OP-ED: Stuck in a Silo: Wall Street Journal Stigmatizes Addiction Healthcare

OP-ED: By failing to provide a global context for his critique of addiction healthcare treatment (“10 things rehab centers won’t tell you,” May 21, 2014), Wall Street Journal Market Watch reporter Charles Passy undercut the credibility of his argument and stigmatized – which seemed to be his real goal – a reputable branch of the U.S. healthcare system.

Passy sought to focus his assessment of behavior-related disease healthcare treatment only on the consumption of alcohol or drugs, while ignoring behaviors such as smoking or poor eating habits, behaviors that lead to asthma, hypertension, heart diseases, and diabetes.

Instead of providing a balanced and nuanced perspective, Passy preferred to play on existing social prejudices of alcohol and drugs and analyzed the subject in a silo.

For example, Passy noted, correctly, that the National Institute on Drug Abuse estimates the relapse rate among drug addicts to be 40% to 60%.

What is the point of highlighting this isolated statistic?

Stop the presses! Drug treatment is a failure!

Right?

Wrong.

It’s wrong when drug addiction relapse is more accurately assessed in the broader context of other addictive behavior healthcare treatments.

In an article, published in The Lancet in 1996 by Charles O’Brien and Thomas McLellan (former Deputy Director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy) found that 30-60% of insulin-dependent diabetic patients have a reoccurrence of their symptoms each year and require at least re-stabilization of their medication and/or additional medical interventions to re-establish symptom remission.

The authors also noted that 50-80% of hypertensive and asthmatic patients have a reoccurrence of their symptoms each year and they too require at least re-stabilization of their medication and/or additional medical interventions to re-establish symptom remission.

This means that they relapsed into behaviors that spawned their disease.

Comparatively, they found relapse rates for alcoholism treatment are 30% – 60%, opioid dependence are 20-50% and cocaine dependence are 40-50%.

O’Brien and McLellan point out that despite these relapse rates for diabetes, asthma and hypertension there is no debate in the public of the value of health care for these chronic, relapsing conditions. Yet, with similar or better results, addiction treatment is continually questioned as effective or even necessary.

And that’s what Passy is doing.

By targeting only alcohol and drug treatment – and leaving out an analysis of health care treatment of other behavior-related, chronic diseases – Passy is, essentially, undermining and stigmatizing the underlying credibility of substance abuse treatment.

A more honest analysis would acknowledge that in regards to healthcare treatment for behavior-related, chronic diseases that no single, one-time wonders or silver bullets exist.

The time has come to change this debate, dispense with prejudice, and, in fact, to emphasize the need to expand treatment of addiction.

Why?

Because it works.

A 2005 study of more than 800 Illinois adults and a 2009 study of more than 700 adolescent clients in Illinois found that 12 months post treatment:

  • Adults reported a 58% decrease and adolescents reported a 42% decrease in drug and alcohol use
  • Adults reported a 56% decrease in the number of days experiencing emotional or behavioral problems
  • Adolescents reported a 36% decrease in the number of days experiencing emotional or behavioral problem

What these numbers reveal is that substance abuse treatment is not perfect, but that it is indeed effective. And effective is the accepted, professional health care standard – not medical miracles.

Had Passy bothered to assess addiction treatment without prejudice, within a broader health care context, and with an accepted standard of success, he would have provided valuable insight to Wall Street Journal readers.

Sara Moscato Howe, CEO, IADDA

Top U.S. Drug Official David Mineta Speaks at 40th Youth Anti-Drug Abuse Conference

Deputy Director for Demand Reduction David Mineta at the Executive Office of the President, Office of National Drug Control Policy took a selfie before addressing the 550 Illinois at the Cebrin Goodman Teen Institute on Sunday.

Deputy Director for Demand Reduction David Mineta at the Executive Office of the President, Office of National Drug Control Policy took a selfie before addressing the 550 Illinois at the Cebrin Goodman Teen Institute on Sunday.

(Springfield, IL) – A top U.S. drug prevention official this weekend appeared in Central Illinois to speak at an Illinois youth substance abuse prevention organization’s summer conference marking the group’s 40th anniversary.

Deputy Director for Demand Reduction David Mineta at the Executive Office of the President, Office of National Drug Control Policy on Sunday attended and spoke at the opening ceremonies of the Cebrin Goodman Teen Institute conference at Eastern Illinois University in Charleston.

The Cebrin Goodman Teen Institute, administered by the Springfield-based Illinois Alcoholism and Drug Dependence Association (IADDA) and which is celebrating its 40th anniversary, hosted nearly 550 Illinois youth at Eastern Illinois University who heard Mineta speak at the conference’s opening day regarding the role of young people in the battle against alcohol and drug abuse.

“The message that I have for the participants at the Cebrin Goodman Teen Institute is that youth can be effective advocates for positive change in their schools and their communities to prevent drug and alcohol abuse,” said Mineta.

A former youth prevention program manager in San Francisco, Mineta, who oversees the agency’s newly created focus on programs for individuals in recovery from addiction, said, “Effective advocacy requires leadership skills and the ability to communicate the benefits of preventing drug and alcohol abuse.”
Mineta, who has held his post since June 2010, also brought greetings from President Barack Obama to the students attending the youth anti-drug forum.

“I also bring greetings to you from the President and note that the President firmly believes in youth and your ability and potential to make positive change in your communities,” Mineta said.

Mineta’s visit, which was the first time that a White House drug policy official has participated at the Teen Institute, launched the four-day conference that features other speakers, discussion groups, and workshops that aim to arm middle and high school students from across the state with the necessary leadership skills to persuade their friends, family, and neighbors that each has a role to play in the fight against alcohol and drug abuse, according to IADDA’s chief.

“The Cebrin Goodman Teen Institute provides youth the opportunity to meet new people, learn new skills, but, most importantly, to become a force for positive change in their schools and communities,” said IADDA CEO Sara Moscato Howe.

The conference, held on the Eastern Illinois University campus, runs from July 20 through July 24.