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Dual Addiction Therapy

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Addiction is usually not a problem that rises out of nowhere. It is usually linked to anxiety, or depression and this is known as dual diagnosis. Individuals who are diagnosed are most likely to have these mental issues that run in their family. If the father in the family is an addict it is more likely for the child to learn these habits through observation as an acceptable or harmful coping method. (Pinel). One in every three people diagnosed actually seek help for their addiction. There is a thin line between recreational consumption and addiction.
The addicted brain becomes dependent and seeks that simulation. The release of dopamine or the pleasure the substance brings triggers the reward center of the brain, tricking it into believing …show more content…

It is harmful and definitely can cause rebellion to attack or directly judge a victim of addiction. With a positive approach, therapists can share their knowledge about addiction and lead them toward recovery. Having a therapist who has previously dealt with addiction themselves can be not surprisingly more helpful because they will be able to relate to the patient and share their experiences to spread the awareness.
This can also serve as a source of hope for the patient, seeing a post addict, as a professional now reaching out to other addicts and giving them the support, knowledge, and resources they need to achieve recovery (Warren, Cisler, Weatherford, Syamilah 2013). Addiction therapy needs to be non bias, stereotype free, and understanding trained, educated professionals. According to the Council of Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP) standards revised in 2009, counseling students need to be properly and thoroughly educated on how to deal with substance abuse …show more content…

In a controlled experiment they gave rats two options and two environments. They gave the rat’s pure drinking water, and next to it a bottle of heroin infused water. In one cage the rat had a non-stimulating environment, and was isolated. That rat chose to drink from the heroin water, and built up an addiction. He would push the bar up to one hundred times per minute. Since he had no other outside influences he built up a tolerance and needed the drugs more than sleep, sex, and eating which eventually lead to his death.
In the other cage, the rats were still given the choice between the pure drinking water or the heroin infused water. The difference was that they had what was called a rat heaven. This rat was surrounded with partners, toys, food, exercise equipment, and hardly ever chose the heroin water. That rat would much rather eat and mate and run on the wheel that drink from the water (Pinel). Does this prove that addiction is not a conscious decision, but rather a biological disposition that can be affected by the environment? Since addiction varies between species and some love drugs where others hate them, the results in testing on these rats were it heightened their impulsive behavior, which was directly caused by the availability of the substance, lack of stimulation, and the environmental change (Ferland, Zeeb, Yu, Kaur, Taves, Winstanley

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