make you feel good. We know that this is
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true, or else why would you be in such a mess. The goal of most forms of
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treatment is to try and convince you otherwise. I<>m sure that you<6F>ve all
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come across them before <20> well-meaning, social work types with their L
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registration cars and their <20>90,000 houses in the bohemian part of town.
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Took a couple of whiffs on a joint once when they were a student and now
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they talk about <20>my hell on drugs<67>.
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The first thing to say is that if you are looking for a miracle cure, look
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elsewhere. Only God works miracles. The only totally effective treatment
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programme I know of was in China. First time they caught you, you got
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twenty years in the re-education camp. The second time, they used the
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magic bullet. The one to the back of the head. And even that was only
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effective because you knew that they would catch you. If people thought
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they could get away with it, they<65>d use, death penalty or no death penalty.
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As with drugs, different things work for different people. If you are
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seeking treatment because you genuinely are motivated to try to stop using,
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then you stand a very strong chance of succeeding regardless of what type
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of treatment you choose. However, you can probably increase your chances
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even further if you pick a type of help that suits to your personality and
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your circumstances.
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Why do people use drugs?
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People use drugs for an wide range of reasons. Some people use
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intoxicating drugs for religious reasons, like the communion wine in this
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culture, smoking ganga in Rastafarianism or drinking the sacred brown-
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mixed among that curious North-Western tribe, the Tetleybittermen. Others
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use drugs to medicate illness, like some of the the community care cases
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that we all know and love.
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Fact of the matter is, a great deal of drug use, legal and illegal, does not
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produce any problems. However, some people and some drugs just don<6F>t
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mix. For every one person who can use the brown on high days and
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holidays, there<72>s another ten who are sitting clucking in a cold flat because
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they are too sick to get out on the street and sell their arse. For every one
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person who likes a line of charlie before they go out trying to pick up a
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lover, there<72>s another who just sold their house because they couldn<64>t keep
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from spending the mortgage money on rock.
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Treatment usually seeks to do one of two things. It either attempts to
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stabilize one<6E>s drug use, to reduce the harm associated with it, or it seeks to
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help you achieve abstinence from drugs. Which, if either, of those two aims
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is yours is something that only you can know. However, it does help if you
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are clear about what you want. Too often, people go along to drugs agencies
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and think, <20>what is the best thing to tell them in order to get what I want?<3F>
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Perhaps we should just tell them what we want, because you<6F>ll only get
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whatever it is they are going to give you, regardless of what you say.
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Some theories of drug addiction argue that drug users will never stop until
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they reach rock-bottom. Different people reach rock-bottom at different
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times. Some never do. Drug addiction is a relatively new phenomena in
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Britain, but as far as we can see, some people may continue using all their
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adult lives. The negative consequences of drug use are a product of the
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relationship between drug, the mind-set of the individual using them, and
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the social situation in which the drugs are taken. Thus, somebody who
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injects large amounts of diamorphine on a daily basis to relieve the pain of
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cancer is not regarded as having a drug problem, whereas somebody who
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smokes a large amount of brown to relieve the pain of living is seen as
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having a very serious problem indeed.
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Academics have rightly pointed out that a great deal of the harm that is
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seen as being caused by drug use is in fact a product of the way that society
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reacts to the issue. So one of the most common problems is the illegal status
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of drugs, which causes people to experience problems with the police and
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the courts. This also drives the prices of drugs artificially high, and so some
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people end up committing crime to pay for their habit. These harms may or
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may not be the fault of society, nevertheless, they are still harms. If you
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are experiencing problems as a result of your drug use, it is easier to
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change your own patterns of drug use than it is to change society.
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What is the nature of your problem?
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Your first step on the route to resolving your problem, is to try to identify
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just what the problem is. Other people may feel that they know what the
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problem is <20> you take illegal drugs. This, in itself, rarely constitutes a
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problem for anybody. On the other hand, you might be experiencing so
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many problems that you can<61>t sort out which ones are related to the drugs
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that you are using, from those that are simply a part of your day to day life.
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Some people will be quite capable of identifying their problems for
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themselves, whereas others may need some help with this.
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For such people, a drug advice and information centre will be the first port
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of call. These services used to describe themselves as <20>counselling<6E> services
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and were avoided like the plague. Staff tended to be either well-meaning
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do-gooders who didn<64>t have a clue, or they were just corrupt know-
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nothings who were earning Brewsters<72> for sitting on their arses. This last
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group were infinitely preferable to the first lot. If you weren<65>t careful,
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they<EFBFBD>d be trying to persuade you to do a <20>family sculpt<70> or tell your feelings
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to a chair. Fortunately, these are now an endangered species, although
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they can still be found in certain parts of the country.
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Anyway, a good advice and information project can sit you down and try to
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help you identify what your problems are, and give you advice on what the
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various options are. Bad ones will identify problems that you never
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recognized as problems and tell you that only they can help you get over
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them. This booklet intends to play a similar role, but it cannot give specific
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information about services available in your area, so ask your friends, see
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if any of them can recommend a good drugs agency or worker.
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Harm reduction
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Many services claim that they now operate according to a <20>harm reduction<6F>
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philosophy. This rather grand term means that some drugs workers have
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finally started listening to drug users rather than pretending that they
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know it all.
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Before we go any further, I must point out there are some experts who feel
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that the very idea of frug treatment is a nonsense. They believe addiction is
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not a <20>curable disease<73>, but a particular set of goals and values. Some people
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like to take legal drugs like alcohol and tobacco, other like to take illegal
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drugs like cocaine and heroin. Some people like to spend <20>1000 a week
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skiing, others like to spend <20>1000 a week on crack. Because of the difficulty
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in actually defining what the problem is, there are similar difficulties
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coming up with forms of treatment that are effective with even a majority
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of people who enroll in any particular programme. There is an old saying
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in the drugs and alcohol treatment field that goes, <20>It doesn<73>t matter what
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you do, a third get better, a third get worse, and a third stay the same.<2E> For
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this reason, a wide range of treatment options are available, some very
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different to others. Hopefully, this booklet will help you choose the one
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that best suits you.
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What services are available, and where do I get them from?
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Advice/Information
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The drug advice and information service should probably be your first port
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of call. Unfortunately, most areas dont have a stand-alone advice and
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information unit <20> they tend to be part of a bigger project, such as a Drug
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Dependency Clinic or a counselling service. Where this is the case, those
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agencies might not be quite so committed to the quality of the advice and
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information that they give out. Test them, ask the workers questions that
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you know the answers to in order to see whether they know the answers as
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well. That should give you some insight into the quality of the advice or
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information that you get from them.
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These agencies do what they say they do <20> offer advice and information. If
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you<EFBFBD>ve got a problem, they<65>ll have suggestions as to what you should do
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about it. They should also be able to refer you on to a more appropriate
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service if necessary. Unfortunately, because many advice and information
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services are also counselling agencies, and because the people who fund
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counselling services want to see results (i.e., numbers), many agencies will
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immediately suggest that what you need is a spot of counselling (see below)
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and can you come back next week.
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Therefore, you should be clear about what it is that you want. If you want to
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have a chat about your drug use with some sad old dear once a week, then
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that<EFBFBD>s fine by me. If you want to secure a supply of methadone , or you want
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to come off, then there may well be other, more appropriate services.
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Counselling
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In the early eighties, counselling agencies dominated drug service
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provision in the U.K. There are a number of historical reasons for this.
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Before the eighties, there were only a few drug dependency units in the
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U.K., mostly dealing with old heroin addicts from the sixties. When the new
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wave of brown heroin flooded the country around about 1980, parents
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began screaming <20>what are you going to do for little Johnny<6E>. By this time,
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maintenance prescribing had fallen out of fashion, so many local
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authorities funded voluntary sector drugs agencies.
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Of course, they were set up by people who had little idea what to do about
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the issue. So they looked around. Drug Dependency Clinics are run by
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...psychiatrists. What do psychiatrists do? They cure people by talking to
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them. (In fact, they really cure people by giving them drugs or ECT, but
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how were they to know that?) Anyway, psychiatrists are expensive, so
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perhaps we should hire counsellors?
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So what is counselling? Well, there are almost as many different types of
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psychotherapeutic counselling as there are counsellors. In classical
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Freudian psychotherapy, you would see a highly-trained therapist as often
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as three times a week, every week for a year. At the other extreme, you are
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more likely to see somebody who has been on an eight-hour, introduction-
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to-counselling course. Furthermore, the quality of counsellors is also very
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patchy.
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The basic idea is that by talking about your problems with a non-
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judgemental counsellor, you can be helped to see the obstacles thus
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bringing about change. What the funders weren<65>t aware of, is the fact that
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at the heart of most models of counselling, is the idea that the victim (oops,
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sorry) that the client sets the agenda and decides what changes they feel
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they want to make. The problem being, that at any given time, a majority of
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drug users actually don<6F>t want to stop taking drugs, and those that do rarely
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find that counselling offers them any concrete help with that process.
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As a consequence, drugs counsellors have tended to focus on the other
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areas of the client<6E>s lives. If you do have a particular problem, for example,
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past sexual abuse or some emotional difficulty, then you may find
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counselling helpful. However, it is not a <20>cure<72> for addiction, nor is it a
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magic wand that can change the way that you think and feel overnight,
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and a more specialized counsellor, like a sexual abuse therapist or a
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marrage guidance counsellor might be better trained and more
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experienced. So before you enter into a counselling contract, get the
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counsellor to justify what they think they can offer you, and why.
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Remember, they are providing a service, and if you don<6F>t think that what
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they offer is appropriate, then you need to tell them that.
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Out-patient detox.
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If you want to stop using opiate drugs like heroin and you find that you are
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unable to stop, one option is to go for an out-patient methadone detox. At
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one time, it was difficult to find a doctor who was prepared to prescribe
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methadone. However, in recent years there has been an enormous
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expansion in the use of methadone.
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A few words about the pro<72>s and con<6F>s of methadone might be in order
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here. Methadone is a synthetic opiate. This means that it was chemically
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synthesized, rather than comes from the opium poppy, and has very
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similar effects to natural opiates. Doctors like to use it in preference to
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heroin for a number of reasons. This means it stays in the body for a long
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time, unlike heroin, which only lasts a few hours. It can be prescribed in
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an oral mixture, which is intended to break the injection habit, and if it is
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prescribed in high doses, it becomes difficult getting enough heroin to
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have any impact.
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On the other hand, it is regarded by many as producing an inferior buzz
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and being more addictive than heroin. Withdrawals are felt to last longer
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with a methadone habit than a heroin habit. Also, it does seem that those
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people who go onto a methadone script are likely to stay addicted for longer
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than those who don<6F>t, although they may also suffer fewer problems than
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those who avoid methadone.
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If you want to try a detox, remember that methadone isn<73>t the only option.
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Some doctors may be prepared to use di-hydro-codeine (DHC, DF118) or
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benzodiazapines or both. You need to decide which one you think is best for
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you.
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Where to get an out-patient detox?
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The obvious first port of call is your family doctor. In the past, many G.P.<2E>s
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would throw you off their list if they knew that you had a drug problem.
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Today, many of them are more sympathetic. If he<68>s not prepared to take on
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the task himself, ask him to refer you to your local Community Drug Team
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(CDT) or Drug Dependency Clinic (DDC). Many drug clinics will not take you
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onto their list unless you have first been referred by a G.P.
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Another alternative is to go to your advice and information service. If
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there is a waiting list at the DDC/CDT, they might well be able to fix you up
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with a G.P. who will take you on to his or her list for a detox. Finally, if they
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aren<EFBFBD>t any use, try approaching your Family Health Service Authority and
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telling them about your needs. They should be able to put you in touch with
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a doctor who is prepared to treat you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Methadone maintenance
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you are experiencing problems as a result of opiate addiction and you
|
|||
|
either don<6F>t want to come off, or you can<61>t manage to do it, you might want
|
|||
|
to think about methadone maintenance. This means that you will receive a
|
|||
|
maintenance dose of methadone for an extended period, until you feel
|
|||
|
ready to try to stop.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At first, this sounds like a good deal. Free, legal drugs for as long as you
|
|||
|
want. However, there are drawbacks. Any addiction involves some
|
|||
|
surrender of personal freedom. On methadone maintenance, you have to be
|
|||
|
at the chemist, every day to pick up your script. You need to attend the
|
|||
|
clinic regularly. Your life is no longer your own <20> key decisions about
|
|||
|
what you can or can<61>t do will be made for you by a doctor or nurse.
|
|||
|
Sometimes, you may have to have to suffer the indignity of giving a urine
|
|||
|
sample to check whether you are using the drugs that they give you, and to
|
|||
|
check that you are not using on top. Again, I should stress that enrolling in
|
|||
|
methadone maintenance is likely to extend the period for which you are
|
|||
|
addicted.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
On the other hand, compared with having to find large sums of money
|
|||
|
every day, then finding a dealer who won<6F>t rip you off, only to find that
|
|||
|
the gear is lousy and hasn<73>t sorted you anyway, methadone maintenance
|
|||
|
might be a good deal. Once again, it<69>s a matter of personal choice,
|
|||
|
dependent on your particular circumstances.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Where to get methadone maintenance
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you do want methadone maintenance, it is most likely to be available at
|
|||
|
your local Drug Dependency Clinic or Community Drug Team. Some G.P.<2E>s
|
|||
|
may prescribe methadone on a maintenance basis, but they are rare and
|
|||
|
they usually prefer it if you<6F>ve already been assessed by a specialist drug
|
|||
|
service first. On the other hand, many DDC<44>s or CDT<44>s will only take people
|
|||
|
who have been referred by their G.P. Your local drugs advice/information
|
|||
|
service should be able to give you the details of your local services.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A brief word about heroin maintenance
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In the golden era, before 1967, all doctors were allowed to prescribe heroin
|
|||
|
and cocaine for the treatment of addiction. However, this facility is now
|
|||
|
strictly limited to doctors in possession of a special license from the Home
|
|||
|
Office, most of whom are Consultant Psychiatrists who work at Drug
|
|||
|
Dependency Clinics.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Although there has been a great deal of debate lately about the desirability
|
|||
|
of such prescribing, the actual number of doctors who are prepared to do it
|
|||
|
is very small, and those who will prescribe heroin or cocaine tend to only
|
|||
|
do it for a limited number of people. Why? Well, the reasoning seems to be
|
|||
|
that you can attract more people than you can treat by prescribing
|
|||
|
methadone, why bother? So all that I<>ll say about heroin maintenance is
|
|||
|
that it is theoretically possible, but it isn<73>t very likely.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In-patient detox
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you find that you can<61>t manage to stop taking drugs because the
|
|||
|
temptations around you to continue using are too great, you might benefit
|
|||
|
from an in-patient detoxification. These usually take place in a special
|
|||
|
hospital ward called a Drug Dependency Unit, although you could also end
|
|||
|
up on a general psychiatric ward. Some of the residential drug
|
|||
|
rehabilitation units (rehabs) are also now beginning to do in-patient detox,
|
|||
|
although this may be conditional on your agreeing to sign up for the full
|
|||
|
programme when your detox is complete.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In-patient detox usually involves a relatively rapid reduction that may or
|
|||
|
may not be supplemented with sleeping medication once the methadone
|
|||
|
has stopped.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A recent development has been the rapid naltrexone detox. This involves
|
|||
|
being put to sleep with large doses of sedatives, then being given opiate
|
|||
|
antagonists to flush the opiates out of the system. Although the worst of the
|
|||
|
turkey is done while you are asleep, your sleep patterns will still be
|
|||
|
disrupted for up to a month afterwards. Furthermore, this type of detox is
|
|||
|
physically traumatic, so requires a great deal of nursing attention to
|
|||
|
monitor the sleeping patient. In drug withdrawal, as in life, there are no
|
|||
|
short-cuts.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Besides the medication, some hospitals also provide some kind of
|
|||
|
psychological therapy which may or may not be compulsorary. As with
|
|||
|
counselling, the nature and the quality of the therapy of offer is very
|
|||
|
variable. Some hospitals have well thought out programmes based on
|
|||
|
relapse prevention models, while others just have free-form encounter-
|
|||
|
type groups.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are a number of advantages in going into hospital to do a detox. You
|
|||
|
are removed from your immediate environment, which can give you a
|
|||
|
break from the everyday pressures of your life, and remove some of the
|
|||
|
temptation to go out and score. However, detox units are no different from
|
|||
|
anywhere else and you can often still score on the hospital ward. You are
|
|||
|
also going to have to face those pressures once you get out, so the situation
|
|||
|
is an artificial one, but the achievement involved in actually getting drug-
|
|||
|
free may well help you sustain your resolve.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The type of therapy that is on offer at these places seems to have little clear
|
|||
|
discernable impact upon outcome rates. All detox programmes have a high
|
|||
|
drop-out rate and a high relapse rate, so you should not go in expecting a
|
|||
|
magical cure. The best predictor of success in drug treatment is the
|
|||
|
motivation of the patient. If you are really determined, you can get clean.
|
|||
|
If you find that you continue to relapse, then rather than doing detox after
|
|||
|
detox, you might find that you need the longer and more intensive regime
|
|||
|
of a residential rehabilitation programme.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You can get information on in-patient detoxification facilities from your
|
|||
|
G.P., your C.D.T. or D.D.C., or from your local drug information and advice
|
|||
|
project.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Residential rehabilitation
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Residential rehabilitation is the big daddy of drug treatment options. They
|
|||
|
usually involve a long stay, usually anywhere from six months to two years
|
|||
|
(though programmes are getting shorter).
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There are several different types of residential rehab (also known as a
|
|||
|
therapeutic community). They include:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Concept Houses <20> concept houses have a particular theory of addiction and
|
|||
|
recovery, sometimes specific to that organization, sometimes just based
|
|||
|
upon the Minnesota Method and the twelve step programmes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Religion-based therapeutic communities - it is rarely a condition of
|
|||
|
acceptance that one accepts the religious principles that inform the house,
|
|||
|
although there is usually some attempt to proselytize for a religious point
|
|||
|
of view.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Non-ideological residential rehabilitation units - These are lacking a
|
|||
|
single, organizing dogma like the first two types and tend to use an eclectic
|
|||
|
mix of counselling, groupwork, relapse prevention, etc.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Rehabilitation or brainwashing? The difference between the two is simply
|
|||
|
a matter of personal values. The aim of the residential rehabilitation unit is
|
|||
|
to totally restructure the personality, changing you from a person who
|
|||
|
thinks that drugs are a reasonable way of dealing with your problems, into
|
|||
|
a person who thinks that drugs are damaging your life, perhaps even
|
|||
|
killing you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Residential rehabs polarize the views of ex-residents. Some people believe
|
|||
|
that it was their stay in a rehab that saved their life. They are usually the
|
|||
|
final option when all other methods of help have failed, and are presented
|
|||
|
to the drug user as just that <20> their last chance.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Other people though, feel that the rehab that they stayed at actually
|
|||
|
damaged them. There has been little independent control or regulation of
|
|||
|
rehabs, and in the past, they tended to make extensive use of programme
|
|||
|
graduates, who would perpetuate abusive situations in the name of
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD>therapy<EFBFBD>.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some examples:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In one rehab, a female resident is told that she will not recover from her
|
|||
|
addiction unless she participates actively in the group therap[y sessions.
|
|||
|
She is encouraged to talk to the group about her experience of being
|
|||
|
sexually abused by her father. However, not all of the residents are
|
|||
|
committed to the therapeutic process. Some of the men regard this as as a
|
|||
|
sexual fantasy. Back on the streets a few weeks later, they gossip about her
|
|||
|
experiences.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In another rehab, residents are woken up in the middle of the night. All
|
|||
|
the clocks are removed, all windows are shuttered. Staff begin a marathon
|
|||
|
session of sensory deprivation lasting several days that is intended to assist
|
|||
|
residents to regress to the point at which they were born. One resident
|
|||
|
suffers a total psychotic breakdown and is transferred to a psychiatric
|
|||
|
hospital.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The major problem with residential rehabs, is that they are often staffed by
|
|||
|
people with very little training, but who believe that they have the
|
|||
|
magical power of cure. Because there is no single model of how best to deal
|
|||
|
with a drug problem, what you get is any number of competing theories. As
|
|||
|
a result, the idea has been spawned that anybody can be a drugs worker. No
|
|||
|
specific training is required, all you need is for somebody to give you a job
|
|||
|
<EFBFBD> you<6F>ll pick it up as you go along.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In this context, the ex-user is a good idea. At least they understand the
|
|||
|
scene, and they know what worked for them. More numerous though, is the
|
|||
|
type that has trained to be a counsellor in order to better understand their
|
|||
|
own pathologies. Then they decide that they want to put their new found
|
|||
|
skills to the test <20> and drugs has recently been one of the few growth areas
|
|||
|
for a trained counsellor. Unfortunately, some of these workers are just as
|
|||
|
dysfunctional as any drug user <20> but they are less likely to get into legal
|
|||
|
difficulties as a consequence.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You can learn a great deal during your stay at a rehab. You can learn about
|
|||
|
yourself and why you do the things that you do. You can learn work
|
|||
|
discipline, and get experience of what it is like to take on managerial
|
|||
|
responsibility. You can learn that it is possible to live without drugs for an
|
|||
|
extended period. Like in-patient detox, it is something of an artificial
|
|||
|
situation, but most rehabs make some efforts to slowly re-integrate
|
|||
|
residents back into the outside world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
However, they tend to be rigidly heirarchical, and necessarily go in for
|
|||
|
somewhat strict discipline which can sometimes verge on the abusive <20> for
|
|||
|
example, you might be forced to wear a jesters outfit for a week if you
|
|||
|
continuously crack jokes, or you might have to walk around with a big
|
|||
|
placard round your neck, telling the world that you are a liar and a thief or
|
|||
|
subit to some other equally demeaning practice. The point of all this, is to
|
|||
|
break down the old <20>addict<63> personality and replace it with a new <20>healthy<68>
|
|||
|
or <20>non-deviant<6E> personality. Like all forms of treatment, far more people
|
|||
|
relapse and return to use, but for those who are committed to attempting to
|
|||
|
stop using drugs, it is a strategy that works for some.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Self-help groups.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A self-help group is any group of people who come together for the
|
|||
|
purposes of supporting each other through a problem. Perhaps the largest
|
|||
|
and best-known of these groups is Alcoholics Anonymous, but there is laso
|
|||
|
Narcotics Anonymous (which focuses of drugs, both prescribed and illegal)
|
|||
|
and more specialized ones like Overeaters Anonymous and Sex Addicts
|
|||
|
Anonymous. Most of these groups are <20>twelve-step programme<6D>, which
|
|||
|
means that they are based upon the twelve step model of Alcoholics
|
|||
|
Anonymous.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Adherents of these groups claim that Twelve-step programmes are really a
|
|||
|
spiritual rather than religious programmes. The steps combine a set of
|
|||
|
tried and tested methods for staying drug or alcohol free, with a quasi-
|
|||
|
religious authority that exhorts members to change the things that they
|
|||
|
are able to change, and rely on a higher power to take care of the things
|
|||
|
that you can<61>t change for yourself.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Many people baulk at the overt religious nature of N.A., but it does have
|
|||
|
advantages over other drug treatment programmes. Support comes, not
|
|||
|
from paid workers, but from other people who have shared the same
|
|||
|
situation, and therefore often have a level of insight into the type of
|
|||
|
behaviour that addicts go in for. This results in a much greater level of
|
|||
|
commitment, and NA groups often provide a circle of support during that
|
|||
|
difficult period after stopping use. NA<4E>s strength is that it can pass on the
|
|||
|
stored experience of hundreds of thousands of addicts (which is how they
|
|||
|
prefer to be described) about the things that work for them in their
|
|||
|
struggle to stay drug free.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Although the 12 step movement is not anything like as big in the U.K. as it
|
|||
|
is in America, there are still groups in most areas. You can find out about
|
|||
|
your local group by ringing World Service Organization at ?, or ask at your
|
|||
|
local advice and information or other drug service.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So finally....
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As you can see from this booklet, drug treatment is an enormously varied
|
|||
|
field with incredibly diverse standards. Some things you might find
|
|||
|
helpful, others you won<6F>t. The key to success is to shop around, find out
|
|||
|
what suits you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You should also remember, the majority of people stop using drugs on their
|
|||
|
own, without any help. Ultimately, the real work has to be done by you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Drugs services can give you medication, a place to do it, advice,
|
|||
|
information, skills and contacts. Some people find that they get useful
|
|||
|
emotional support from a drugs worker but the vast majority don<6F>t. That<61>s
|
|||
|
why the user groups like NA and others exist <20> so that people can get
|
|||
|
support from those who have experienced these problems and discovered
|
|||
|
solutions that work for them.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Whatever stage in your life you are at at the moment, remember, you still
|
|||
|
have the whole of your future ahead of you. It<49>s time to start making the
|
|||
|
most of it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Good luck.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(c) Peter McDermott, Lifeline, 1993
|