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Can You Get Over an Addiction (www.nytimes.com)

 

Great column by Maia Szalavitz who is the author of “Unbroken Brain: A Revolutionary New Way of Understanding Addiction.”

There are, speaking broadly, two schools of thought on addiction: The first was that my brain had been chemically “hijacked” by drugs, leaving me no control over a chronic, progressive disease. The second was simply that I was a selfish criminal, with little regard for others, as much of the public still seems to believe. (When it’s our own loved ones who become addicted, we tend to favor the first explanation; when it’s someone else’s, we favor the second.)

We are long overdue for a new perspective — both because our understanding of the neuroscience underlying addiction has changed and because so many existing treatments simply don’t work. Full article.

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Robert Olcott posted:

If one's "world view" only sees the "dispositional factors" (medical model of disease), rather than also seeing the "situational factors" (public health model of disease), it may help to read Vincent Felitti's paper: "The Origins of Addiction: Evidence from the Adverse Childhood Experiences study". 

Robert:

Thanks for mentioning that paper by Dr. Felitti. I hadn't read it. Here's the link for others as well.

http://www.nijc.org/pdfs/Subje...iginsofAddiction.pdf

Cissy

If one's "world view" only sees the "dispositional factors" (medical model of disease), rather than also seeing the "situational factors" (public health model of disease), it may help to read Vincent Felitti's paper: "The Origins of Addiction: Evidence from the Adverse Childhood Experiences study". 

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