American Society For Addiction Medicine: Don’t Legalize Marijuana

SAN FRANCISCO — A medical society for addiction doctors has reiterated its opposition to marijuana legalization as its California chapter considers voicing its support for allowing and regulating adult use of the drug as a way to prevent its abuse by adolescents.

Directors of the American Society for Addiction Medicine meeting in Washington are scheduled on Sunday to discuss a report from three of its top California members that recommends replacing the state’s besieged medical marijuana program with a system that treats and taxes pot like alcohol.

“The best course at this point is to replace the current system of medical marijuana dispensaries and physician recommendations with a more strictly regulated system in which physicians are no longer gatekeepers for access, and fees and taxes from marijuana sales preferentially support education, prevention, and intervention for youth with marijuana-related problems,” reads the 15-page California Society for Addiction Medicine report, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press.

The provocative report is unlikely to produce any immediate changes in the national group’s anti-marijuana stance. Its board on Thursday restated its official position, last approved in 2006, that marijuana should not be legal for medical or recreational use until its health benefits and risks are more fully understood.

“We oppose any changes in law and regulation that would lead to a sudden significant increase in the availability of any dependence-producing drug,” the society’s board said in a statement. “This policy includes marijuana, a mood-altering drug capable of producing dependence as well as serious negative mental, emotional, behavioral and physical consequences.”

The move was not a response to the forthcoming recommendations from its California affiliate, but rather to the California Medical Association’s endorsement earlier this month of decriminalizing recreational marijuana use for adults 21 and over, said Stuart Gitlow, acting president of the American Society for Addiction Medicine.

“It’s an old policy, but it’s obviously timely right now given CMA’s newly released policy,” Gitlow said. “We had been getting a number of phone calls asking if we had any sort of policy regarding the same subject matter.”

Both the American Society for Addiction Medicine and the American Medical Association have urged the federal government in recent years to review marijuana’s status as an addictive substance with no medical value so it would be easier for scientists to obtain the drug and conduct studies on its medical efficacy and physiological effects.

But doctors in California, which legalized marijuana use for residents with physician recommendations 15 years ago, have felt the need to go farther due to the proliferation of medical marijuana dispensaries and specialty clinics that some think run counter to their profession’s aims.

Earlier this month, the 53 trustees of the California Medical Association approved a new policy that made it the nation’s first professional medical society to support making marijuana use legal for adults 21 and over and regulating the drug like alcohol or tobacco.

Donald Lyman, who chaired the nine-member committee that produced the policy, said the call for complete decriminalization was a reluctant, but clear-eyed acknowledgement that the federal government needs to be pressured to promote research on pot’s medical potential, and also that the medical underpinnings of California’s medical marijuana system are flimsy at best.

“We have become the gatekeepers to a substance that is largely nonmedical and there is no gate,” Lyman said. “There is no regulatory structure we can hang our hats on to say, this stuff is helpful for certain conditions and if you are going to inject it into the brownie, you better make sure it doesn’t have salmonella. It’s the absence of that solid foundation for this activity that really, really troubles us.”

Similar assumptions buttress the report from the president and two past presidents of state addiction doctors group. It states that while marijuana already is easy to obtain in California, adolescents are most at risk of developing addictions or other ill effects and that allowing adults to use the drug legally would make it harder for under-age users to access the drug and provide income that could be funneled toward treatment for young people.

“It should be clear by now that it is impossible to stamp out drugs,” the report says. “This fact ultimately leads us to confront the inevitable choice: non-medical drug markets can remain in the hands of unregulated profiteers or they can be controlled and regulated by appropriate government authorities.”

California Society for Addiction Medicine Timmen Cermak, one of the report’s co-authors, said the document was submitted for a vote of the chapter’s membership last week, but that it was premature to reveal the outcome given the upcoming presentation at the national meeting.

Gitlow said it would take at least a year and a review by several committees for the national group to consider changing its anti-legalization policy. Under the American Society for Addiction Medicine’s bylaws, chapters are prohibited from taking positions that run counter to the national board’s, he said.

“The reason it is coming before us for discussion is to see if California intends for it to become one of their policies and if they do, what would have to happen for them to do that,” Gitlow said. “At the moment, what would have to happen is ASAM would have to have a policy consistent with that.”

Kevin Sabet, a former senior adviser to the president’s drug czar and a fellow at the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Substance Abuse Solutions, said relying on hoped-for treatment and research dollars as a rationale for legalization is naive, if not “a hijacking from the legalization movement” of California’s medical establishment.

“Last time I checked, anti-binge drinking and anti-drunk driving programs weren’t a dime a dozen,” Sabet said. “They are not that plentiful because there aren’t funds for these types of programs, and these drugs are already legal.”

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Addiction doctors restate anti-marijuana stance

SAN FRANCISCO — A medical society for addiction doctors has reiterated its opposition to marijuana legalization as its California chapter considers voicing its support for allowing and regulating adult use of the drug as a way to prevent its abuse by adolescents. Directors of the American Society for Addiction Medicine meeting in Washington are scheduled on Sunday to discuss a report from three of its top California members that recommends replacing the state’s besieged medical marijuana program with a system that treats and taxes pot like alcohol. “The best course at this point is to replace the current system of medical marijuana dispensaries and physician recommendations with a more strictly regulated system in which physicians are no longer gatekeepers for access, and fees and taxes from marijuana sales preferentially support education, prevention, and intervention for youth with marijuana-related problems,” reads the 15-page California Society for Addiction Medicine report, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press. The provocative report is unlikely to produce any immediate changes in the national group’s anti-marijuana stance. Its board on Thursday restated its official position, last approved in 2006, that marijuana should not be legal for medical or recreational use until its health benefits and risks are more fully understood. “We oppose any changes in law and regulation that would lead to a sudden significant increase in the availability of any dependence-producing drug,” the society’s board said in a statement. “This policy includes marijuana, a mood-altering drug capable of producing dependence as well as serious negative mental, emotional, behavioral and physical consequences.” The move was not a response to the forthcoming recommendations from its California affiliate, but rather to the California Medical Association’s endorsement earlier this month of decriminalizing recreational marijuana use for adults 21 and over, Stuart Gitlow, acting president of the American Society for Addiction Medicine, said. “It’s an old policy, but it’s obviously timely right now given CMA’s newly released policy,” Gitlow said. “We had been getting a number of phone calls asking if we had any sort of policy regarding the same subject matter.” Both the American Society for Addiction Medicine and the American Medical Association have urged the federal government in recent years to review marijuana’s status as an addictive substance with no medical value so it would be easier for scientists to obtain the drug and conduct studies on its medical efficacy and physiological effects. But doctors in California, which legalized marijuana use for residents with physician recommendations 15 years ago, have felt the need to go farther due to the proliferation of medical marijuana dispensaries and specialty clinics that some think run counter to their profession’s aims. Earlier this month, the 53 trustees of the California Medical Association approved a new policy that made it the nation’s first professional medical society to support making marijuana use legal for adults 21 and over and regulating the drug like alcohol or tobacco. Donald Lyman, who chaired the nine-member committee that produced the policy, said the call for complete decriminalization was a reluctant, but clear-eyed acknowledgement that a) the federal government needs to be pressured to promote research on pot’s medical potential and b)the medical underpinnings of California’s medical marijuana system are flimsy at best. “We have become the gatekeepers to a substance that is largely nonmedical and there is no gate,” Lyman said. “There is no regulatory structure we can hang out hats on to say this stuff is helpful for certain conditions and if you are going to inject it into the brownie you better make sure it doesn’t have salmonella. It’s the absence of that solid foundation for this activity that really, really troubles us.” Similar assumptions buttress the report from the president and two past presidents of state addiction doctors group. It states that while marijuana already is easy to obtain in California, adolescents are most at risk of developing addictions or other ill effects and that allowing adults to use the drug legally would make it harder for under-age users to access the drug and provide income that could be funneled toward treatment for young people. “It should be clear by now that it is impossible to stamp out drugs,” the report says. “This fact ultimately leads us to confront the inevitable choice: non-medical drug markets can remain in the hands of unregulated profiteers or they can be controlled and regulated by appropriate government authorities.” California Society for Addiction Medicine Timmen Cermak, one of the report’s co-authors, said the document was submitted for a vote of the chapter’s membership last week, but that it was premature to reveal the outcome given the upcoming presentation at the national meeting. Gitlow said it would take at least a year and a review by several committees for the national group to consider changing its anti-legalization policy. Under the American Society for Addiction Medicine’s bylaws, chapters are prohibited from taking positions that run counter to the national board’s, he said. “The reason it is coming before us for discussion is to see if California intends for it to become one of their policies and if they do, what would have to happen for them to do that,” Gitlow said. “At the moment, what would have to happen is ASAM would have to have a policy consistent with that.” Kevin Sabet, a former senior adviser to the president’s drug czar and a fellow at the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Substance Abuse Solutions, said relying on hoped-for treatment and research dollars as a rationale for legalization naive, if not “a hijacking from the legalization movement” of California’s medical establishment. “Last time I checked, anti-binge drinking and anti-drunk driving programs weren’t a dime a dozen,” Sabet said. “They are not that plentiful because there aren’t funds for these types of programs, and these drugs are already legal.”

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Addiction expert testifying for Jackson’s doctor says singer likely was addicted to painkiller

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Counselor helps wealthy shoplifters overcome urge to steal

Some people call them teacher of the year, family doctor, engineer or Girl Scout leader.

Nancy Clark calls them clients.

For 15 years, Clark has run a shoplifting addiction treatment program on Old Newport Boulevard. Many clients attend in lieu of possible jail or prison sentences.

Despite stereotypes about petty thieves snatching items out of financial desperation, many of the folks in the program are well-to-do. They see shoplifting as an addiction that gives an endorphin rush on par with drugs.

One prerequisite for clients enrolled in Nancy Clark & Associates Inc.’s treatment program is that clients only steal items they can afford. The program is not for those who steal to support a drug or alcohol addiction — there’s another group for them.

Clark enforces a strict dress and grooming code during the 12-week program: no tank tops, men must be clean-shaven and hats and sunglasses are forbidden.

“I don’t want somebody to look like the Unabomber when they come to my office in the morning,” Clark told the Daily Pilot

That isn’t an issue for many in the largely female group. Many of the clients are professionals or publicly lauded in the community, but quietly steal items to satisfy an urge often begotten by feelings of loneliness, anxiety or frustration in their personal lives.

“The clientele I work with usually can afford the products,” said program director Kathy Escher. “They are professionals. … The risk-taking in shoplifting can work as an antidepressant. It’s just like any other high with any other addiction. The pleasure area of the brain that’s stimulated can be addictive.”

Many of the stolen items are meaningless or unusable to those who take them. Clark knows of someone who stole a single shoe and another who amassed three storage units worth of items, spanning a 25-year “career.”

According to Clark, some shoplifters are triggered by small stores filled with tchotchkes, while others feel a compulsion to act out in the aisles of big-box retailers.

The program aims for the root of why clients steal, emphasizing individual treatment coupled with group counseling to build a support network in which they can share feelings that compel them to steal. By the group’s estimates, they have a 4% recidivism rate of those who reoffend after completing the program.

One client named Elizabeth, 42, has been a stay-at-home mom for 20 years. She said Clark’s program helped her understand that she isn’t alone in her struggle with shoplifting.

“This is a real problem,” said Elizabeth, whose last name is being withheld by the Daily Pilot to protect her identity. “This is something you have to manage for the rest of your life. I’m a good, moral person. I know it’s wrong to steal. … For so long I didn’t realize why I was doing it. Basically you’re trying to fill a need.”

ALSO:  

Beverly Hills reports its first murder of 2011; suspect arrested

Occupy L.A. protesters say they have no plans to leave City Hall 

Conrad Murray trial: Final defense witnesses to testify Thursday

— Lauren Williams, Times Community News

Photo: Nancy Clark, a criminal justice consultant who deals with alternative sentencing programs, speaks with Joseph Mendoza, 32, of Brea, a DUI offender at her office in Newport Beach on Thursday. Credit: Kevin Chang / Daily Pilot

Read more http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2011/10/counselor-helps-wealthy-shoplifters-break-the-urge-to-steal.html

Breaking News: Former Toon star checks into rehab

FORMER Toon striker Michael Chopra has checked into the Sporting Chance rehabilitation clinic to receive treatment for a gambling addiction.

The 27-year-old, who also played for Sunderland and Cardiff, has spent the last four weeks based at the Hampshire clinic.

The Ipswich forward has suffered problems with gambling in the past, most notably while playing for the Black Cats in 2008.

Speaking on a radio show, Ipswich boss Paul Jewell spoke about his addiction.

He said: “Michael has had an addiction to gambling for some considerable time.

“We thought he was getting better, but he wasn’t, so off his own back he checked into the Sporting Chance Clinic after the Brighton game, on October 1.”

The Sporting Chance Clinic is a facility set up by former England and Arsenal defender Tony Adams to treat behavioural problems, such as alcohol, drugs and gambling addictions in professional and amateur sports people.

Read more http://www.sundaysun.co.uk/news/breaking-news/2011/10/27/former-toon-star-checks-into-rehab-79310-29672765/

Addiction Pioneer Dr. Akikur Mohammad Launches Inspire Malibu — the First Recovery Community of Its Kind

Press Release Source: Malibu Horizon/Inspire Malibu On Wednesday October 26, 2011, 2:34 pm EDT

MALIBU, CA–(Marketwire -10/26/11)- Dr. Akikur Mohammad, Founder of Malibu Horizon, the leading non 12-step treatment center in Malibu, California and Assistant Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and the Behavioral Sciences at the University of Southern California (USC.edu), today announced the opening of Inspire Malibu, the first collective community approach to residential addiction treatment to open its doors in the U.S.

Utilizing a team of the world’s top experts and proven scientific methods, Inspire Malibu is the first true recovery community to treat everything from food addiction to substance abuse in one communal facility. Located on the most exclusive property in Malibu, California, Inspire Malibu is being touted as the most advanced treatment model of its kind and is already recognized as the future of addiction treatment. A comprehensive addiction compound, Inspire Malibu is a cutting-edge treatment system to date, providing onsite detox, outpatient and residential treatment, and the finest expert addiction team available in one location.

Dr. Mohammad said, “Our team’s continued focus on using advanced medication for detox and to control cravings, our proprietary Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Motivational Enhancement Therapy (MET) models, our pure respect for the science of addiction and our truly individualized, holistic approach to addressing the critical therapeutic needs of Inspire Malibu’s patients, are critical parts of the equation; however, we are changing the landscape of treatment because we have eliminated the marketing poison traditional treatment centers have used for decades — addiction is a disease and must be treated with science, not religion!” Mohammad added, “While there is a very real place for the 12-step model in recovery, it is a self-help model, not a critical piece of the treatment blueprint and if it weren’t for many years of deceptive marketing, there would be many more treatment centers willing to be honest with patients and families about the fact that the 12-step model isn’t the best option for everyone. Our patients respond to the way we empower them with knowledge, not the message of powerlessness they hear in AA, the difference is profound.”

Inspire Malibu’s non 12-step, non-religious, secular approach to recovery, coupled with their groundbreaking community model has already delivered such prolific results that the community’s waiting list is daunting. “We will continue to add property and facilities to the Inspire Malibu community until we are treating everyone that wants to lead an abuse-free lifestyle. I have worked with traditional facilities for decades and what we are seeing with our new Inspire Malibu model is profound. We are building a recovery campus and we don’t have patients, we have students. All of which are unlocking the life they were supposed to lead by finding strength and a new brand of support in the community itself. The experience is humbling for us all,” said Mohammad.

For more information about Inspire Malibu and admissions, visit www.inspiremalibu.com.

Read more http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Addiction-Pioneer-Dr-Akikur-iw-3912535900.html

Florida House Launches Addiction Treatment Program for Professionals

The Professionals Program at The Florida House Experience aims to treat addiction and restore a healthy work-life balance when it matters most.

Deerfield Beach, FL (PRWEB) October 26, 2011

The Florida House Experience, a nationally recognized drug and alcohol rehabilitation center in Deerfield Beach, Fl recently announced the launch of their addiction treatment program for professionals. This specific program is geared towards career-minded individuals who need drug or alcohol dependency treatment to get their work and life back on track.

The Professionals Program is a great solution for the problems that arise from addiction when one’s career is at stake. Taking the patients’ careers out of jeopardy is the ultimate goal in this addiction treatment program as long term addiction recovery is achieved in a secure, relaxing environment.

Peter Marinelli with The Florida House says of the program, “Drug or alcohol abuse can affect anyone – even the most well-respected men and women of your community. Having a good job does not make you immune to the disease of addiction. Our program works for professionals because it is designed to save their career and reputation as they achieve sobriety. Their privacy is of the utmost importance in the process.”

The Florida House Experience has a variety of addiction treatment programs to meet the needs of many different individuals. This South Florida drug and alcohol treatment center offers medically supervised detox, residential inpatient drug treatment, outpatient addiction treatment and dual diagnosis treatment, among others.    

The programs at The Florida House Experience combine both individual and group therapy sessions, personal counseling, and patient education in a structured, supervised environment. For more information about the Professionals Program, call 866-421-6242 or visit http://www.FloridaHouseExperience.com.

###

Peter Marinelli
Florida House Experience
866-421-6242
Email Information

Read more http://news.yahoo.com/florida-house-launches-addiction-treatment-program-professionals-115210048.html

Rise in referrals for alcohol addiction

Rise in referrals for alcohol addiction

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

MORE people with chronic alcohol addiction are being referred to Cork-based treatment services, with experts claiming one factor could be the role of alcohol in the Roscommon abuse case.

Representatives of Tabor Lodge, a treatment centre in Co Cork, told an Oireachtas Committee on Health and Children yesterday that the number of referrals by social services to its centre had grown in recent years.

The committee also heard that attendance by Tabor Lodge clients at a step-down facility, Fellowship House, was being jeopardised as the Department of Social Protection has withdrawn a €19-a-night discretionary payment.

Of the 239 referrals made to Tabor Lodge last year, 181 involved alcohol.

Mick Devine, clinical director of Tabor Lodge, quoted from the inquiry report into the Roscommon case, in particular the parents’ “preoccupation with alcohol [which] clearly affected their parenting capacity [and] was manifested by the children often being left alone when the parents were in the pub and the older children having to fulfil adult roles.

“This abysmal scenario is reported daily in our services…”

Mr Devine, who is also clinical manager of Tabor Lodge, said he believed the Roscommon case was a factor in the increase in social service referrals.

Tabor Lodge admits over 230 clients a year and the core of its service is a 28-day residential service for 18 people at a time. Half of all admissions are in the 18 to 35 age group and Mr Devine stressed alcohol was “the main drug of choice”.

Finbar Cassidy, addiction manager at Fellowship House, said eight of its former clients died last year, either by suicide, or alcohol or drug abuse. Fellowship House can take 10 clients at a time on its three month programme, costing €260 a week per client. Half of this is covered by the clients attendance of an associated Community Employment scheme. Typically, the other €130 would be covered by the Exceptional Needs Payment of €19 a night, but this has now been removed.

Mr Cassidy added that it would affect the numbers attending, at a time when there is a 12-13 week waiting list for both facilities.

a d v e r t i s e m e n t

 

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