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When it comes to
thinking about addiction, opinions converge. Having bought into the addiction
industry's mantra, so-called social progressives and conservatives alike share
the same ideological hangover from the Prohibition era, with a twist of AA
sadism: all are religious about abstinence, and all accept as bible from Sinai
the wisdom of coercing addicts into treatment regimens. But perhaps the greatest
error made in the attempt at humane formulations about addiction is to cast as a
disease what is essentially a problem of behavior.
The dangers of
gathering more and more behaviors under the disease label is not something
pharmacology moguls, politicians or health care professionals ruminate about,
despite the ramifications for a society already committed to a morality lite and
to diminished personal responsibility. In his book Diseasing of America,
addiction researcher Stanton Peele breaks with this tradition. Disease
conceptions of misbehavior are bad science and morally and intellectually
sloppy, argues Peele. "Once we treat alcoholism and addiction as diseases,
we cannot rule out that anything people do but shouldn't is a disease, from
crime to excessive sexuality to procrastination."
While the application
of the medical disease model to addictions was developed to "remove the
stigma from these behaviors", there is no genetic marker for alcoholism or
drug addiction. Still, the misconception that these behaviors are linked to a
genetic vulnerability is aired repeatedly by the media, in the absence of
evidence. The rationale for using the disease model to describe addiction even
though it is intellectually dishonest is that medical treatment is effective.
Yet another
deception. An overview of controlled studies indicates that "treated
patients do not fare better than untreated people with the same problems."
Of note is a 4500-subject-strong 1996 US epidemiological study conducted by the
National Longitudinal Alcohol Epidemiological Survey. Treated alcoholics, it was
found, were more heavily alcohol dependent on average than untreated alcoholics.
Clearly a behavioral problem cannot be remedied by medical intervention. Addicts
are cured when they decide to give up the habit.
The disease
conception of addiction acts to isolate the noxious behavior from the person.
Thus when we claim that drugs, much like the flu, "get a hold" of you,
we conveniently deflect from that which mediates behavior: personality, values,
character or lack thereof. Once someone becomes involved with drugs, we explain
everything they do by saying it was due to the drugs, forgetting, in the process
of this circular argument, that the source of the addiction is the person and
not the drug. An honest look at drug-use means we cannot separate it from the
person.
Heroin addicts are
thus highly disposed to having social problems even before they become addicted,
and truancy and smoking behavior serve as good predictors of future drug use.
With the disease
label as a protective rampart, addicts have taken to comparing their
"disease" with having, let's say, diabetes or cancer. How opting to
shoot up for the first time, then doing it again, then stealing to get some,
even breaking and entering mimic the organic disease process in cancer or
diabetes is unclear.
As Peele explains,
addictive disorders are known only by the behaviors they describe. In the
absence of the ongoing behavior there is no way of telling whether the person
is, or will be addicted. "By claiming that alcoholics are alcoholics even
if they haven't drunk for fifteen years, alcoholism is made to seem less tied to
drinking behavior and more like cancer." But "a person does not get
over cancer by stopping a … behavior"…while "the sole and
essential indicator of successful remission of alcoholism is that a person
ceases to drink".
It is unfortunate
that the various preventive programs school kids are exposed to are delivered by
equivocating addicts-cum-activists who conveniently convey that "It"
can happen to anyone, that kids have little control and that once diagnosed as
an addict, always an addict. This sets in motion--where there is already some
drug use--a self-defeating cycle of abstinence and relapse, not to mention an
overall rise in drug related involvement.
Most youngsters
outgrow their occasional binges and turn into responsible adults. For doing what
they do as a rite of passage, teens and college students do not deserve to be
labeled diseased. What they do need is to be held accountable for their
behavior. Failure to hold the person who strays responsible for his actions
means that you cannot credit the person who doesn't. That's the logic of
diminished responsibilities all round.
For the rest, the
lingering paranoia of the temperance and prohibition era, which has culminated
in AA disease dogma, should be consigned to the historical dustbin.
©2000 by Ilana
Mercer
The
Calgary Herald
June 22
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