What actually happens in treatment programs
 
Although treatment programs differ, the basic ingredients of treatment are similar. Most programs include many or all elements presented below.
 
Assessment
All treatment programs begin with a clinical assessment of a person’s individual treatment needs. This assessment helps in the development of an effective treatment plan.
 
Medical Care
Programs in hospitals can provide this care on site. Other outpatient or residential programs may have doctors and nurses come to the program site for a few days each week, or a person may be referred to other places for medical care. Medical care typically includes screening and treatment for HIV/AIDS, hepatitis, tuberculosis, and women’s health issues.
 
A Treatment Plan
The treatment team, along with the person in treatment, develops a treatment plan based on the assessment. A treatment plan is a written guide to treatment that includes the person’s goals, treatment activities designed to help him or her meet those goals, ways to tell whether a goal has been met, and a timeframe for meeting goals.The treatment plan helps both the person in treatment and treatment program staff stay focused and on track. The treatment plan is adjusted over time to meet changing needs and ensure that it stays relevant
 
Group and Individual Counseling
At first, individual counseling generally focuses on motivating the person to stop using drugs or alcohol. Treatment then shifts to helping the person stay drug and alcohol free.
 
The counselor attempts to help the person
  • See the problem and become motivated to change
  • Change his or her behavior
  • Repair damaged relationships with family and friends
  • Build new friendships with people who don’t use alcohol or drugs
  • Create a recovery lifestyle.
Group counseling is different in each program, but group members usually support and try to help one another cope with life without using drugs or alcohol. They share their experiences, talk about their feelings and problems, and find out that others have similar problems. Groups also may explore spirituality and its role in recovery.
 
Individual Assignments
People in treatment may be asked to read certain things (or listen to audiotapes), to complete written assignments (or record them on audiotapes), or to try new behaviors.
 
Education about Substance Use Disorders
People learn about the symptoms and the effects of alcohol and drug use on their brains and bodies. Education groups use videotapes or audiotapes, lectures, or activities to help people learn about their illness and how to manage it.
 
Life Skills Training
This training can include learning and practicing employment skills, leisure activities, social skills, communication skills, anger management, stress management, goal setting, and money and time management
 
Testing for Alcohol or Drug Use
Program staff members regularly take urine samples from people for drug testing. Some programs are starting to test saliva instead of urine. They also may use a Breathalyzer to test people for alcohol use.
 
Relapse Prevention Training
Relapse prevention training teaches people how to identify their relapse triggers, how to cope with cravings, how to develop plans for handling stressful situations, and what to do if they relapse. A trigger is anything that makes a person crave a drug. Triggers often are connected to the person’s past use, such as a person he or she used drugs with, a time or place, drug use paraphernalia (such as syringes, a pipe, or a bong), or a particular situation or emotion.
 
Orientation to Self-Help Groups
Participants in self-help groups support and encourage one another to become or stay drug and alcohol free. Twelve-Step programs are perhaps the best known of the self-help groups. These programs include; Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), Narcotics Anonymous (NA), Cocaine Anonymous, and Marijuana Anonymous. Other self-help groups include SMART (Self Management and Recovery Training) Recovery7 and Women for Sobriety.
 
Members themselves, not treatment facilities, run self-help groups. In many places, self-help groups offer meetings for people with particular needs. You may find special meetings for young people; women; lesbian, gay, and bisexual people; newcomers; and those who need meetings in languages other than English. Internet chat groups and online meetings are also available for some groups.
 
Many treatment programs recommend or require attendance at self-help groups. By attending, many people make new friends who help them stay in recovery. The number of meetings required varies by treatment program; many programs require participants to attend “90 meetings in 90 days,” as AA and NA recommend. Some treatment programs encourage people to find a “sponsor,” that is, someone who has been in the group for a while and can offer personal support and advice.
 
Self-help groups are very important in most people’s recovery. It is important to understand, however, that these groups are not the same as treatment.
 
There are self-help groups for family members, too, such as Al-Anon and Alateen (see the “Just for You” section of this booklet).
 
Treatment for Mental Disorders
Many people with a substance use disorder also have emotional problems such as depression, anxiety, or posttraumatic stress disorder. Adolescents in treatment also may have behavior problems, conduct disorder, or attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder.
 
Treating both the substance use and mental disorders increases the chances that the person will recover. Some counselors think people should be alcohol and drug free for at least 3 to 4 weeks before a treatment professional can identify emotional illness correctly. The program may provide mental health care, or it may refer a person to other sites for this care. Mental health care often includes the use of medications, such as antidepressants.
 
Family Education and Counseling Services
This education can help you understand the disease and its causes, effects, and treatment. Programs provide this education in many ways: lectures, discussions, activities, and group meetings. Some programs provide counseling for families or couples. Family counseling is especially critical in treatment for adolescents. Parents need to be involved in treatment planning and follow up care decisions for the adolescent. Family members also need to participate as fully as possible in the family counseling the program offers.
 
Medication
Many programs use medications to help in the treatment process. Although no medications cure dependence on drugs or alcohol, some do help people stay abstinent and can be lifesaving. Medication is the primary focus of some programs, such as the medication-assisted OTPs discussed earlier. Methadone is a medication that prevents opioid withdrawal symptoms for about 24 hours, so the person must take it daily. Taken as directed, it does not make a person high but allows him or her to function normally. In fact, methadone blocks the “high” a person gets from an opioid drug.
 
Some people stay on methadone for only 6 months to 1 year and then gradually stop taking it; most of these people relapse and begin to use opioids again. However, others stay on methadone for long periods of time or for life, which is called methadone maintenance treatment. People receiving this treatment often have good jobs and lead happy, productive lives.
 
If your family member is taking medications for HIV infection or AIDS or for any other medical condition, it is important that OTP staff members know exactly what he or she is taking. Mixing some medications with methadone or LAAM may mean that your family member will need special medical supervision. Buprenorphine is another medication that may be used to treat opioid dependence and is sometimes used by OTPs. Buprenorphine recently was approved for treatment by primary care doctors in their offices. A doctor treating a patient with buprenorphine generally will provide or refer the patient for counseling, also.
 
Disulfiram (Antabuse7) is a medication that causes a bad reaction if people drink alcohol while taking it. The reaction is flushing, nausea, vomiting and anxiety. Because people know the medication will make them very ill if they drink alcohol, it helps them not to drink it. Antabuse is taken daily
 
Another medication, naltrexone (ReVia7), reduces the craving for alcohol. This medication can help keep people who drink a small amount of alcohol from drinking more of it. Programs also sometimes use naltrexone to treat heroin or other opioid dependence because it blocks the drug’s effects. It is important for people who use heroin to go through detox first, so they are heroin free before starting to take naltrexone.
 
Because it is very difficult for a person to detoxify from opioid drugs, many people don’t make it that far; buprenorphine is sometimes used to help people make that transition. If a person does detoxify from opioids and begins to take naltrexone, it still will not work well for this purpose unless a person has a strong social support system, including someone who will make sure that he or she continues to take the medication regularly. When an adolescent is taking naltrexone to treat opioid dependence, it is particularly important that parents provide strong support and supervision
 
Follow up Care (Also Called Continuing Care)
Even when a person has successfully completed a treatment program, the danger of returning to alcohol or drug use (called a “slip” or relapse) remains. The longer a person stays in treatment, including follow up, the more likely he or she is to stay in recovery. Once a person has completed basic treatment, a program will offer a follow up care program at the treatment facility or will refer him or her to another site. Most programs recommend that a person stay in follow up care for at least 1 year. Adolescents often need follow up care for a longer period.
 
Follow up care is very important to successful treatment. Once a person is back in his or her community, back in school, or back at work, he or she will experience many temptations and cravings for alcohol or drugs. In follow up care, your family member will meet periodically with a counselor or a group to determine how he or she is coping and to help him or her deal with the challenges of recovery.
 
For some people, particularly those who have been in residential treatment or prison based programs, more intensive forms of follow up care may be helpful. Halfway houses or sober houses are alcohol- and drug-free places to live for people coming from a prison-based or residential program. People usually stay from 3 months to 1 year, and counseling is provided at the site or at an outpatient facility.
 
Supportive living or transitional apartments provide small group living arrangements for those who need a sober and drug-free living environment. The residents support one another, and involvement in outpatient counseling and self-help groups is expected.
 
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