can we talk?€¦ · the disease model- history • 1784: dr. benjamin rush • catalogued signs of...

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CAN WE TALK? The Disease Model, Evidence-Based Treatment, Individualized Treatment, and How We Do Our Job. Barry Lehman MARRCH Fall Conference October 31, 2017

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Page 1: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

CAN WE TALK?

The Disease Model, Evidence-Based Treatment, Individualized Treatment, and How We Do Our Job.

Barry Lehman MARRCH Fall Conference October 31, 2017

Page 2: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

• Barry A. Lehman, D. Min.; LADC; LPC (retired) • Chair, MARRCH Ethics Committee • Co-author: MARRCH Synthetic Ethics Decision-Making

Process Manual • Counselor at Mayo Clinic Addiction Services • Retired Moravian pastor • No monetary or other interests or involvement

Page 3: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Summary • There are many implications to the “disease model” of addiction, positive and negative.

• These include • Choice vs. disease, i.e. acceptance of disease model

• A cluster of different diseases with different etiologies?

• A “syndrome” of diseases? • What might be the impact of these on the future of treatment?

Page 4: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Objectives • One:

• A brief history and the controversies surrounding the disease model of addiction.

• Two: • Explore differing understandings of the disease model and the implications in practice.

• Three: • Discover ways to apply (or expand) best practices to address these implications and the ethics involved in making these choices.

Page 5: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

How I Got to This Point • Pulitzer Prize-winning book: The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer by Siddhartha Mukherjee (2010)

• Cancer “relapsed” • The disease relapsed… not the patient!

• What if we looked at addictions that way?

Page 6: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

A Thought Experiment- Challenging Assumptions

• Assumptions and doubt keep us from moving forward. (Deviate, by Beau Lotto)

• We are all “stuck” in (and with) our assumptions and biases.

• They define “reality” for us. • They control how we see the world. • We work from confirmation bias

Page 7: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

A Thought Experiment- The Leading Questions

•  If addiction is a relapsing-remitting disease, how does that impact our treatment planning?

• What if we are not dealing with one disease but with different diseases, or at the very least significantly different forms of a disease?

•  If addiction is a disease, how can or should that impact the language we use to describe it and the behavior of individuals with it?

Page 8: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Definitions • The Disease Model

• Keep it simple for our purposes

• Relapse • A return of symptoms

• Relapsing-Remitting Diseases • Symptoms are at times worse (relapse) and other times

are improved or gone (remitting).

Page 9: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History • Short History-

(from a series by William White in Counselor Magazine, 2000.)

•  Late 18th Early 19th Century • Struggle to distinguish drunkenness as a vice vs.

caused by a disease • Disease

• Cluster of physical and social problems produced by chronic drunkenness

•  “Ungovernable appetite” that overwhelms willful choice

Page 10: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History •  1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush

•  Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness •  Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease induced by vice” •  Progressiveness of disease •  Recommended treatments based on disease concept- Sober House

•  1820s Dr. William Sweetser •  A “morbid alteration” in nearly all structures and functions of body

•  1830s Dr. Samuel Woodward •  Intemperance a “physical disease preys on… health and spirits •  Heredity a possible causative factor

•  1849 Dr. Magnus Huss in Sweden •  Study of the effects of alcohol •  Named it: Alcoholismus chronicus

Page 11: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History • Second half of 19th Century- shifting times and critics •  1864- Dr. Joseph Turner

• New York State Inebriate Asylum •  1870- American Association for the Cure of Inebriety

•  It’s a disease • Curable in same sense as other diseases • Primary cause- a constitutional susceptibility •  Tendency may be either inherited or acquired

Page 12: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History •  1874- Franklin Reformatory for Inebriates in

Philadelphia •  Drunkenness is not the effect of a disease. It is a “habit, sin, and

crime… we do not speak of cases being cured in a hospital but ‘reformed.’ “

•  Disease concept is a “weak apology for the sin of drunkenness” and “a blasphemy against God.”

• Evangelical Christian views came to the front •  Three views:

•  Source of the problem in the person as “vice” or “sin. •  Source not in the person but the substance •  Caused by the aggressive marketing and promotion of alcohol

• Disease concept as a medical concept fell out of favor

Page 13: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History •  1900-1942: Dormancy

•  Some individual physicians maintained the disease concept •  Overall definition shifted from a vulnerable minority of users to a

focus on the inherent “badness” of the substances, the persons, and the institutions profiting from their sale.

•  Courts and law enforcement inadvertently shifted responsibility for care of addicts from physicians to criminal syndicates.

•  Physicians silenced by cultural redefinition of addict as a psychopath deserving isolation and punishment.

•  1928- Winifred Black best seller, Dope: The Story of the Living Dead •  Addict carrier of a disease “worse than smallpox and more terrible

than leprosy.” Should be in penitentiaries.

Page 14: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History •  1919- Prohibition - a way of curbing drunkenness •  Care shifted to penal institutions and “foul wards” of large public

hospitals and to fledgling field of psychiatry.

• Drunkenness also became a symptom of underlying psychological disturbance. Had two outcomes: •  Theoretical foundation for some humane efforts to find treatment. •  Alcoholics and addicts subjected to whatever treatments were

currently in vogue and to policies and attitudes toward the mentally ill.

•  Often subjected to the worst abuses of mental health institutions of the day.

Page 15: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History •  Alcoholics Anonymous and the Disease Model •  Bill W.: We have never called it a disease.

•  Like with heart disease with different heart ailments •  AA’s use of medical terms reflects …its belief about the solution.

•  Dr. Bob: •  “Have to use disease – sick – only way to get across hopelessness.”

•  Experience of A.A. Members •  alcoholism had a physical, as well as a mental and a spiritual,

component •  helpfulness of medical metaphors in making sense of drinking

experiences •  portrayal of alcoholism as an accelerating process •  importance of concentrating on drinking behavior rather than

searching for underlying causes •  loss of control over alcohol contained only by complete

abstinence from alcohol.

Page 16: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History • 1942-1970: Modern Movement

• Research Council on Problems of Alcohol (1937) • Yale Center of Alcohol Studies (1943) • National Committee for Education on Alcoholism

(1944) • driving force behind the “modern alcoholism movement” •  convey a focus on alcoholism, rather than on alcohol or

the broad spectrum of alcohol-related problems. • met the cultural need to escape a century of polarized

wet-dry debates •  the unique vulnerability of a small subpopulation of

drinkers.

Page 17: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History • Marty Mann 1944

• Alcoholism is a disease.

• Minnesota Model 1948-1950 •  The model of alcoholism treatment that most

exemplified the disease concept • Pioneer House (1948), Hazelden (1949), and Willmar

State Hospital (1950). •  alcoholism as a primary, progressive disorder •  required sustained abstinence •  active, continuing program of recovery. • E.M. Jellinek – More on him later

Page 18: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History • By mid-20th Century- Beyond Alcohol

•  Therapeutic community as treatment modality •  Most rejected the disease concept, isolated themselves from AA

and Narcotics Anonymous, and instead based their treatment on the process of character reconstruction.

• Methadone maintenance •  Became major approach to treatment of narcotic addiction. •  Viewed opiate addiction as a metabolic disease.

Page 19: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Disease Model- History •  1970-2000: Concept Extension and Backlash • Extended influence and cultural acceptance • National awareness through famous people’s openness • Concept applied to wider range of drug use and

behaviors • Explosive growth of treatment programs • Minnesota Model the most widely used • Backlash by end of Century

•  Financial •  Ideological and philosophical •  No consensus

Page 20: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Four Recent Discussions •  Inside Rehab: The Surprising Truth About Addiction

Treatment--and How to Get Help That Works, Anne Fletcher, 2013.

• Unbroken Brain: A Revolutionary New Way of Understanding Addiction, Maia Szalavitz, 2016

•  “The Irrationality of Alcoholics Anonymous”, Gabrielle Glaser, Atlantic, April 2015.

•  “How Science Is Unlocking the Secrets of Addiction”, Fran Smith, National Geographic, September 2017.

Page 21: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

What Can We Learn?

•  Impact of greater cultural and religious issues

•  Impact of language utilized

• Our individual experiences

• Our assumptions and related confirmation bias

Page 22: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

What Can We Learn? •  If all we have is a hammer, everything will look like a nail.

•  If all we have: •  the 12-Steps, it will always look “spiritual”. •  sin and a choice model, it will always look like bad

choices and bad behavior. •  laws and rules, it will always look criminal. •  cognitive therapy it will always look like brain

dysfunction • motivational interviewing, it will always look like a

motivational problem.

Page 23: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Blind and the Elephant

Page 24: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Blind and the Elephant

The Law

MAT Spiritual

Motivation

Sin

Cognitive

????

Page 25: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Blind and the Elephant

Page 26: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Assuming that the Disease Model is Broadly Correct •  Two ways of seeing it keeping the elephant in mind • As a Relapsing-Remitting Disease

•  Examples: •  Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis (RRMS) •  Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) •  Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) •  Diabetes? •  Pain? •  Some cancers after treatment? •  Addiction?

• Different Diseases with Similar Symptoms

or Variation of One Disease

Page 27: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Assuming that the Disease Model is Broadly Correct

• What’s the same? What’s different?

• Symptoms: What’s the same, what’s different •  Treatment: What’s the same, what’s different • What happens if we treat them all the same way? • What happens if we get it wrong? •  Is one “deadlier” than the other? • Why? What’s the difference?

Page 28: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Diabetes •  Type 1: a total lack of insulin - 5-10% of diabetics

•  Usually juvenile onset •  Immune system destroys cells that release insulin •  Sudden illness from high blood sugar •  Low blood sugar episodes common •  Cannot be prevented, only treated •  Life expectancy: -11 – 20%

•  Type 2: too little insulin or cannot use insulin effectively •  Usually adult onset although it is now showing up in children •  90-95% of diabetics •  Usually symptom free •  Can be prevented or delayed by lifestyle changes •  Life expectancy: - 10 – 15%

Page 29: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Diabetes

•  Type 1 vs. Type 2: What’s the same, what’s different • Symptoms: What’s the same, what’s different •  Treatment: What’s the same, what’s different • What happens if we get it wrong? •  Is one “deadlier” than the other? • Why? What’s the difference?

Page 30: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Cancers •  Location: Lung, skin, colon, etc.

•  Obviously different •  But are they different diseases or variations of a single

process? •  Does it matter if we treat each in an appropriately different

way? •  Breast Cancer

•  A number of different diseases or variations •  Dependent on:

•  Location •  Genetics •  Molecular structure

Page 31: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Cancers • Cancers: What’s the same, what’s different • Symptoms: What’s the same, what’s different •  Treatment: What’s the same, what’s different • What happens if we treat them all the same way? • What happens if we get it wrong? •  Is one “deadlier” than the other? • Why? What’s the difference?

Page 32: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Addiction(s) •  Is alcohol use disorder the same disease as opioid use disorder, amphetamine use disorder, or marijuana use disorder?

•  I.e do the different substances cause different processes to work?

•  If they are all the same would it be a stretch to say that therefore Campral or naltrexone would work on all of them?

•  If they are all the same why do many people not respond to 12-Step treatment?

•  What if we are seeing the disease relapse, NOT the person?

Page 33: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Addiction(s) •  Is alcohol use disorder the same disease as opioid use disorder, amphetamine use disorder, or marijuana use disorder? • This is not a new idea

• E. M. Jellinek: • a variety of “alcoholisms,” • criticized the tendency to as a single disorder. • Scientists feared a future day of reckoning for this simplistic portrayal of alcoholism.

•  History of the Disease Concept, William White

Page 34: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Addiction(s) • What might cause and/or exacerbate different diseases? • Genetics

• Brain chemistry •  The substance used •  Genetics

• Physical issues •  TBI •  Other trauma •  Pain •  Gastric bypass

Page 35: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Addiction(s) • What might cause and/or exacerbate different diseases? • Environment (Epigenetics?)

• Poverty • Peer groups • Retirement

• Co-morbidity Mental Health issues • Depression • Anxiety • PTSD • Cluster B traits

Page 36: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Addiction(s) • At this point in time we use the same general symptoms to diagnose any addiction- regardless of the substances or causes.

• Different diseases can, of course, show the same or similar symptoms.

• Are we at a place similar to cancer diagnosis 50 - 60 years ago?

• We generally use the same treatment regardless of the substance or substances involved.

• Medication-assisted treatments being the basic difference.

Page 37: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Addiction(s)

• Problems we face in this discussion • Relapse and recovery data are often highly suspect and difficult to gather and verify.

• Definitions and vocabulary • Social stigma and related issues • Commitment to (or against) certain treatment methods and/or combining them

• Opposition to “disease” model

Page 38: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Addiction(s) • Different addictions: What’s the same, what’s different • Symptoms: What’s the same, what’s different •  Treatment: What’s the same, what’s different • What happens if we get it wrong? •  Is one “deadlier” than the other? • Why? What’s the difference?

•  Let’s do a thought experiment and compare good old alcohol use disorder and opioid use disorder.

Page 39: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Relapsing Diseases- Addiction(s) Alcohol Use Disorder, Severe

Opioid Use Disorder, Severe

Symptoms

Treatment Protocol

Mortality

Same or different?

Same or different?

Same or different?

What if we get it wrong?

Page 40: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Then There’s Language • How can you tell when an addict is lying?

• Drunkard, lush, alkie, boozer, souse

• Junkie, druggy, dopehead, stoner, fiend

• Clean or dirty drug screens

• Replacement or substitution therapy

Page 41: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Then There’s Language • Mathew is manipulative

• Mathew is trying really hard to get his needs met. Mathew may need to work on more effective ways of getting his needs met

• Kyle is non-compliant

• Kyle is choosing not to... Kyle would rather... Kyle is looking for other options

Page 42: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Then There’s Language •  Jennifer is in denial

• Jennifer is ambivalent about...... Jennifer hasn’t internalized the seriousness of.... Jennifer doesn’t understand............

• Mary is resistant to treatment

• Mary chooses not to... Mary prefers not to... Mary is unsure about...

Page 43: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Then There’s Language •  John relapsed…

• John’s disease relapsed…

•  Judy needs relapse prevention…

• Judy needs recovery planning… Judy is working on immunotherapy…

•  Fred is an addict… • Fred is a person with addiction

Page 44: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Leading Questions

•  If addiction is a relapsing-remitting disease, how does that impact our treatment planning?

• What if we are not dealing with one disease but with different diseases, or at the very least significantly different forms of a disease?

•  If addiction is a disease, how can or should that impact the language we use to describe it and the behavior of individuals with it?

Page 45: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Leading Questions and Their Implications • Treatment planning

•  Individualized •  Do no harm •  Do what’s right

• The needs of the patient come first. • How and what we teach to our patients • How we see our patients • Our language • Chronic Disease Management

Page 46: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Leading Questions and Their Implications

•  The thin, fine line we have to walk

• History of treatment models • Our own experiences and training • The different “models” • The politics of health care and our field as a part of it.

Page 47: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Leading Questions and Their Implications •  Some of the ethical questions:

• How can we only recommend what WE each think is right ignoring other possibilities?

• Place of evidence-based modalities • Role of patient in decision making

• When the patient believes differently than what we think?

•  Informed consent

Page 48: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Leading Questions and Their Implications •  Some of the ethical questions:

•  Individualized treatment • What will be the role of LADCs in diagnosis? • Do the right thing

• Who decides “The Right Thing?”

Page 49: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Into the 2st Century •  Conclusions from William White

• The new disease concept will •  forge consensus on a language that can be used to differentiate types and intensities of alcohol- and other drug-related problems.

• shift from an alcoholism model to a more encompassing addiction model.

• carefully map its conceptual boundaries, defining the conditions and circumstances to which it should and should not be applied.

Page 50: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Into the 2st Century •  Conclusions from William White

• The new disease concept will • place alcoholism/addiction within a larger umbrella of alcohol- and other drug-related problems.

• portray addiction as a cluster of disorders that spring from multiple, interacting etiological influences and that vary considerably in their onset, course, and outcome.

• define the complex inter-relationships between addiction and other acute and chronic disorders and champion integrated models of care for the multiple problem client/family.

Page 51: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Into the 2st Century •  Conclusions from William White

• The new disease concept will •  define the role human will and personal responsibility play in the onset, course, and outcome of AOD problems and of alcoholism/addiction.

• celebrate the variety of styles and pathways of long term recovery management.

• view addiction as a chronic rather than acute disorder and incorporate the principles of chronic disease management.

Page 52: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Into the 2st Century • Conclusions from William White

•  it is unlikely to survive as the dominant “governing image” for AOD problems unless it is able to continuously incorporate the following: 1) the new findings of addiction science, 2) major elements of the emerging public health model, and 3) the ever-accumulating lessons of clinical and recovery experience.

Page 53: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

The Leading Questions and Their Implications • Let’s Talk

• And Let’s Keep Talking

Page 54: CAN WE TALK?€¦ · The Disease Model- History • 1784: Dr. Benjamin Rush • Catalogued signs of acute and chronic drunkenness • Medicalized language- “Odious disease”; Disease

Sources •  “Addiction as a Disease: The Birth of a Concept” by William L.

White, Counselor (2000). Online: www.williamwhitepapers.com •  The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer by

Siddhartha Mukherjee (2010) •  Deviate, by Beau Lotto •  Inside Rehab: The Surprising Truth About Addiction Treatment--

and How to Get Help That Works, Anne Fletcher (2013) •  Unbroken Brain: A Revolutionary New Way of Understanding

Addiction, Maia Szalavitz (2016) •  “The Irrationality of Alcoholics Anonymous”, Gabrielle Glaser,

Atlantic (April 2015) •  “How Science Is Unlocking the Secrets of Addiction”, Fran

Smith, National Geographic (September 2017)