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3. How effective is drug addiction treatment?
In addition to stopping drug use, the goal of treatment is to return the
individual to productive functioning in the family, workplace, and community.
Measures of effectiveness typically include levels of criminal behavior, family
functioning, employability, and medical condition. Overall,
treatment of
addiction is as successful as treatment of other chronic diseases, such as
diabetes, hypertension, and asthma.
| Treatment of addiction is as successful as treatment of other
chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, and asthma. |
According to several studies, drug treatment reduces drug use by 40 to 60
percent and significantly decreases criminal activity during and after
treatment. For example, a study of therapeutic community treatment for drug
offenders (See Treatment Section) demonstrated that arrests for violent and
nonviolent criminal acts were reduced by 40 percent or more. Methadone treatment
has been shown to decrease criminal behavior by as much as 50 percent. Research
shows that drug addiction treatment reduces the risk of HIV infection and that
interventions to prevent HIV are much less costly than treating HIV-related
illnesses. Treatment can improve the prospects for employment, with gains of up
to 40 percent after treatment.
Although these effectiveness rates hold in general, individual treatment
outcomes depend on the extent and nature of the patient's presenting problems,
the appropriateness of the treatment components and related services used to
address those problems, and the degree of active engagement of the patient in
the treatment process.
4. How long does drug addiction treatment usually last?
Individuals progress through drug addiction treatment at
various speeds, so
there is no predetermined length of treatment. However, research has shown
unequivocally that good outcomes are contingent on adequate lengths of
treatment. Generally, for residential or outpatient treatment, participation for
less than 90 days is of limited or no effectiveness, and treatments lasting
significantly longer often are indicated. For methadone maintenance, 12 months
of treatment is the minimum, and some opiate-addicted individuals will continue
to benefit from methadone maintenance treatment over a period of years.
| Good outcomes are contingent on adequate lengths of treatment. |
Many people who enter treatment drop out before receiving all the benefits
that treatment can provide. Successful outcomes may require more than one
treatment experience. Many addicted individuals have multiple episodes of
treatment, often with a cumulative impact.
5. What helps people stay in treatment?
Since successful outcomes often depend upon retaining the person long enough
to gain the full benefits of treatment, strategies for keeping an individual in
the program are critical. Whether a patient stays in treatment depends on
factors associated with both the individual and the program. Individual factors
related to engagement and retention include motivation to change drug-using
behavior, degree of support from family and friends, and whether there is
pressure to stay in treatment from the criminal justice system, child protection
services, employers, or the family. Within the program, successful counselors
are able to establish a positive, therapeutic relationship with the patient. The
counselor should ensure that a treatment plan is established and followed so
that the individual knows what to expect during treatment. Medical, psychiatric,
and social services should be available.
| Whether a patient stays in treatment depends on factors associated
with both the individual and the program. |
Since some individual problems (such as serious mental illness, severe
cocaine or crack use, and criminal involvement) increase the likelihood of a
patient dropping out, intensive treatment with a range of components may be
required to retain patients who have these problems. The provider then should
ensure a transition to continuing care or "aftercare" following the patient's
completion of formal treatment.
6. Is the use of medications like methadone simply replacing
one drug addiction with another?
No. As used in maintenance treatment, methadone and LAAM are not heroin
substitutes. They are safe and effective medications for opiate addiction that
are administered by mouth in regular, fixed doses. Their pharmacological effects
are markedly different from those of heroin.
| As used in maintenance treatment, methadone and d LAAM are not heroin
substitutes. |
Injected, snorted, or smoked heroin causes an almost immediate "rush"
or brief period of euphoria that wears off very quickly, terminating in a
"crash." The individual then experiences an intense craving to use more heroin
to stop the crash and reinstate the euphoria. The cycle of euphoria, crash, and
craving - repeated several times a day - leads to a cycle of addiction and
behavioral disruption. These characteristics of heroin use result from the
drug's rapid onset of action and its short duration of action in the brain. An
individual who uses heroin multiple times per day subjects his or her brain and
body to marked, rapid fluctuations as the opiate effects come and go. These
fluctuations can disrupt a number of important bodily functions. Because heroin
is illegal, addicted persons often become part of a volatile drug-using street
culture characterized by hustling and crimes for profit.
Methadone and LAAM have far more gradual onsets of action than heroin, and as
a result, patients stabilized on these
medications do not experience any rush.
In addition, both medications wear off much more slowly than heroin, so there is
no sudden crash, and the brain and body are not exposed to the marked
fluctuations seen with heroin use. Maintenance treatment with methadone or LAAM
markedly reduces the desire for heroin. If an individual maintained on adequate,
regular doses of methadone (once a day) or LAAM (several times per week) tries
to take heroin, the euphoric effects of heroin will be significantly blocked.
According to research, patients undergoing maintenance treatment do not suffer
the medical abnormalities and behavioral destabilization that rapid fluctuations
in drug levels cause in heroin addicts.
continue: Drug Treatment in Prison and
How Can Family/Friends Help the Addict . back to guide index
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Reviewed: 02/2005
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