I need to hear other people's experiences with a drug called antabuse (it's for making you sick if you drink ANY...
58I have witnessed many people use this drug for alcohol withdrawals. I don't wish to comment on whether someone should take it or not, I believe this is something best left to the doctors of this world.
I do know it is dangerous in many cases to do a raw detox from alcohol. Unlike heroin et al it can actually kill a person if they do not have help for alcohol withdrawals.
The more important question though is what a person can do to stay clean. Again, I have witnessed many people get clean only to start drinking again after some time.
I'm no expert but there appear to be two schools of thought on this matter.
One favors CBT (cognitive behaviorial therapy) and the other relies upon a spiritual solution to the problem.
There is a great article at;
http://www.sedona.com/html/Alcohol-Addiction.aspx
(copy and paste the above URL into your browser or Google)
The sedona method is something that is both helpful for the alcoholic and those affected by their behaviors.
Let me know if this is of any help.
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Nice article DiamondRN, thanks for adding it :)
A great book for anyone interested in the history of AA (and its original members dependency upon a higher power) is 'Not-God' by Ernest Kurtz.
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Not God: A History of Alcoholics Anonymous
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DiamondRN says:
2 years ago
This article pretty much says it all.
Alcohol & Drug Abuse
Is Alcoholism a Treatable Condition?by Jeff Cohen
Alcoholism is a very treatable illness. This has been confirmed by a study of the US National Institute for Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, which showed that a majority of patients who attend government-supported treatment services recover.
The most common and usual treatment of alcoholic people is the psychological one. The ways this can be provided are quite varied. Psychiatrists use psychotherapy, one form of psychological treatment. The therapist and patient examine crucial emotional issues that affect the patient's view of the world, his responses, and behavior.
It is the emotional experience that is hoped will lead to individual growth and the development of different ways of responding. Psychological treatment can be provided either individually or in a group setting. There is no uniform opinion as to which type is most effective.
Therapy and drugs
Some people need what is known as aversion therapy. Aversion therapy is accomplished by giving the person some medicine that causes nausea and vomiting. This medicine is given at about the same time the person takes his favorite alcoholic drink so that an association of alcohol and sickness is created in the patient's mind. The person takes the alcohol and shortly after receives an injection of the vomit-producing medicine.
These sessions are repeated every other day until a total of four to six are completed. Every six months, a repeat treatment is administered. Electroshock techniques are also sometimes used in aversion therapy.
Another important form of treatment involves the use of the drug Antabuse, which was developed in Denmark in 1948. Antabuse causes an abnormal physiological reaction to alcohol. If a person taking Antabuse takes alcohol, he or she will, a few minutes later, feel a rush of heat, turn lobster red, feel a tightening in the neck, begin to cough and develop difficulty in breathing. Thirty minutes later, the person becomes nauseated, pale and scared, and begins to vomit.
The effect usually ends with the person falling into a deep sleep. All people find this experience frightening and uncomfortable. The major drawback of Antabuse is that is must be taken every day to be effective. Most doctors find it helpful in combination with other forms of treatment.
Emotional support
All people who treat alcoholics know that how you behave toward the alcoholic person at the first meeting is most important. The therapist has to reach out actively and be supportive because people with alcohol problems are depressed and expect to be rejected. Once the initial distrust of the patient toward helpers, society, and themselves is removed, treatment can be carried out.
One form of psychologic-spiritual help to alcoholic people is the great self-help organization called Alcoholics Anonymous (AA). This loosely organized voluntary fellowship is well-known worldwide. Its goal is sobriety achieved with help provided by the fellowship of fellow sufferers. Beyond its life-saving aid to thousands of alcoholic people, its great impact has been to point out to non-interested professionals that alcoholic persons can be helped.
AA waged a battle and created interest while others hid behind attitudes of moralism and pessimism toward alcoholism and its effects. AA supplies comradeship: all members suffer the same disturbance. AA encourages self-examination and confession. It encourages dependency, since members take others under their wing and create a group identity.
There are other forms of treatment. There is behavior modification treatment, which is related to aversion therapy. There is also hypnotism, transcendental meditation, multivitamin therapy, lithium therapy, and so on. All of these programs, with their special target thrust, depend on an approach tailored to the needs of the individual.
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Posted: Nov 13, 2006About The Author / Credits: SolveYourProblem.com : 2006 Web Site: email Address:
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