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Relapse and Chronic Relapse - is Recovery Possible?
Yes recovery is possible, In fact Relapse is not
part of recovery. Relapse is a symptom of ineffective treatment
programs. Statistically 75%-90% of all alcoholics or addict will
relapse within the first year of release from traditional treatment
programs. The short term 28 day inpatient model or outpatient programs have in the past demonstrated these failure rates.
Addicts and alcoholics usually do work the programs they are taught
and do give their best
efforts. Unfortunately many addicts fail. You hear from the professionals
"he didn't work the
program" or "he's not ready, he hasn't hit his bottom".
In fact the program has failed the
addict and their family.
Relapse is a heartbreaking event for a family it can in fact be
the breaking point.All too often
relapse is where the family takes a hard line and tells the addict
to "do it on their own" or "we
can't help you anymore". This is the time families are needed
most. There are other treatment
options such as programs that have higher success rates or that
offer "peace of mind" guarantees
to families. This is the time for long
term effective care that will treat the bio-physical drug
cravings and the underlying
emotional pain, the root of the addiction.
Typically a 3-5
month residential program with 4-6 months of follow-up aftercare
is the recommended treatment
method, for most hard-core addictions
Never Give Up!
Addiction and alcoholism are
tricky afflictions. The addict has most likely deeply hurt the
family. Lying, cheating, stealing, job loss,
violence, even criminal behaviors are all symptoms of
the addictive behavior. If these were the
symptoms of cancer would you give up? Of course not,
you would try other treatments. You would
go to the end of the earth to find something to save
your loved one's life. If you have a chronic
relapse victim in your life you are in the same position
as a terminal cancer patient's family if
not effectively treated. The addict/alcoholic will die or end
up in prison. Unfortunately addiction is
viewed all too often in the light of a lack of will power or
the addict just wants to get high and doesn't
care about his family. This could not be farther from
the truth.
Never giving up should not to be confused with enabling on the
part of the family. The enabling
behavior is destructive and must be stopped immediately upon identifying
the active addict or
alcoholic. The family must provide treatment options only. For
the addict unwilling to get
treatment professional intervention is recommended.

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