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subject: What Do Alcohol Intervention Programs Offer [print this page]


Although alcoholism and drug treatment interventions could be good at coercing people into a conventional 12 step or healing rehabilitation, the question that lots of people are interested in is at what cost? It is true that the substance user has been stopped, albeit for a while, and is taken to a treatment facility. Now the obvious question must be asked: Is the drug user going to a therapy course that could teach him/her the way to overcome substances, or is it likely to teach vulnerability, furthering the drug user's progression toward misery and failure in life?

These are very important questions that have to be asked before shelling out your time and money for alcoholism intervention programs. It will be much better to understand the facts and dangers of the treatment that is being recommended beforehand. Is the treatment is dependant on the control model, thus creating learned helplessness and a greater chance for future failures, or is it in accordance with the Freedom Model, thereby building self-confidence and self-respect that have been related to long term success? These too are serious questions you should ask prior to sending a family member or yourself away to an alcoholic intervention program while looking for a good life.

It's also necessary to find out if the recommended treatment facility has an independent verified post-program rate of success. Additionally, ask about the program's definition of success, as many programs just use program completion rates, affected individual-reported decrease in usage data or totally fabricated success rates solely for marketing purposes. In some treatment scenarios, substance users slow down or quit their usage temporarily to get their families or close friends off their backs. The substance user complies out of sheer frustration and might attend therapy, only to be released and get drunk again, often within several hours or days of completion.

As the choices that drug users make are often cruel and destructive, those close to them search seriously for a reasonable, or even an illogical explanation (as in the case of rejection). Interventionists make use of this information against the drug user who has no real defense. When confronted, drug abusers are in no position to argue that they don't have a problem, even if they have freely made the choice to make use of substances and to follow pleasure by doing this. Even more appalling is the instance where the subject of the treatment really does not have a drug or alcohol problem. The amount of individuals erroneously sent to alcohol and drug rehabilitation by interventionists is large, especially among the younger people.

by: Teodora Atanasoff




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