Thursday, June 11, 2020

Will the pandemic lead to an alcoholism epidemic?

Rise in stress drinking has experts worried.
Quarantinis.  Zoom happy hours. Front-door liquor delivery.

The boredom of staying home and the intense anxiety produced by the pandemic has caused a spike in alcohol sales and Twitter jokes about drinking before noon.

Addiction experts say they are worried it also could trigger more serious drinking problems and even create new ones for people who have never struggled with alcohol dependency before.

“I expect we’re going to see pretty significant increases in what I call unhealthy alcohol use, which means drinking above recommended limits,” said Dr. Sarah Wakeman, an addiction medicine doctor at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.

Before the pandemic, Mhairi McFarlane, a novelist in Nottingham, England, had been thinking of cutting back. But the first week she was in quarantine, she said, she was “cheerfully” having three or four drinks a night, usually gin and tonics or “very cold bottles of cava.”

“It was very much not my style of drinking,” she said. “I’ve always associated drink with going out and being social. I was never really one for opening a bottle of wine in front of the television.”

She woke up one Thursday with a headache and a sense that her body was unhappy with what she was doing. Worried that things were getting out of control, she hasn’t had a drink since.

“My brother said of all the shocks of 2020, ‘none have been as great as you becoming the poster girl for sobriety,’ ” McFarlane said.

Kelly Rubinsohn, an opera singer in Philadelphia who has a day job as an office manager at an architectural firm, lost both gigs when the quarantine started. Drinking has been a salve during a difficult time, she said.

“There is literally nothing else to control,” she said. “I can at least make a cocktail.”

More alcohol sales

Liquor store sales have jumped 55% compared with last year. But it is unclear if Americans are consuming more alcohol or if the increase is the result of people simply replacing the drinking they normally do at bars and restaurants.

Still, addiction specialists say they are watching carefully to see how isolation will affect drinking and drug use in general.

Historically, drinking and drug use rise when people experience wars, terrorist attacks or natural disasters, but those are typically localized events, said Adam Leventhal, director of the University of Southern California Institute for Addiction Science.

“A pandemic of this magnitude affecting the entire globe is something we’ve never encountered before,” he said. “Every person is being affected by it.”

A study published in April in the Asian Journal of Psychiatry showed a sharp increase among people in China, where the pandemic originated, who reported “harmful drinking” during isolation. People between the ages of 21 and 40 were particularly susceptible, the study found.

Harmful drinking is defined as drinking to excess in a way that leads to health problems. Alcohol dependency, or alcoholism, is characterized by cravings that are difficult to control and a preoccupation with alcohol that leads to continued drinking even when a person knows it will have negative consequences.

“Social isolation, limited interaction and financial distress are causing excessive stress, which has direct correlations with alcohol consumption,” said Md Zahir Ahmed, an author of the study, which showed that the rate of harmful drinking and dependence went up 6.7% during the lockdown in China.

Support missing

The pandemic has reduced access to social support networks, while alcohol remains fairly easy to get. That combination means “there remains a threat to develop new substance-use disorders,” even among casual drinkers, Ahmed said.

People should not fret that they are addicted to alcohol because of a few nights of heavy drinking, Wakeman said. But at the same time, it’s not a good idea to shrug off a recycling bin full of empty bottles.

“Everyone is cutting themselves some slack because these are crazy times,” she said. “But the same way we do with food and exercise and concerns about obesity, we want to have some benchmarks for how to stay healthy.”

People should seek help if family and friends express concerns about their drinking, if they continue to want to drink even if it causes problems or if their drinking begins to get in the way of everyday responsibilities, like taking care of their children or working, Wakeman said.

Harm Reduction for Alcohol is a Facebook group that supports people who want to reduce how much they drink. The group’s founder, Kenneth Anderson, said he recently circulated a poll asking members about their drinking during the pandemic. Of the 187 who responded, more than half reported that they were drinking more than usual, he said.

“Most of our people are pretty aware of how much they’re drinking,” Anderson said. “They know they’re stressed. They know it’s a rough time.”

Andrew Beile, an out-of-work bartender in Liberty, Mo. said that while a bar will cut off a customer who has overindulged, a person drinking alone at home can lose track of how much they have consumed.

“When there is not a professional bartender pouring your drinks,” he said, “it’s very easy to overdo it very fast.”

Courtesy of StarTribune.com

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Sunday, April 12, 2020

Detox and Nutrition

Turning Point Treatment Center has recently partnered with The Health Dude of Orange County, CA. The HealthDude is a unique collaborative of dedicated nutritionists, physicians, trainers and community leaders who provide education, awareness, and knowledge to everyone worldwide in order to help others in achieving their health and nutritional goals, and in turn promote healthy habits.

The Health Dude Detox

Detoxing your body is a cleansing of all that contaminates the body, this includes chemicals we ingest with the processed foods we eat on a daily basis. Our diets are directly related to our health, so if poor eating habits, fast-food addiction, and a sedentary lifestyle are currently apart of your life than many of the protocols below can be essential to you in reaching your health and nutritional goals. Please reference the HealthDude Juicing, Smoothie, Exercise, & Healthy Living Protocols.

How To Choose A Drug Rehabilitation Facility?

It’s Easier than you think… Just find one that has a detox nutrition program that they really care about, you can feel whether they are genuine or not….

As a consultant in the industry, I noticed that to have a successful drug Rehab Clinic there are some crucial factors that make or break an organization. Some of those factors are: A strong leadership, honesty, trust, well organized, experienced counselors, and a solid treatment program. However, one of the most overlooked factor is nutrition. Nutrition, that supports the physical medium of recovery has been demonstrated again and again that clients that receive a good nutrition program feel better during detox and are up to 80% less likely to relapse. That makes perfect sense, if your nutrition is optimal then you are less likely to be irritable and less likely to cravings and that ultimately affects your ability to make good sound decisions – which is the crucial element in recovery.

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Monday, March 16, 2020

Tips On How To Beat Drug Addiction

It is said that no two persons are alike. Some of us are born tall; others, small. Some of us have white skin paired with blonde hair while others have brown skin and black hair. Many of us differ from one another. Not even the twins are successful in copying each other’s genetic makeup or their psychological interests and interest. Indeed, all of us are created unique from one another.

People also vary in interest. A brother may not have the same passion for one hobby with his sister. Brothers may not share the same weaknesses and this may also be applicable with sisters.

Another thing that made people unique from one another is the fact that each and every one of us has a unique need though we have the same organs and capabilities. There are people who are born with an ailment such as asthma, anemia, and many more while others are completely healthy from head to toe.

With diversity comes an opportunity to learn and appreciate the things that you do not have. People on the planet differ in the color of their skin and eyes, their height, and everything that makes them human. Others are renowned to have a beautiful faces while others are just the usual.

Drug rehab centers such as TPT Center Executive Drug and Alcohol Treatment considers the idea that everyone is different from one another and with that comes the fact that we have a wide-ranging set of needs.

This is the reason why, before our treatment, we first take a note of the patient’s medical history, personal background, etc. You may seem to think that it is an invasion to your privacy but it is a requirement for you to experience quality services under our care.

How can gathering such information help us, especially you, in your treatment? Let us talk about how your choice of treatment services can give a great impact to your stay here in TPT Center.

First of all, how do you choose the best service that will match your only one of its kind needs? Consider first the accreditation and licensing of the program, the helpfulness of the program’s treatment methods, and the type of aftercare services to help you prevent relapse.

  • Accreditation and LicensingIt is very significant to know and be confident that the program you will be undergoing is approved in and around the state. Also, make sure that the people who will be caring for you although this program are trusted by the license and experience they hold to performing the program. TPT Center offers programs that are tested and trusted by the American population and have been accredited and licensed in the country. We pride ourselves with our staff who are known to be composed of professional, experienced, and licensed individuals.
  • HelpfulnessA Drug rehab center should also inform not only the patient but also the rest of the world the effectivity of their program. This is to ensure the clients of the success of their offered programs. We assure you that TPT Center only offers programs that are successful in getting you out of our addiction phase to help you live life anew.
  • Type of Aftercare ServicesRelapses are one of the pains you can experience while you are on a rehabilitation program. Is there a proper and effective program that will help an addict in these times? To answer your doubts, always ask yourself and your caretakers the following questions:
    • Is there an efficient after care program?
    • Does that after care program have any referrals to other support groups and recovery services that are available in the community?

In TPT Center, we make sure that your treatment does not only last until the last day of the program. We make sure that you get rid of drugs and/or alcohol in your system by having our staff member create a discharge plan right after you finish your program and before you leave the center for the community.

After you have ensured a checklist for the mentioned characteristics, it is of the essence that you have a good background of the different drug treatment program types.

  • Residential treatmentThis treatment requires the patient to live in the center’s treatment facility while undergoing the processes and programs of rehabilitation. This type of treatment may commonly last from 30-90 days.
  • Intensive Outpatient ProgramPatient is subjected to be committed to intensive rehabilitation programs that are conducted while the patient is out in the community. This program usually allows the addict to meet with us, in the very least, 2-3 hours a day and 3 days a week.
  • Partial HospitalizationThis program typically meets addicts at the hospital for at least 3-5 days a week and 4-6 hours a day. It is applicable for people who require an ongoing medical monitoring.
  • CounselingThis includes individual, group or family. This therapy helps an addict overcome his or her addiction through interacting with other people to help them in their journey. This can identify the root cause of the addict’s drug abuse and/or alcohol abuse, learn healthier coping mechanisms, and mend broken relationships.
  • Sober livingThis acts as a follow-up to your residential treatment to avoid relapse. You may live with a fellow recovering addict before going back to the community.

Now that you know the different types of drug treatment programs, make sure that you choose a drug treatment program that best adapts to your needs.

TPT Center Drug and Alcohol Treatment offers the following Treatment Programs:

  • Residential Inpatient
  • Outpatient Program
  • Addiction Intervention Services (Counseling and many more)
  • Medical Detoxification
  • Executive Programs

If you want to know more of these programs, do not hesitate in asking us anything.

Choose the best option for your unique needs. Go with TPT Center and make us a Drug rehab center partner in your journey to recovery.

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Monday, March 9, 2020

Smartphone Addiction Has Same Effect On Brain As Drug Use, Claims New Study

How smartphone addiction changes your BRAIN: Scans reveal how grey matter of tech addicts physically changes shape and size in a similar way to drug users

  • German researchers examined the brains of 48 participants using MRI images
  • Total of 22 people smartphone addicts and 26 non-addicts made up the cohort 
  • Researchers found diminished grey matter volume in key regions of the brain 
  • Similar phenomenon observed in people who suffer with substance addiction

A new study has found that smartphone addiction has the same effect on the brain as drug addiction — specifically lowering grey matter volume in certain areas of the brain. According to The Daily Mail, the shocking results were discovered after MRI images were taken of brains with smartphone addiction, known as SPA.

The images taken by the MRI found that smartphone addiction physically changes the shape and size of the brain, most particularly in regards to grey matter.

Grey matter in the brain is vital, as it contains a majority of neuronal cell bodies and includes the regions that are associated with muscle control, speech, and seeing and hearing. It also has a strong effect on one’s mental wellbeing, housing the areas that are in charge of emotion, memory, decision making, and self-control.

“This study provides first evidence for distinct structural and functional correlates of behavioral addiction in individuals meeting psychometric criteria for SPA,” the paper, published in Science Direct, notes.

The experiment, conducted at Heidelberg University in Germany, examined 48 participants, of which 22 suffered from smartphone addiction and 26 did not.

The results showed that a startlingly large number of areas in the brain were affected by smartphone use.

“Compared to controls, individuals with smartphone addiction showed lower grey matter volume in left anterior insula, inferior temporal and parahippocampal cortex,” the researchers claimed.

“A significant negative association was found between [smartphone use] and both [anterior cingulate cortex] volume and activity,” they continued.

Article courtesy of TheDailyMail

 

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Friday, February 28, 2020

Medication Treatments Led to 80 Percent Lower Risk of Fatal Opioid Overdose for Patients

Patients with opioid use disorder (OUD) receiving treatment with opioid agonists (medications such as methadone or buprenorphine) had an 80 percent lower risk of dying from an opioid overdose compared to patients in treatment without the use of medications.

The new findings, published online February 25 in the journal Addiction, are a collaboration between researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the Maryland Department of Health, and multiple Maryland State agencies.

The majority of research examining the effectiveness of medication treatment for OUD in population-based studies has been conducted outside of the U.S. and compares patients receiving treatment to those receiving no treatment. This is one of the first U.S. population-based studies, the researchers say, to compare overdose risk among two patient populations across an entire state—one whose treatment includes agonist medications, and a control group receiving psychosocial interventions without agonist medication.

The team of researchers additionally found that being in any kind of treatment for OUD (with or without medication) is protective against overdose compared to not being in treatment at all. However, neither treatment type offers any additional protections against lethal overdose once patients leave treatment.

Nationally, approximately 60 percent of patients entering specialty treatment for OUD do not receive medication, and many patients with access to medication treatment prematurely discontinue care. This is often due to persisting stigma around the use of medication to treat OUD along with logistical barriers involved in accessing medication treatment, which can, in turn, lead to relapse and overdose.

The researchers also found that taking medication while in treatment offered no protection against fatal opioid overdose once patients left treatment. “This lack of post-treatment protection highlights the need to promote better retention strategies so that patients can remain in treatment as long as it continues to help them,” said Noa Krawczyk, PhD, assistant professor, Center for Opioid Epidemiology and Policy in the Department of Population Health at NYU Langone Health, and lead author of the study.

They also found that overdose risk was highest in the first month after leaving treatment, for both medication and non-medication treatment groups.

How the Study Was Conducted

Krawczyk and colleagues examined administrative claims records for publicly-funded outpatient specialty treatment programs in 2015 to 2016 for 48,274 patients with primary diagnosis of opioid use disorder. The research team then linked these claims to mortality data provided from Maryland’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner. Seventy-two percent of the patients in treatment received medication during the study period, while 28 percent did not (a breakdown that differs significantly from the national landscape, where less than 40 percent of patients in treatment receive medication for OUD).

Accounting for time, the researchers compared four distinct groups: people receiving non-medication treatment, people receiving treatment with medication, people no longer in treatment but who left non-medication treatment, and people who left medication treatment.

“Getting people in the door and started on medication treatment is a great first step, but retention in treatment is equally important,” says Krawczyk. “Because of this, we need to remove barriers to continuation of care, adopt more harm reduction approaches and employ better strategies to encourage and enable people to stay in treatment.”

Study Limitations 

Krawczyk and colleagues identify a number of study limitations. Findings relied on administrative data used for payment and not research, which limits clinical information available. The investigators also clustered all types of non-medication treatment together and were unable, for example, to distinguish between specific non-medication treatment types such as counseling relative to detox. Similarly, they grouped buprenorphine and methadone together; they did not compare patients using different opioid agonists. Finally, the study focuses only on patients receiving outpatient specialty treatment and does assess overdose risk among patients receiving buprenorphine in primary care settings.

In addition to Krawczyk, study co-authors from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Public and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine include Ramin Mojtabai, PhD, Elizabeth Stuart, PhD, Michael Fingerhood, MD, Deborah Agus, JD, Jonathan Weiner, DrPH, and Brendan Saloner, PhD. Co-authors from the Maryland Department of Health include Casey Lyons, MPH.

Funding for the study was supported by Grant No. 2015-PM-BX-K002 awarded to the Maryland Department of Health by the Bureau of Justice Assistance of the U.S. Department of Justice. This research was also supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (F31DA047021, NK supported).

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Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Preventing mental health disorders may be key to thwarting the opioid crisis

What constitutes mental illness is widely misunderstood. Many people immediately think of schizophrenia or other forms of psychotic or dissociative diseases (e.g., multiple personality disorder), as portrayed in the movies. Sufferers of these illnesses are relatively easy to detect, given obvious alterations in thinking, emotion and behavior. Other disorders such as depression and anxiety, however, are not often readily apparent, even though they are much more common.

Regardless, the opioid crisis has raised our consciousness about the role of these disorders in addiction; science tells us that one begets the other. Given that there are more overdose deaths each year than the number of homicides and suicides combined, we must invest in policies that promise to prevent addiction, not simply treat it after it rears its ugly head. Prevention policies imbedded into national strategies promise to ensure that these problems do not continue to become entrenched, unabated, costing countless lives and precious dollars.

I grew up in a low-income neighborhood outside of Washington, D.C., that was riddled with child abuse, violence, and crime.

Gloria is representative of just one of the many people I knew who traveled along a pathway from trauma to depression, including subsequent attempts to stem the pain through drug use, and in far too many cases — debilitating addiction. And because it was so clear to me that these pathways to addiction could be avoided, I decided to devote my career to the field of prevention, which has documented the ability to avert these pathways toward more positive outcomes using science-informed strategies

Today, it is well established that adverse childhood experiences, such as those Gloria endured, significantly increase the likelihood of a person developing mental illness, addiction, or both. People exposed to early adversity such as child abuse, poverty, or caregiver addiction disproportionately develop opiate use problems at a rate twice that found in the general population.

The use of painkillers is 50 percent higher in middle and high school students who grow up in toxic environments. And once teens start misusing prescription painkillers (oxycodone and morphine), approximately 80 percent will transition to opiate dependence.

Although a healthy mix of both prevention and treatment has been recommended by scientific experts to tackle the opioid crisis, treatment has been vastly underfunded and prevention has been virtually ignored.

Effective prevention practices are substantially more cost-beneficial than treatment alone over the long haul. Economic studies consistently report the cost-effectiveness of early, sustained prevention efforts embedded in public health systems.

Noteworthy examples include PROSPER (middle school programs in rural Pennsylvania) shown to reduce opioid use by 10-35 percent, suicide prevention programs targeting Native American Youth (for every dollar spent, $10.67 are saved), and programs to reduce youth risk factors for mental illness such as the Good Behavior Game (for every dollar spent, $81 are saved) by addressing underlying problems before it is too late.

Current policies, however, prioritize the treatment of mental disorders after they have taken root. An example of this reactive policy-driven approach is that insurance coverage is not generally provided until the individual qualifies for a specific diagnosis.

Our health care systems are geared towards medical models of diagnosing “diseases” and only treating them after they manifest as full-blow disorders.

Courtesy of TheHill.com

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Monday, February 10, 2020

Addiction Treatment for Couples

Call Turning Point Treatment Center’s at 949-383-4439 #CouplesDrugRehab

Seeking addiction treatment together in a rehab for couples can be beneficial for a number of reasons, especially when both partners are committed to the relationship and to becoming clean and sober. Providing that both partners are willing to start the recovery process, couples rehab can help not only break the cycle of addiction, but also fortify the relationship by helping the couple examine and change the issues that led to their addiction in the first place.

Turning Point Treatment Center is Pet Friendly

Couples who are addicted to drugs or alcohol often experience difficulties with setting boundaries, expressing feelings, making decisions, parenting, and handling finances. Couples rehab provides education, skills, training, and counseling to help partners achieve improved ways of handling these difficulties. Even if just one partner has an addiction, the other partner can benefit from couples rehab by learning to manage specific triggers and helping the other stay sober. Whether one or both partners require addiction treatment, specialized couples rehab teaches the tools needed to overcome obstacles, prevent relapse, and achieve long-term recovery.

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