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    Hooked in America

    Running head: HOOKED IN AMERICA THE BIRTH OF ADDICTION

    Hooked in America

    The Birth of Addiction and

    Recovery Treatment in America.

    Fred Stinson III

    PSY 7110

    Capella University

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    ABSTRACT

    From the earliest human record of Sumerian people in 5000 B.C., human being have

    experimented, cultivated, and created different drugs for a variety of purposes. Since

    Columbus landing on Plymouth Rock in 1620, alcohol and drug use has also been used

    for similar purposes and have been a staple of America society. Drugs have been used

    for medical, religious, and recreational purposes and to cure, fix, reduce, eliminate all

    kinds of human feelings and suffering. The overuses of drugs have lead to addiction,

    which is a physical and psychological disease of the human brain and body. Exploration

    of addiction in America may indicate the problems and solutions that propel Americans

    to implementing social, religious, legal, and intervention constraints to control its spread.

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    Hooked in America

    The Birth of Addiction and Recovery Treatment in America.

    Alcoholism and drug addiction has a history that expands 250 years in America.

    Likewise, recovery has paralleled the history of addiction. But for centuries there has

    existed conflicts between the legal, religious, and scientific treatment of addiction. The

    history is discussed to the extent that it provides insight into the nature of addiction and

    treatment interventions (Lemanski, 2001). Addiction will be used interchangeably to

    define both alcoholics and drug addicts. Although addiction is often characterized as a

    chronic and relapsing disease, a study of its history and treatment my led to a deeper

    understanding of voluntary behaviors and far-reaching negative consequences.

    Drugs and the official definition of Addiction

    Addiction has many agents that are classified into eleven psychoactive categories.

    The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorder IV (DSM-IV; American

    Psychiatric Association [APA], 1994) classifications are alcohol; amphetamines or

    similarly substituted phenylethylamine substance; caffeine; cannabis; cocaine;

    hallucinogens; inhalants; nicotine; opioids; phencyclidine or similarly substance; and

    sedatives, hypnotics, or anxiolytics. These eleven psychoactive agents have many

    chemical, trade, and street names. The one thing all psychoactive drugs perform is that

    they affect the central nervous system (CNS), therefore, altering thoughts, moods, and or

    behaviors. Each psychoactive drug has unique properties and effect the CNS is different

    ways. Thus, the degree of addiction is measured by the potential of the drug; some drugs

    have low addiction potential while others have high potential (Beck, Wright, Newman,

    & Liese, 1993). Psychoactive drugs reach the CNS and brain by being ingested orally,

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    snorted, smoked, or intravenously. Smoking and intravenously drug methods penetrated

    the CNS quickest and have the highest intensity and potential for the development of

    addiction (Beck et al, 1993).

    The American Psychiatric Association as cited by Inaba & Cohen (2004) defines

    addiction as a compulsive psychological and behavioral manifestation characterized by:

    often use the drug in larger amount or for longer period of time than intended.

    unsuccessful try to cut down or control the drug use.

    spend a great deal of time in activities to obtain the substance or recovery from it

    use.

    give up or reduce important social, occupational, or recreational activities because

    of the drug use.

    continue to use despite knowledge that the drug use is causing physical or

    psychological problems (p.66).

    If a voluntary substance user meets all the above definitions through alcohol or drug

    use, they are classified as addicted. Therefore, alcoholics and drug addicts are those

    users who have lost control of their use and the substance has become the most important

    thing in their lives (Inaba & Cohen, 2004).

    Drug use in autobiography

    In 1612, John Rolf of England introduced the first known drug, tobacco, a

    stimulant and mild relaxant, to Jamestown Virginia (Inaba & Cohen, 2004). Tobacco

    was used by the upper class in small to moderate amounts, a pinch of snuff or chopped

    leafs in the cheek provided a mild simulation to CNS. Many poorer classes and slaves

    had to smoke it in pipes because it was the cheapest low-grade tobacco. Tobacco was

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    also used as medicine to cure headaches, snakebites, stomach pains, and toothaches. By

    1930, Inaba and Cohen s record that cigarette tax provided a rich source of revenue for

    federal and state governments, southern colony farmers, media, and retailers. After the

    landing of the Mayflower alcohol, a downer, was ingested daily to relieve inhibition and

    boredom. Most importantly, rum and whiskey was the chief medium of exchange in

    Americas economy and slave trade. Another drink that became popular during this time

    period was coffee and tea, which are both stimulants. In New York and Boston, popular

    coffeehouses served coffee and tea to intellectuals, politicians, and doing literary

    discussions. Sometime after 1620, alcohol, tobacco, coffee, teas and marijuana had

    become the drug staples of America societies. (Inaba & Cohen, 2004).

    In 1764, King Georgia III of England ordered Georgia Washington to direct

    colonies to plant and cultivate kemp, which is marijuana. Kemp had two useful purposes;

    it was used to make rope for ships sails; and it was a psychoactive drug that was used to

    produce a euphoric feeling of wellness (Inaba & Cohen, 2004). Therefore, Americas

    drugs were to cure ailments, to cope with the stress from a harsh new environment, to

    support for the next two centuries the Americas economy, which include the funding of

    the American Revolution and slave trade (Inaba & Cohen, 2004). By the mid 1800s,

    government and business exploited legal psychoactive substances such as tobacco,

    alcohol, coffee, and tea while making them readily available to the masses.

    Historically opiates are the prototypical addictive drug among most civilized

    countries, and in America it provided the same service. By the time the American

    Revolutionary war beginning an opium epidemic from England had reached the shores of

    the America. Inaba and Cohen (2004) cited that opium was used in the American

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    Revolutionary war mainly to treat injured soldiers; it was an effective painkiller. It was

    also used to treat diarrhea, and prescribed for almost every illness. However, in 1803, a

    German pharmacist F.W. Serturner isolated the active ingredient of opium and named the

    substance morphine after Morpheus, the Greek god of dreams and sleep (Narcotic

    Anonymous, 1998). Morphine is ten times as powerful of a painkiller than opium.

    During the American Revolution opium and morphine were used indiscriminately as a

    painkiller and to relieve social aliments (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998).

    About forty years later, the invention of the hypodermic syringe to administer

    morphine indirectly into the blood steam would unknowingly launch America first

    epidemic, morphine drug use. It use endure for more than a century (Narcotic

    Anonymous, 1998). By 1868, morphine injections were cheaper than alcohol. Demand

    fueled the low cost and lean to its widespread use. Most physicians believed morphine to

    be a harmless substance, but an extremely effective painkiller (Narcotic Anonymous,

    1998). American reliance on morphine as a medicinal painkiller reached it peak during

    the Civil War period. Interestingly, most users were prescription drug users.

    Ironically, the most common usage of opium was not soldiers, but was children

    medicine labeled under friendly names such as Gofreys Cordial, Munns Elixir, and

    Mother Bailey Quieting Syrup, Mrs Winslows Soothing Syrup, Darbys

    Carminative, and Ayers Cherry Pectorial (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998). These

    friendly paten medicines and tonics did not list ingredients ( Inaba &Cohen,2004). A

    drug derived from opiate is laudanum that dissolved easily into a liquid form and was

    given by adults to children to relief a variety of aliments. Narcotic Anonymous (1998)

    claim that poor women who did textile work to support their family had few alternatives

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    but to dope their children with laudanum quieting syrup. These patent medicines were

    loaded with opium, morphine, cocaine, marijuana, and alcohol (Inaba & Cohen, 2004).

    Many other opium-based mixtures were popular with older white women from middle

    and upper socioeconomic classes.

    Cocaine was introduced to Americas society in 1850 and became almost as

    popular as patent medicine with opium. In 1887, the Hay Fever Association declared

    cocaine its official remedy for aliments and social discomforts (Inaba & Cohen, 2004).

    As a result, cocaine popularity grew immensely as businesses begin raking in huge profits

    from its sale in drugs stores, by mail order, and in catalogues such as Sear Roebuck. It is

    also known that even Coca-Cola, a popular drink, contained about 5 mg of cocaine from

    1886 to 1903 (Inaba & Cohen, 2004). Cocaine was also known as an aphrodisiac, used to

    treat asthma, used to treat morphine addicts. One would have to conclude that

    Americas birthing pains manifested drug use, which would proliferate the next 100 years

    of its history.

    The Twentieth first Century Drugs

    The dawn of the twentieth first century in America was explosive as industrial

    and manufactory productivity evolved. But so did Americans history of psychoactive

    substances use. By the early 1900, a drug kit sold by Macys and Sears Roebuck two of

    the most famous corporations, included for sale to the public a vial of cocaine, heroin,

    and reusable syringe; it could be purchased through mail order catalogues. In 1908,

    marijuana use shifted from making rope to widespread smoking of marijuana; it was an

    alternative high to alcohol. In 1920, cigarette use multiplied as pioneer of Camel

    cigarettes produced by the J.R. Reynolds begin to expand its market to women, to young,

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    and those who wanted to lose weight. After the 1920, Inaba and Cohen (2004) reported

    that new pharmacological technologies and refinements of drugs led to the introduction

    of new and more sophisticated drugs, which could reach the CNS faster and more

    efficiently. Amphetamine, a stimulant, was first introduced during World War II to

    improve physician performance, fight fatigue, heighten endurance, and elevate fighting

    spirit. By the 1950s it was coined Americas drug for it help you stay awoke and alert

    while increasing productivity with a nip of euphoria. It was an effective appetite

    suppressant and had a calming and focusing effect on the CNS. A similar agent,

    methamphetamines became even more popular because it provided longer effects on the

    CNS. Both Amphetamine and methamphetamines have been used medically to treat low

    blood pressure, narcolepsy, schizophrenia, and alcoholism.

    The science of pharmacology recognized that chemical brain imbalance were

    causes of mental illnesses, which led to the development of 50-100 new psychiatric

    medicines and synthetic drugs during 1940s 1960s. Synthetic drugs were drugs that

    were synthesized rather than being extracted from natural products such as alcohol,

    opium, cocaine, coffee, and nicotine. Soon after their development, Sedative- hypnotics

    and benzodiazepines such as Libruim, Valuium, Xanax, Ritlan, Amphetamine, Rohyprol,

    Quaaludes, Tricyclic, and MAO inhibitors dominated the prescription drug market. These

    upper drugs provided a feel of confident, outgoing, eagerness, and ecstatic feelings in

    different degrees and intensity. Downers drugs such as codeine, OxyContin, Vicodin and

    Demrol were effective designer painkillers. Synthetic all arounders were hallucinogenic

    and new psychedelics such as LSD, MDA, PCP, CBR, and MOMA (estasy). All

    Arounders were anesthetics and distorted sensory messages to and from the brain stem.

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    Lastly, the design of Rave and club drugs were used by thousand of young people. The

    most common psycho-stimulants were X and E, which delivered a sense of wellness,

    togetherness, and unity. As a result of these new pharmacological technologies,

    Americas drug use became commonplace and socially accepted. However, these new,

    designers, high potent, and high dose drugs led to abuse and dependency (Inaba &

    Cohen, 2004). Surprisingly, adding to the drug movement was increased recreational use

    of stimulants and depressant spurred by the government allowing for personal freedom

    and growth of a self controlling and monitoring middle class population.

    Natural history of addiction

    The automation of cigarette rolling machine in 1884, a milder strain of tobacco,

    mass advertising, and a more plentiful supply vastly expanded the market of cigarettes

    and its addictive agent nicotine. By mid 1950s cigarette smoking was entrenched in

    America society as its use rise to millions. Inaba and Cohen (2004) research estimated

    that America Revolutionary war produced 400,000 morphine addicts in the Army alone.

    The social conditions of two populations, veteran and well-to-do white women were the

    majority of addicts (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998). The problem of opiate addiction was

    seen as unfortunate medical problem of war veterans and was looked upon with some

    sympathy because they had fought for the countrys independency (Narcotic Anonymous,

    1998). Because many physicians were not aware of the addictive potential of patent

    medicines and opiate drugs, they indirectly caused iatrogenic ( physician induced)

    addiction, which was a common problems. By 1900, Inaba and Cohen (2004) estimated

    300,000 opiate-dependent people in the United States. However, the wave of immigrant

    that overruns American shores at the turn of the century would begin to change

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    Americans view of addicts dramatically within two decades (Narcotic Anonymous,

    1998).

    The proliferation of addiction had other allies heroin, cocaine, and amphetamine;

    they became as popular as alcohol and shifted the cultures view of addiction as

    compared to that of war veterans and citizen illnesses (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998).

    American became addicted to heroin as a result on its availability, the hypodermic

    syringe, and its calming effect on the CNS. Cocaine was a fashionable expensive high for

    the upper class that snorted or injected it. But the development of smokable freebase

    cocaine and a cheaper agent crack made cocaine available to the masses. As a result,

    cocaine addiction specifically crack became prevalent among minorities. Smoked cocaine

    reached the CNS quicker rising the risk of dependency. Freebasing and crack cocaine

    became an epidemic by mid 1980. Media, new coverage, and the effect of drug itself

    fueled the popularity of these drugs. The powerful rush of cocaine lasted 7-10, resulting

    in a crash that can be only overcome by smoking again and again, which lead to

    widespread addiction. Synthetic smokable methamphetamine called Ice and Crank

    caused thousand of recreational users to be addicted to its euphoria effects. In 1940s and

    1950s civilian truck drivers, workers of monotonous factory jobs, and college student

    cramming for a exam used methamphetamines to stay awake and to increase

    productivity. Moreover, amphetamine use soared as a diet drug between the 1950s and

    1960s. In 1970, Inaba and Cohen (2004) estimated that 6-8% of Americans were using

    12 billion pills, tablets, and capsules for weight loss, alertness, and energy.

    However, it was not the drugs themselves that made addiction hideous; it was the

    drug related crimes, poverty, lost souls, and families that became the source of

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    considerable concern to social, political, and religious leaders. Despite several legal and

    social stances, addiction would strengthen its grip in America as a wave of immigrants

    from Europe and Asia increased the population of urban tenements and the development

    of slums. As poverty among the new arrivals increased, so did the use of alcohol and

    narcotics. By the middle 1900, addiction had taken a firm hold upon a significant number

    of Americans (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998).

    By the second World War addicts fitted neatly into two categories; addicts who

    were addicted to pills and prescriptions drugs such as sedative, barbiturates, laudanum,

    Demerol, or the other who were considered dope fiends who sought out any kind of

    drugs to deal with physiological and psychological problems. The recklessness and

    social tyranny of dope fiends in effect caused increased searches, harassments, and

    incarceration by legal authorities as they tried to reduce social demands for drugs.

    Unfortunately, Americas stance was met with resistant as social ideologies

    encouraged drug use and addiction. In 1930, William Randolph Hearsts newspapers

    uneventful popularized marijuana by making it sound foreign, demonic, and menacing.

    The federal and state government and media portrayed the same kinds of fear tactics, but

    it backfired and a new generation of marijuana users emerged (Inaba & Cohen, 2004). It

    was symbol of youthful rebellion. Although marijuana had medicinal values, in 1950

    many famous jazz musicians, poets, and writers glamorized it use for creativity. In 1960,

    Dr. Timothy Leary, a known cocaine and psychedelics user, encourage the Youth of

    America to turn on, tune in, and drop out. He advocated drug experimentation with

    psychedelics, cocaine, LSD, marijuana, and mushroom to alter the mind to gain insight.

    Learys ideology later led to the Hippie and Summer of Love movements in 1967 that

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    The Criminalization of Addiction:

    In opposition to health, social, and political liabilities, Americans enacted

    hundreds of legislations to discourage all alcohol and drug use for non-medicinal

    purposes since the 1800. The New Era American also called the Progressive Era fought

    to eliminate moderation of alcohol temperance. The Anti-alcohol coalitions claimed that

    there was no compromise because the great debaters claimed that alcohol abuse was the

    result of or cause poverty. America was not the first civilization to experience social

    disorders from alcohol and drug addiction. China and England had major addiction

    problems that they were successful dealing with. Therefore, Americans would

    incorporate drug laws from both governments in an attempt to control alcohol and use

    (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998).

    The Chinese appetite for opium inspired the first American drug laws. America s

    first drug law was enacted in San Francisco, California in 1875 to deal with the ten

    thousand Chinese railroad gangs who open up opium dens commonly used in their

    homeland. The law was unsuccessful in dislodging opium and other drug use as similar

    laws in Virginia City, Nevada, in 1876. By 1914, there were twenty-seven city and state

    laws against citizens and immigrants smoking opium (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998). As

    a result, America first attempts at opium legislation and control resulted in addicts going

    underground to buy, sell, and trade drugs. Just as previous attempts, the laws stimulated

    and new menace, illegal drug trading (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998. Thus, legislations

    became inadvertently responsible for the hopelessness that characterized the disease of

    addiction for the next half of twentieth century in America.

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    Nevertheless, in 1900 Dr. Benjamin Rush founded the Temperance Movement;

    his goal was to enact prohibition on alcohol and tobacco (Inaba & Cohen). His

    movement was unsuccessful for several reasons. Inaba and Cohen (2004) cited that one

    reason alcohol restriction and even prohibition was overturn was because alcohol was

    valued as a source of major funds for corporations and excise tax. Likewise, state laws

    that passed prohibition on cigarette sales, failed because they were unenforceable

    resulting in a repealed by late 1920.

    Later in 1900, Dr. John Witherspoon became the President of the American

    Medial Association and cited in his speech that the medical community had a duty to

    save people from the disease of opium addiction (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998). He

    declared that drug addicts were a menace and called them hydra-headed monsters

    stalking through the civilized world, wrecking lives and happy homes. He proceed to

    elaborate that thousands of addicts were filling the countrys jails and lunatic asylums,

    and taking from the unfortunates the precious promise of happiness and eternal life. As a

    result of his compelling authoritative evidence, the Federal opium Commission was

    established in 1903. Harris Wright was appointed its commissioner and postulated that

    same year that America imported 16, 000 pounds of opium for smoking and eating and

    that 2, 600,000 pounds of coca leaves were imported yearly (Narcotic Anonymous,

    1998).

    To rid America of tonic and patent medicines, The Pure Food and Drug Act of

    1906 was passed. It prohibited interstate commerce of adulterated foods and drugs; it

    also required accurate labeling of the ingredients. In 1909, the opium Exclusion Act was

    enacted to encourage the reduction of opium worldwide and in the same year Congress

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    increase in organized crime, Americans had mixed feelings about the benefits and

    liabilities of alcohol. The majority felt that Prohibition created serious problems for the

    country; thus, Prohibition was repeal in 1933 (Inaba & Cohen, 2004).

    The federal Narcotic Division with it punitive interpretation of Harrison Act

    intimidate doctors and medical centers into discontinuing treatment for drug addicts and

    pressured them into reporting users to the authorities (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998). Over

    the next two decades, the Federal Government swiftly legislated fifty-five laws defining

    narcotics usage, sell, and distribution. Local government took the same stance and

    enacted hundreds of local statues outlawing addiction. One interestingly example, a local

    statue cited that it was illegal for any two known or suspected addicts to be seen together

    resulting is fines or incarceration to insane asylums (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998).

    The efforts of federal and state legislation appeared promising and fruitful on the

    surface, but this type attitude only drove narcotic addicts underground. America adopted

    an anti-maintenance position that resulted in the harassment and even imprisonment of

    doctors who continue to treat addiction by prescribing opiates. By 1919, in the US v.

    Doremus case the courts would officially cite that addiction and it medical treatment was

    a crime. Drug policy has shifted from supply reduction to demand reduction.

    In 1932, Harry J. Anslinger became the first Drug Czar of the newly established

    Federal Bureau of Narcotics. He vigorously enforced cannabis laws while using fear of

    rape, murder, and social chaos to support his propaganda campaign. Headlines of

    marijuana use read drug-crazed Negroes; marijuana is an addictive drug; its effect on

    the degenerate races; and sexual promiscuity with white women thrust federal and state

    government to enact legislation to wipeout marijuana. His strong campaign against

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    marijuana use led to 46 states passing antimarijuana legislations. The Federal government

    responded likewise in 1937 and enacted The Marijuana Tax Stamp Act which banned the

    growing, selling, and using of cannabis sativa, marijuana (Inaba & Cohen, 2004).

    The passage of Baggs Act 1951 and the Narcotic Control Act 1956 were

    additional acts that imposed harsher penalties. The Harrison Act and its rigid

    interpretation was a one-two punch that driven addicts underground to street violence,

    disease, arrest, conviction, and incarceration. Addicts could no longer seek medical

    treatment; thus they engaged in more illegal activities to support their habits. The

    environment for addiction was hostile. A portrait of the Americas addicts can be read in

    William Borough famous book Junkie that described addicts of the forties and fifties

    and the grim confirmation of limited treatment options available to addicts (Narcotic

    Anonymous, 1998).

    The Controlled Substance Act of 1970 was enacted to legislate against

    methamphetamine, but the street market expanded (Inaba & Cohen, 2004). The act,

    moreover, established and provided regulatory power to The Drug Enforcement

    Administration (DEA). Within a year, the DEA categorized all drugs danger drugs into

    five schedules, which limit the availability, use, and abuse of the major drugs such as

    cocaine, marijuana, heroin, and methamphetamines (Inaba & Cohen, 2004).

    Media, film, and literature have characterized the prosperity of the 1950 - 1980s,

    but addicts suffered insurmountable pain and despair. Unfortunately, another significant

    change would occur that spread the degradation of addiction in the United States. The

    exodus of European immigrants moving out of the crowed cities while African

    Americans and Hispanics and moved in exploded addictive behaviors. Stigmatization

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    and criminalization mushroomed as report after report linked drug use to crime. Both

    developments, however, would lay the foundation for the social interventions of alcohol

    and drug dependency (Narcotic Anonymous, 1998).

    The War between Psychiatry and Religious

    For centuries in America there has existed conflicts between psychiatry and

    religious treatment of addiction. In 1935, the most important and well-known

    development in this century pertaining to the treatment of alcohol and drug problems was

    the program of Alcohol Anonymous (Fajardo, 2005).Another paramount development

    was an article published in 1939 by Dr. William Silkworth in The Lancet, A New

    Approach to Psychotherapy in Chronic Alcoholism. In the article, Dr. William Silkworth

    describes the process and principle for recovery from alcoholism (Fajardo, 2005).

    Dr. William D. Silkworth speech acknowledged that doctors have recognized for

    years that alcoholism was some form of moral psychology and of urgent importance to

    alcoholics. He claimed that the treatment of alcoholism real, but the application

    prescribed difficult beyond our conception (Alcoholic Anonymous, 2001). He cited that

    an alcoholic should be freed from his physical craving though hospital procedure before

    psychological measures can maximum benefits. He described chronic alcoholic as a

    manifestation of an allergy, in which the phenomenon of craving develops. Thus allergic

    aloholic types can never safely use alcohol. The sensation sought by alcoholic is so

    elusive that while they admit it is injurious, they cannot differentiate the true from the

    false. As a result of alcoholism insane acts are repeated over and over unless a person

    can experience and entire psychic change; there is little hope of recovery. He postulated

    that something was needed to produce an essential psychic change. Psychiatric efforts is

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    considerable, but we physician most have made little impressive upon the problems.

    Finally, he stated many type do not respond to the ordinary psychology approach

    (Alcoholic Anonymous, 2001).

    Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde described the alcoholic and addict. The addicted person

    was absolutely unable to stop on the basis of self-knowledge; thus he was on one more

    journey to the asylum. The behaviors of addicts were absurd and incomprehensible with

    respect to the disease of addiction. Using alcohol and drugs lead to extremes until they

    lost everything in life. In the end, they took a trip, swearing off forever, physical

    exercise, reading inspiritual books, going to health farm and sanitariums, accepting

    voluntary committed to asylums, but nothing relieved them of their disease. The precise

    definition of such damnation and dereliction we call plain insanity. People, who

    exhibited splendid judgment and determination, yet relapse nevertheless. This

    characterized the psychological life of alcoholic and addict (Alcoholic Anonymous,

    2001).

    To deal with hopeless of alcoholics and addicts, various treatment and dispensing

    clinics were open to detoxification alcoholic and as opium maintenance (Narcotic

    Anonymous, 1998). By 1919 thirteen municipalities in America had forty-four clinics.

    Seeming to appear as threats to the Federal anti-maintenance policy the government had

    all treatment and clinics closed by 1924; therefore leaving no government programs for

    the treatment of addiction. Even though debate raged over the treatment of addiction,

    crime and drug related problems continued to spiral out of control. America became

    sincerely concern with the associated issues of narcotic use throughout the country.

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    Sometime in 1930, Jung treated Rowland Hazard an investment banker and former state

    senator from Rhode Island for one year. Jung told him he had seen alcoholic recovery

    after experience some type of religious conversion. After their meeting, Hazard

    associated with the Oxford Group a Christian movement action in America. The Oxford

    Group a religious movement was founded in 1908 by Frank Buchman and was extremely

    popular during the 1920s and 1930s (Finley, 2000). Bill Wilson a successful stockbroker

    in New York had a progressively serious alcohol problem and was told by Hazard from

    Oxford Group the peace of mind and sense of purpose he felt in his live because of the

    Oxford Group practice.

    Later, Wilson was prescribed with a copy of William James 1902 book The

    Varieties of Religious Experience, which was recommended reading by the Oxford

    Group. In 1909, Jung and Sigmund Freud travel to America to lecture at a celebration of

    the 20th anniversary of Clark University while there they met with Williams James to

    share psychological ideas. Jung (1948-1958) wrote A Psychological Approach to the

    Trinity about conversion experiences; it acclaimed how spiritual experiences came to

    people in dire circumstance, sever anguish, and calamity (Finley, 2000).

    Lemanski (2001) reported that recovery movement over the past 250 years has

    been more religious than a scientific enterprise. In 1840, the Washingtonians and the

    Women Christian Temperance Union offered recovery program that required acceptance

    of religious dogma. The Emmanuel Movement included some Freudian psychoanalysis

    to it spiritual approach Christian base (Lamanski, 2001). The Oxford Group Movement

    was Moral Re-Armament, in which finding God led to morality (Lamanski, 2001).

    Lamanski (2001) report that religious does not work for everybody, but psychological

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    treatment can help more clients achieve recovery by offering a broader arrow of

    treatment modalities and matching client to the modalities that worked best for him or

    her. All have been successful with some significant percentage of client, but Primary

    psychotherapeutic intervention Freudian psychoanalysis to more successful intervention

    (ML). Fajardo (2005) report that the first person alcoholism counselor was Courtney

    Baylor in 1913. The Common Sense Drinking, a book that influenced both Dr. William

    Silkworth and Bill Wilson was instrumental the development of treatment models. The

    Minnesota Model born out of Dr. Nelson Bradley and Dr. Dan Anderson took a team

    approach (Fajardo, 2005). In 1996, The American Society of Addiction Medicine

    (ASAM) devoted five chapters to the twelve Step programs, which is one full section of

    its manual (Fajardo, 2005). The 12 Step demonstrated effectively the ability to identify

    the problems, define the solution and design a program of actions necessary to bring

    about recovery (Fajardo, 2005). Iabna & Cohen Drug courts and laws like California

    Proposition 36 mandated the availability to treatment had support of public and treatment

    community.

    The Countrys Dilemma

    Beck et al (1993) report that addiction has become a countrywide dilemma of

    serious and legal problems. In fact, addiction is responsible fro more than 25% of

    property crimes, 15% of violent crimes, and 14% of homicides per year. American

    financial loss is estimated at $1.7 billion per year. The cost of criminal activities against

    addiction by federal agencies is approximately $2.5 billion in 1988, compared to $1.76

    billion spent in 1986. In addition, at least 14 million Americans used illegal drugs every

    month and peak months the total climbs to 25 millions users. Expert estimated that

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    approximately 2.3% of Americans over 12 years of age have used illegal drugs. He also

    states that one of every hundred people in the United States have serious problems with

    alcohol and are by clinical standards considered alcoholics. The number of regular

    cigarette smokers is estimated at approximately 49.4 million Americans. In addiction,

    Beck et al (1993) found that 37% of addicts had coexisting Axis I mental disorder; thus

    concluding that coexistence of addiction with other psychiatric disorder is very common.

    Alcohol use effect every body organ, heart, brain, liver, and stomach. Cocaine use

    is known to produce serious effects on the neurological, cardiovascular, and respiratory

    system. Cigarette smoking is link to cancer, heart disease, and birth defects. A major

    problem with heroin, nicotine, cocaine, and alcohol is chronic relapse; most addicts will

    relapse within 3 months. Pharmacological interventions such as antabuse, 12-step

    programs, methadone, naltrexone, and other preventive drugs are only limited in there

    effectiveness in eradicating addiction.

    Despite the American best efforts at domestic control through education,

    international interdiction, and vocations, the problems of addiction seen to be

    multiplying. Hunt, In a country with fluid social structure, a growing underclass of the

    poor, delinquent , and criminal, and influx of million of ill educated immigrants, a

    scientific way of treating alcohol and drug addiction was offered the leader of America a

    way to make social order out of chaos.

    Aaron Beck Substance Abuse Therapy

    Beck et al (1993) cite that addiction affect the human reward mechanism of the

    brain, which led to the two components of addiction, compulsive and obsessive

    behaviors. He also noted that social, environmental, and personality factors greatly affect

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    the development of addiction is way far beyond the pharmacological properties of the

    agents. Moreover, Beck (1993) indicated that addiction have certain cluster of addictive

    attitudes that lean to the despair associated with addiction.

    Sociological problem as well as psychological issues factor poverty, lack education,

    vocations (Beck et al) In 1960, Georgia Miller (Hunt, 1993) began a forceful movement

    known as the cognitive revolution. The movement explored human mental processes and

    expanded the knowledge of how the mind works. Later, an extraordinary development of

    six old sciences, cognitive psychology, neuroscientist, logician, anthropologist,

    psycholinguist, computer scientist collectively explored into a new dynamic knowledge

    of mental processes, especially the study of addiction.

    Therefore, successful treatment depends on the effectiveness in dealing with

    addictive potentials. Cognitive therapy is a well documented and research efficacious

    treatment model to deal with the pressing problems of addiction. Cognitive therapy is

    recommend by many psychologists. Cognitive therapy is a useful mesh of medial and 12-

    Step programs to deal with addiction.

    Beck et al. the main variable that influence treatment is the addicts avail

    themselves to all treatment opportunities, and the effects by the attitudes of treatment

    providers and clinical. The high-risk situations of drug abuse are negative and positive

    emotional and physical states, interpersonal conflict, social pressure or exposure to drug

    cues. Beck describes four cognitive processes: self-efficacy refers to ones judgment t

    deal competently with challenging on high-risk situation; outcome expectancies refer to

    the anticipation about effect of a addiction A/D or activity. Attributable drug use to

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    feeling better internal and external factors; decision-making that substance use is a result

    of multiple decision dependency on decision may or may not lead to substance use

    References:

    Alcoholic Anonymous (2001) Fourth Edition. Alcoholic Anonymous World Services,Inc. New York City.

    Bensely, D.A. (1998). Critical thinking in psychology: A unified skills approach. PacificGrove, CA: Brook/Cole Publishing.

    Beck, A.T., Wright, F. D., Newman, C.F., & Liese, B.S. (1993). Cognitive therapy ofsubstance abuse: New York: The Guilford Press.

    Fajardo, C. (2005) Alcohol/drug counseling and the 12 steps of Alcoholics Anonymous.Retrieved: January 17, 2006. fromhttp://www.manisses.com/AP/online/archives/2005/Jan.htm

    Finlay, S.W. (2000) Influence of Carl Jung and William James on the origin ofAlcoholics Anonymous.Review of General Psychology, 4(1),pp. 3-12. RetrievedJanuary 12, 2006 from EBSCOhost database gpr413 athttp://search.epnet.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=pdh&an=gpr413.

    Groves, P.M., & Rebec, G.V. (1988). The introduction of biological psychology (3rd ed.).

    Dubuque, IA: Wm. C. Brown Publishers.

    Hunt, M. (1994). The story of psychology. New York: Anchor Books.

    Inaba, D., Cohen, W.E. (2004) Uppers, downers, all arounders, (5th ed.).

    Narcotic Anonymous. (1998). Miracles happens: the birth of Narcotics anonymous inwords and pictures. Chatsworth: CA. Narcotic Anonymous World Service

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    Lemanski, M. (2001). A History of Addiction and Recovery in the United States.Tucson, AZ: Sharp Press. Retrieved: January 17, 2006 fromhttp://www.self-renewal.com/history_of_addiction_and_recovery.htm

    Wein, S. (1998). Platos Moral Psychology. Retrieved January 15, 2006. fromhttp://www.bu.edu/wcp/Papers/Anci/AnciWein.htm.

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