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The
following is
an interview with the author of Diseasing of America (1989). A
psychologist and an attorney, Stanton
Peele is an addiction expert with an
international reputation. The author of 120 articles and eight books about
chemical and relational addiction, Dr. Peele is a recipient of the Mark Keller
Award from the Rutgers Center for Alcohol Studies, and the Lindesmith Award for
Career Achievement in Scholarship from the American Drug Policy Foundation.
Q: Dr. Peele, do
you believe addiction is a disease?
A: No. Most
emphatically not. It has become the style to call negative behaviors, which
people often experience as compelling motivation, "diseases." As
though nail biting, overeating, and wife beating were like the malignant growth
of cancer cells. Much self-defeating and anti-social behavior has a common
thread. People engage in it because they feel degraded and disapproved of, which
feeds into their motivation to continue the negative behavior. But how
ultimately do people stop drinking too much, overeating, and biting their nails?
They feel, internally, that the balance of their desires and rewards is not to
act this way; people make positive choices when they feel they have the
opportunity to engage -and are supported - in more positive choices. The
toughest addiction to quit is smoking. Right now about 50 million Americans have
quit smoking, over 90% without a patch or formal therapy.
Q: How have we
progressed to thinking about addiction as a disease?
A: We have
developed a faith in medical advances that is steeped in the legend of the
"microbe hunters", the generation of researchers and physicians who
identified the bugs that cause many of the major killers of humans. This worship
of medicine has become a fetish in North America. If we can describe a malady in
medical terms, we feel we have somehow conquered it. Yet with psychological
disorders and problems of behavior, namely addictions - such labeling and
accompanying medical mumbo jumbo have not led to improvement in treatment
outcomes. In many ways, in fact, turning our sense of ourselves over to medicine
seems to be making things worse. Surveys repeatedly confirm that a generation of
education about addiction has led to people's spiraling out of control now more
than ever.
Q: What is the
science on which the disease proponents of addiction base their demand for
considering addiction a disease?
A: There is no
inherited mechanism that leads a person to be unable to control their substance
use, to go on tremendous binges, or to leave off their connection to people and
environments in order to consume a substance. Genetic theories, being the modest
things they are, can never explain the experience of loss of control. An
overview of the research on alcohol and drugs NEVER supports the wild claims
made by some proponents of the disease model. These claims reflect fundamentally
antiscientific attitudes and a lack of understanding of the confluence of human
motivation in response to experience, biology and external stimuli.
Consider this
example: A 1996 headline in The New York Times declared that
brain images of addiction in action show its neural basis. The article reviewed
research showing that many different drugs---namely heroin, alcohol,
amphetamines or nicotine---activate common neural pathways. Its author surmised
that these drugs bathe the neurons at these sites so as to reduce natural
supplies of dopamine, and thus stimulate a craving for more of the drugs to
compensate for this depleted supply of the neurotransmitter. And this was taken
to mean that addiction is purely brain driven.
In my critique of
this folly I explain that a wide range of activities stimulate the same pleasure
centers of the brain -- including sex, eating, working, consuming chocolate.
This should alert us to the fact that these brain theories tell us nothing about
differences in behavior, let alone addiction. Apparently, stimulation of a
pleasure center is only one small component in the entire addiction syndrome.
Moreover, if any activity can be pleasurable ---from work, to sex, to parenting
and so on---identifying activities as stimulating the pleasure center simply
begs the questions: Why do people find different things pleasurable and why do
different people react in destructive, addictive ways to some of these things,
while others incorporate them into a balanced overall lifestyle?
__________
Dr. Peele's position
is at odds within the drug reform movement. He is a proponent of harm reduction
policies such as needle exchange, but is a strong opponent of a treatment
industry that relies, for the most, on coercing addicts into rehabilitation.
©2000 Ilana Mercer
The
Calgary Herald
June 29
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