Drug Addiction Treatment Methods
Drug addiction is a treatable disorder. Through treatment that
is tailored to individual needs, patients can learn to control their
condition and live normal, productive lives. Like people with diabetes
or heart disease, people in treatment for drug addiction learn behavioral
changes and often take medications as part of their treatment regimen.
Behavioral therapies can include counseling, psychotherapy, support
groups, or family therapy. Treatment medications offer help in suppressing
the withdrawal syndrome and drug craving and in blocking the effects
of drugs. In addition, studies show that treatment for heroin addiction
using methadone at an adequate dosage level combined with behavioral
therapy reduces death rates and many health problems associated
with heroin abuse.
In general, the more treatment given, the better the results. Many
patients require other services as well, such as medical and mental
health services and HIV prevention services. Patients who stay in
treatment longer than 3 months usually have better outcomes than
those who stay less time. Patients who go through medically assisted
withdrawal to minimize discomfort but do not receive any further
treatment, perform about the same in terms of their drug use as
those who were never treated. Over the last 25 years, studies have
shown that treatment works to reduce drug intake and crimes committed
by drug-dependent people. Researchers also have found that drug
abusers who have been through treatment are more likely to have
jobs.
Types of Treatment Programs
The ultimate goal of all drug abuse treatment is to enable the
patient to achieve lasting abstinence, but the immediate goals are
to reduce drug use, improve the patient's ability to function, and
minimize the medical and social complications of drug abuse.
There are several types of drug abuse treatment programs. Short-term
methods last less than 6 months and include residential therapy,
medication therapy, and drug-free outpatient therapy. Longer term
treatment may include, for example, methadone maintenance outpatient
treatment for opiate addicts and residential therapeutic community
treatment.
In maintenance treatment for heroin addicts, people in treatment
are given an oral dose of a synthetic opiate, usually methadone
hydrochloride or levo-alpha-acetyl methadol (LAAM), administered
at a dosage sufficient to block the effects of heroin and yield
a stable, noneuphoric state free from physiological craving for
opiates. In this stable state, the patient is able to disengage
from drug-seeking and related criminal behavior and, with appropriate
counseling and social services, become a productive member of his
or her community.
Outpatient drug-free treatment does not include medications and
encompasses a wide variety of programs for patients who visit a
clinic at regular intervals. Most of the programs involve individual
or group counseling. Patients entering these programs are abusers
of drugs other than opiates or are opiate abusers for whom maintenance
therapy is not recommended, such as those who have stable, well-integrated
lives and only brief histories of drug dependence.
Therapeutic communities (TCs) are highly structured programs in
which patients stay at a residence, typically for 6 to 12 months.
Patients in TCs include those with relatively long histories of
drug dependence, involvement in serious criminal activities, and
seriously impaired social functioning. The focus of the TC is on
the resocialization of the patient to a drug-free, crime-free lifestyle.
Short-term residential programs, often referred to as chemical
dependency units, are often based on the "Minnesota Model"
of treatment for alcoholism. These programs involve a 3- to 6-week
inpatient treatment phase followed by extended outpatient therapy
or participation in 12-step self-help groups, such as Narcotics
Anonymous or Cocaine Anonymous. Chemical dependency programs for
drug abuse arose in the private sector in the mid-1980s with insured
alcohol/cocaine abusers as their primary patients. Today, as private
provider benefits decline, more programs are extending their services
to publicly funded patients.
Methadone maintenance programs are usually more successful at retaining
clients with opiate dependence than are therapeutic communities,
which in turn are more successful than outpatient programs that
provide psychotherapy and counseling. Within various methadone programs,
those that provide higher doses of methadone (usually a minimum
of 60 mg.) have better retention rates. Also, those that provide
other services, such as counseling, therapy, and medical care, along
with methadone generally get better results than the programs that
provide minimal services.
Drug treatment programs in prisons can succeed in preventing patients'
return to criminal behavior, particularly if they are linked to
community-based programs that continue treatment when the client
leaves prison. Some of the more successful programs have reduced
the rearrest rate by one-fourth to one-half. For example, the "Delaware
Model," an ongoing study of comprehensive treatment of drug-
addicted prison inmates, shows that prison-based treatment including
a therapeutic community setting, a work release therapeutic community,
and community-based aftercare reduces the probability of rearrest
by 57 percent and reduces the likelihood of returning to drug use
by 37 percent.
Drug abuse has a great economic impact on society-an estimated
$67 billion per year. This figure includes costs related to crime,
medical care, drug abuse treatment, social welfare programs, and
time lost from work. Treatment of drug abuse can reduce those costs.
Studies have shown that from $4 to $7 are saved for every dollar
spent on treatment. It costs approximately $3,600 per month to leave
a drug abuser untreated in the community, and incarceration costs
approximately $3,300 per month. In contrast, methadone maintenance
therapy costs about $290 per month.
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