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Alcoholism: Getting Past the Addiction
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Alcoholism: Diagnosis & Treatment
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Alcoholism and the Family
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Defining Alcoholism
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After the physical problems associated with alcohol withdrawal have been treated, the more difficult task begins: helping the person to clearly recognize the nature and severity of his or her illness. This is done on both an in-patient and outpatient basis. Alcoholism is a disease of denial; as members of Alcoholics Anonymous put it, it is "the only disease that keeps telling you that you do not have a disease." Recall that often the alcoholic is made aware of his or her condition through what is called an intervention, a meeting with family and/or significant people who describe for the alcoholic the symptoms of alcoholism that they have witnessed and how these symptoms have affected them. This is important because alcoholics who are actively drinking are often not aware of what they do, nor do they remember later what they have done. (Interventions are sometimes done before the problem becomes serious enough to require detoxification from alcohol). Essential to recovery is the awareness of powerlessness over the disease, acceptance of having the disease, and abstinence from the substance that perpetuates the disease.
There is no cure for alcoholism. Sessions led by peers, such as Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) meetings, are often part of in-patient hospital treatment. AA meetings, where recovering alcoholics meet regularly and provide support for each other's recovery, are considered among the best methods of preventing a return to drinking (relapse). The AA program is a twelve-step program. Its steps involve recognizing the destructive power that alcohol has held over the alcoholic's life, looking to a Higher Power for help in overcoming the problem, reflecting on the ways in which the use of alcohol has hurt others, and if possible, making amends to those people. The final step involves carrying the message of hope and recovery to other sick and suffering alcoholics. The Serenity Prayer becomes an ally: "God grant me the strength to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can change, and the wisdom to know the difference."
The best programs incorporate the alcoholic's family or loved ones into the therapy, because loved ones have undoubtedly been severely affected by the drinking. Many therapists believe that families, in an effort to deal with the alcoholic's drinking problem, develop patterns of behavior that unwittingly support or "enable" the patient's drinking. This situation is referred to as co-dependency. The twelve-step programs of Al Anon and Adult Children of Alcoholics are often very successful in helping the families or loved ones of alcoholics.
There are also medications that may help an alcoholic avoid returning to drinking. These have been used with variable success. Disulfiram (Antabuse) is a drug which, when mixed with alcohol, causes a very unpleasant reaction that includes nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, and trembling. Naltrexone (a drug that blocks a narcotic high and may reduce the urge to drink) and acamprosate seem to be helpful in limiting the effects of a relapse. Naltrexone, found to produce liver damaging side effects, may be a difficultly exercised option. None of these medications has been found to be helpful unless the patient is also willing to work very hard to change his or her behavior.
As noted earlier, there is no cure for alcoholism. Recovery from alcoholism is a lifelong process. In fact, people who have suffered from alcoholism are encouraged to refer to themselves ever after as a recovering alcoholic, never a recovered alcoholic. Alcoholism can only be arrested—by abstaining from the drug, alcohol. The potential for relapse (returning to illness) is always there, and it must be acknowledged and respected. Statistics suggest that among middle-class alcoholics in stable financial and family situations who have undergone treatment, 60% or more can successfully stop drinking for at least a year, and many for a lifetime.
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Author Info: Katherine E. Nelson N.D., The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Alternative Medicine, 2005 |