Week of March 13, 2001
Mental illness and addiction: for 10 million Americans these
debilitating disorders, hard enough to cope with on their own,
are a deadly team. Sharing their first hand experiences with dual
diagnoses are Robert, a client at New York's innovative
Institution for Community Living, and writer Emily Carter.
Former deputy drug czar Dr. Herbert Kleber and Jean
Henry, clinical director of Journey House, in Louisville,
Kentucky discuss challenges in diagnosis and treatment. Dr.
Alvin F. Poussaint recalls the loss of his schizophrenic older
brother to drug related suicide, and the mental health crisis
among African-Americans. And Dr. H. Westley Clark, Director
of the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, at the Office of
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services, outlines SAMSHA's
strategies to further the mental health field's effectiveness
in this field, and answers calls from concerned family members
of those living with the double jeopardy of addiction and psychiatric
illness.
In an opening essay, Dr. Fred
Goodwin comments that many times he sees treatment of depressed
and manic-depressive patients run into obstacles when they have
a chemical dependency that has not been factored into the treatment
equation. He points to an alarming trend - manic depression is
on the rise among young people. Why? Dr. Goodwin suggests that
substance abuse may be the culprit, as it may kindle an existing
genetic pre-disposition for manic depression, and so activate
it. This raises the stakes in preventing drug abuse among kids
with family histories of mental illness.
The Institute for Community Living
(ICL), in New York City, provides carefully designed therapeutic
communities for people with severe mental illness and chemical
dependency to tackle their problems. Robert, 35, will soon
graduate from an ICL residential center to an out-patient program,
shares his early experiences with addiction and depression. For
more information about The Institute for Community Living, and
the range of programs it offers, log onto www.iclinc.net
or write to The Institute for Community Living, 40 Rector Street
New York, NY 10006. Tel: (212) 385-3030.
Next we hear from Dr. Herbert
Kleber and Jean Henry, L.S.W. Dr. Kleber is a Professor
of Psychiatry at Columbia University Medical School and the New
York State Psychiatric Institute, where he directs the Division
on Substance Abuse. Ms. Henry is clinical director of Wellspring's
Journey House, in Louisville, Kentucky. Dr. Kleber points out
that at least one out of three people with chemical addiction
suffer from a co-existing mental disorder. Addiction can mask
underlying disorders or trigger them. In making a diagnosis, he
asks questions like "Is there a family history of mental illness?"
"Did the psychiatric disorder persist throughout abstinence?"
and "Which appeared first?" He points out that managed care sometimes
fails to provide clinicians and clients with enough time to make
an accurate assessment.
Dr. Kleber discusses the role of
neurotransmitter imbalances in psychiatric disorders and addiction.
Dopamine, for instance, is in short supply and handled erratically
in the brains of people with schizophrenia and depression. Cocaine
use boosts dopamine levels, but throws off the already imbalanced
system, requiring ever higher levels to set off the dopamine receptors.
Chronic chemical abuse also creates long-term effects on the brain.
Dr. Kleber encourages families of people with co-occuring mental
illness and addiction to do get them treatment, but warns "not
all treatment is created equal."
Ms. Henry discusses her own experience
in being diagnosed with manic depression eight years into her
recovery for addiction. At Journey House, Ms. Henry has worked
to provide "integrated" treatment for women facing homelessness,
addiction, and mental illness. "We take both diagnoses as primary,"
she says. This approach calls for more flexibility than traditional
substance abuse treatment offers, for instance, being willing
to work with clients who relapse, rather than kicking them out.
"We tell clients 'You don't have a character defect, you have
an illness.'" Ms. Henry urges family members to get support for
themselves, for instance through contacting the National Alliance
for the Mentally Ill (NAMI) at http://www.nami.org
or Al-Anon at http://www.al-anon.alateen.org.
To learn more about Journey House,
and Wellspring's other programs, write to Wellspring P.O. Box
1927 Louisville, KY 40201 or call: 502-637-4361. To contact Dr.
Herbert Kleber, write to: Dr. Herbert Kleber, New York State Psychiatric
Institute, 1051 Riverside Drive, Unit 66, New York, NY 10032.
Next, writer Emily Carter
reads from her new book, Glory Goes and Gets Some, a collection
of short stories, most of which are told in the voice of the title
character. Glory's heroin habit lands her in a drug rehabilitation
facility in Minnesota, which Glory dubs "Land of Ten Thousand
Treatment Centers." Ms. Carter reads from a story called 'The
Bride.' "Heroin was the boyfriend that removed the need for boyfriends.
Heroin removes any importance or relevance from social interaction.
Image such bliss. I was even willing to hang around with other
white, pretentious, privileged heroin users to get to the stuff."
Glory Goes and Gets
Some reflects Ms. Carter's own experiences with drugs, depression,
and recovery. For Ms. Carter, the first years of recovery from
addiction revealed depression as her major issue. For the first
time, she made a point of taking her anti-depression medication
"religiously." The anti-depressants gave her the energy to take
on other depression fighting measures like exercise and volunteer
work, "all those things that if you tell a depressed person to
do they'll say 'Are you kidding? I can't even find my socks.'"
Recovery has required absolute honesty with herself, which Carter
draws strength from in her writing. "You can't bamboozle
your
readers. If you can sense a false note, so will they."
You can order
Glory
Goes and Gets Some by clicking here. To
contact Emily Carter, write to her in care of Coffee House Press,
27 North 4th St., #400, Minneapolis, MN 55401.
Our next guest is Dr. Alvin F.
Poussaint, Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School
and the Judge Baker Children's Center in Boston. He is the author,
with journalist Amy Alexander, of Lay My Burden Down: Unraveling
Suicide and the Mental Health Crisis among African-Americans,
published by Beacon Press. Dr. Poussaint begins by recalling his
older brother, Kenny, who had discovered heroin in his teen years
and was diagnosed as a young man with paranoid schizophrenia.
He was hospitalized for his schizophrenia, but after his release
was soon back in his addiction, and struggled with it for many
years. Kenny died at the age of 42 from meningitis contracted
through using a dirty needle, a death that Dr. Poussaint calls
suicidal. In discussing the mental health crisis among African-Americans,
Dr. Poussaint points out that many blacks have a deep mistrust
of health care professionals, stemming in part from a long history
of unequal treatment and even experimentation. Risk-taking behavior
like drug use and homicidal behavior can mask underlying suicidal
impulses, made worse by the overall stressors of discrimination
and resulting low self esteem. Dr. Poussaint recommends that African-Americans
move past equating an acknowledgement of mental illness with weakness,
and that the mental health community show greater sensitivity
to African-American concerns.
Dr. Alvin Poussaint can be contacted
at the Judge Baker Children's Center, 3 Blackfan Circle, Boston,
MA, 02115-5794 or can be e-mailed at Alvin_Poussaint@jbcc.harvard.edu
Finally, Dr. Goodwin interviews
Dr. H. Westley Clark, who heads the Center for Substance
Abuse Treatment at the Office of Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services (SAMSHA) SAMSHA is the Federal agency charged with improving
the quality and availability of prevention, treatment, and rehabilitative
services in order to reduce illness, death, disability, and cost
to society resulting from substance abuse and mental illnesses.
Dr. Clark discusses the need for
comprehensive treatment for co-existing addiction. Dina, a caller
from New Jersey, brings up the problem of doctors proscribing
addictive medications like benzo-diazepenes to depressed patients
who have a history of addiction. And Diana, also from New Jersey,
calls to share the tragic result of a hospital's rejection of
her son's appeals for hospitalization for homicidal feelings.
Days after the hospital refused him in-patient treatment, her
son over-dosed on drugs. Dr. Clark brings up the need for better
training of physicians, who may discount the full scope of an
addict's condition, and the need for more resources and education
in general. For family members, Dr. Clark advocates they do what
they can to create a safe environment, for instance, by not keeping
alcohol in the house if they are living with an alcoholic. Family
members also continue to play an important role in coordinating
treatment efforts between doctors, psychiatrists, substance abuse
counselors, the client, and other family members.
To find out more about SAMSHA and
the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, log onto www.samsha.gov.
E-mail for SAMSHA or Dr. Clark can be sent to info@samsha.gov.
SAMSHA's telephone number is (301) 443-8956.
Other Information and Links:
The National Alliance for the
Mentally Ill (NAMI) is a nonprofit, grassroots, self-help,
support and advocacy organization of consumers, families, and
friends of people with severe mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia,
major depression, bipolar disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder,
and anxiety disorders. You can reach NAMI at Colonial Place Three,
2107 Wilson Blvd., Suite 300, Arlington, VA 22201, call 1-800-950-NAMI
[6264] or visit at http://www.nami.org.
Dual Recovery Anonymous is
an independent, twelve step, self-help organization for people
with a dual diagnosis. We are chemically dependent and we are
also affected by an emotional or psychiatric illness. To contact:
write to DRA, Central Service Office P.O. Box 218232 Nashville,
TN 37221-8232, call toll free 1-877-883-2332 or 1-888-869-9230
or on the Internet at http://www.draonline.org
http://www.soberrecovery.com/links/dualdiagnosis.html
Links to dual diagnosis web sites, support groups, up to date
information, etc.
http://users.erols.com/ksciacca/
Kathleen Sciacca has worked in the field of dual diagnosis
since 1984, providing important training to health care providers
in the field. Her site features good information and links.
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