Painkillers, Heroin, and the Road to Sanity: Real Solutions for Long-term Recovery from Opiate Addiction

Painkillers, Heroin, and the Road to Sanity: Real Solutions for Long-term Recovery from Opiate Addiction

by Joani Gammill BRII
Painkillers, Heroin, and the Road to Sanity: Real Solutions for Long-term Recovery from Opiate Addiction

Painkillers, Heroin, and the Road to Sanity: Real Solutions for Long-term Recovery from Opiate Addiction

by Joani Gammill BRII

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Overview

Recovery from prescription painkiller or heroin addiction can feel impossible, with low numbers of people sustaining recovery. But there is hope. With guidance from those in long-term recovery, along with new approaches to treatment, a healthy, drug-free life is possible.

Recovery from prescription painkiller or heroin addiction can feel impossible, especially considering that those who have gone through typical twenty-eight-day treatment programs often experience relapses and sometimes even fatal overdoses. But there is hope.In Painkillers, Heroin, and the Road to Sanity, recovering addict and prominent interventionist Joani Gammill offers a radically effective approach for those struggling with opiate addiction, sharing sometimes controversial tips that have worked for others who are in long-term recovery. Gammill examines the science behind the low numbers of people sustaining recovery from the disease of opiate addiction. Tapping the pioneering work of treatment professionals whose new approaches are changing the way we think about opiate addiction, she offers practical steps for creating a realistic and effective recovery plan.Gammill affirms that recovery from opiate addiction is a process, not an event. This honest and trustworthy guide reveals that, although it may not happen in one detox or treatment experience, a healthy, drug-free life is possible.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781616495282
Publisher: Hazelden Publishing
Publication date: 06/10/2014
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 180
Sales rank: 1,022,180
File size: 967 KB

About the Author

Joani Gammill, former RN, has appeared regularly on “Dr. Phil” where she has led interventions that have inspired millions of viewers. Before her career as an interventionist, she worked as a registered nurse in medical facilities including a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center. She is also the author of The Interventionist (Hazelden, 2011).Joani lives in Annapolis, Maryland.

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Preface

“Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil walks about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour.”
--1 Peter 5:8

That passage from the New Testament warns about the dangers people face in life, but to us addicts it has a special meaning. It speaks directly to our struggles with addiction, which stalks us for so much of our lives. Opiate addiction is recognized by the medical community as a brain disorder. According to the 2005 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, almost two million Americans are opioid dependent. Addicts have moments, months, and years of reprieve, but like all other chronic, lifelong diseases, addiction flares up again and requires further treatment to get well. We call this a relapse. I hate the word “relapse.” It conjures up failure, which is so far from the truth.

In this book, I challenge the conventional thought that if a twenty-eight-day rehab “did not work,” it was a failure. Recovery from opiate addiction is a process, not an event. I have received bits of wisdom from every rehab facility I attended that ring in my ears and come out of my mouth as I speak about recovery. I went on to many more rehabs after my first, Father Martin’s Ashley, and it is Father Martin’s wisdom that continues to stay with me more than any other: once the bell has been rung, you cannot unring it. Getting well from this disease does not happen in one event, one rehab, one detox, one out-patient treatment. Like some diseases, it can take many different treatment modules to gain long-term sobriety. Thus it is a process.

In this book, I explore approaches to recovery that motivate addicts to do what needs to be done to stay well. I look at the scientific explanations for the low rate of sustained recovery for opiate addiction--the relapse rate is currently 93 percent--and at what the strong, committed folks in recovery say is the problem with sustaining recovery.

But science is only part of the story. I also explore my own struggle with opiates and share what the elements are that I think have given me my longest remission to date. I write about the commonalities I have seen between my struggle and the struggles of my patients who suffer from opiate addiction. I look back at some of the interventions I have done and provide updates on how those patients are doing today.

I also look at the insurance industry and the fact that not enough benefits are provided for people to get what they need to get well. We vilify the addict, but the real enemy is the lack of resources for people to get the health care they need. State resources are abysmal, and the rehabs they provide are not always very effective; they are more like revolving-door crash pads for detox only.

As I interweave the story of my own long love affair with opiates with the stories of others with whom I have come into contact, I offer hope, illuminating what I feel to be the missing links to long-term sobriety. Opiate addiction is a complicated issue, but I believe that if we approach it from a different direction, we can help reduce the carnage that results from it. The problem is huge, and I am under no delusion that I can fix it. But I can shed light on it, calling to arms those with the power to effect change. I do, in a sense, help fix the problem with every intervention I do. I jokingly say, “I am working in the war on drugs, one person at a time.” Still, that might not be too far from the personal solution for many families, even as other advocates work hard every day on a larger level to help solve this pervasive, costly, and devastating problem.

Again, addiction is a chronic, recurring disease like many others. People who suffer from other chronic diseases get a sympathetic pass when their diseases return, but addicts get scorn. That’s not fair. I want to give hope to those suffering with addiction and to the people who love them. There is a Yiddish saying, “If you save one life, you save the world entire.” This book is a chain letter of hope.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xi

Introduction xiii

Chapter 1 The Road to Heaven and Hell: A Brief History of Opiates 1

Chapter 2 The Brain on Opiates 11

Chapter 3 Trauma, Psychiatric Disorders, and Addiction 23

Chapter 4 Heroin: Old Enemy with a New Face 39

Chapter 5 Money, Money, and More Money: The Salvation and Curse of Prescription Drugs? 47

Chapter 6 The Door Is Closed: Barriers to Addiction Treatment and How to Overcome Them (Sometimes) 59

Chapter 7 Moms with Babies and Other Special Groups 71

Chapter 8 The Pain Game: Real or Not? 87

Chapter 9 Alternative Treatments for Opiate Addiction 103

Chapter 10 Laws That Might Help Stem the Tide of Prescription Drug Deaths 115

Chapter 11 The Disease of Addiction and Why I Hate the Word "Relapse" 129

Chapter 12 Dry Drunk and a Grocery Cart 141

Chapter 13 Hope: Real Solutions for Improving Opiate Addiction Treatment and Recovery 157

Appendix A Your Plan for the First Five Days Sober and Drug-Free 169

Appendix B The Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous and Narcotics Anonymous 173

Appendix C Resources 177

Notes 179

About the Author 185

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