Summer House
Ibogaine Detox and Treatment Jul 09, 2008
Since the 1960s, many addicts have reported that even a single dose of ibogaine, a hallucinogenic alkaloid extracted from the root of an African shrub, helps them kick their habit by reducing their cravings for drugs. And there is hard evidence to back these claims, as well. Ibogaine was first introduced as a potential treatment for opiate addiction by Howard Lotsof, who took the drug in 1962 looking for a psychedelic experience, and awoke 30 hours later with no cravings and no withdrawal symptoms, despite being a heavy heroin user at the time. Lotsof was able to develop and follow an ibogaine maintenance program, which he then followed for three years while remaining opiate free. In 1986, Lotsof opened a company by the name of NDA International to advocate for the use and research of ibogaine and its active constituents as anti-addictive compounds.
Since ibogaine aides in the cessation of addiction, it started to be used to deal with opiates and other substance addictions. Ibogaine has only been introduced to Western scientific medicine but has documented use by the Bwiti tribe in Central Africa for centuries. At lower doses ibogaine has the ability to increase energy and mental alertness and appears to decrease the desire for food and drink. Higher doses (20+ mg/kg) of ibogaine have a larger psychoactive property, and is used ritualistically in initiation rites for its potent hallucinogenic properties.
Barbara E. Judd, CSW did a study on ibogaine and stated that the most difficult aspects of treatment are getting the patient to enter treatment. She notes that the three major obstacles are the fear of detoxification lack of insight, and the inability of patients to control their urges to use drugs. It was in these three areas where she felt the benefits of ibogaine treatment far outweighed those of traditional methods. Judd further states that psychological fear of pain and withdrawal prevents many addicts from even attempting detox. Addicts feared having to deal with the emotions that lead them to use in the first place. Judd adds that when patients learn the benefits of ibogaine they are more willing to try it.
Like all forms of detox, ibogaine is not without risks and side effects. At therapeutic doses, ibogaine has an active window of 24 to 48 hours, is often physically and mentally exhausting and produces ataxia for as long as twelve hours. Nausea that may lead to vomiting is not uncommon throughout the experience. These side effects reduce the attractiveness of ibogaine as a recreational drug at therapeutic doses, however, at lower doses ibogaine is known to have stimulant effects. It is still a controversial and experimental drug and there are some cases of fatal cardiac arrhythmias.
There are two types of ibogaine treatment. The first type of treatment is oriented toward addiction, most commonly heroin dependence, and typically involves dosages in the range of 15 to 25 mg/ kg .5-8 The second type of treatment, also know as “initiatory," involves a dosage on the order of 8 to 12 mg/kg, or about half of the dose used for addiction and is used for spiritual insight and facilitating psychotherapy. In addition to reducing craving, ibogaine often promotes a sense of wellbeing that can last from weeks to months. As the studies into the nature of ibogaine progress, scientists have discovered that ibogaine’s anti-additive properties are actually two-fold. First, when the substance is consumed, the body produces a chemical called noribogaine. Noribogaine blocks the brain’s receptors that control cravings. Noribogaine also increases dopamine and serotonin levels, which elevate feelings of wellbeing.
So while ibogaine is not a substitute for drugs, and is not addictive, ibogaine is a chemical dependence disruption and a chance for patients to get a head start on recovery. Ibogaine enables the patient to focus on the underlying causes of addiction without going through the intense withdrawal symptoms that accompany most types of detoxification. And, even if there are some remaining symptoms after ibogaine detox they are more tolerable than other detox approaches. Studies show that ibogaine has the ability to drastically attenuate drug withdrawal in all patients and, in 90 percent of treated patients during one case study, to interrupt the patient’s craving to continue drug use for periods of time ranging from as short as two days to as long as two and a half years from a single treatment.
Drug dependence is a universal public health problem of which opioid dependence, notably involving heroin and morphine are a major component. In Europe alone, there are an estimated 1.1 million intravenous drug users and the number is estimated to be at least 3 times that many in North America. The majority of these individuals remain untreated. Opioid dependence is a chronic relapsing medical condition that requires long-term treatment and patient support. In addition, many of these intravenous drug users share syringes and needles, a practice that can lead to the transmission of serious blood-borne infections including human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis B and hepatitis C.
Currently opiate dependence treatments like methadone can be dispensed only in a few centers that focus in addiction treatment. There are not enough addiction treatment clinics to assist all patients seeking treatment. Suboxone is the first narcotic drug available under the Drug Abuse Treatment Act (DATA) of 2000 for the treatment of opiate dependence that can be prescribed by a physician. Hopefully, this advance in therapeutics will provide more patients the opportunity to access treatment.
Suboxone (buprenorphine with naloxone) is currently available for the maintenance treatment of opioid addiction. The intention of adding naloxone to the formulation is to deter intravenous misuse and reduce the symptoms of opiate dependence. Suboxone treatment is intended for use in adults and adolescents more than 16 years of age who have agreed to be treated for addiction.
Once detoxification of the individual is completed, Suboxone is used during the maintenance phase of treatment. Suboxone has recently become the drug of choice instead of methadone in the treatment of opiate addiction. Suboxone use is less rigidly controlled than methadone because it has a lower potential for abuse and is less dangerous in an overdose. As patients progress on therapy, the physician may write a prescription for a take-home supply of the medication.
Suboxone Prescription
Only those physicians who have approval from the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) are able to start in-office treatment and provide prescriptions for ongoing medication. The Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) maintains an active database to help patients locate qualified doctors.
Route of Administration
Suboxone is available as a tablet which is always administered sublingually. The pill is placed underneath the tongue until it is fully dissolved. Swallowing or sucking on the pill does not offer any therapeutic benefit. When placed underneath the tongue, the pill dissolves and is absorbed in 10 -20 minutes.
Suboxone treatment is generally done under medical supervision. During the induction phase, one is taught how to properly take the medications and dose adjustments are done during the phase. One is usually started on the smallest dose until the best therapeutic effect is obtained. Once the ideal dose is obtained, the individual is seen once in a while and prescriptions can generally be available from the same physician.
Suboxone is available as 2 and 8 mg tablets. Most anecdotal reports indicate that the response to the 2 mg dose is suboptimal. The majority of individuals report benefit at higher doses of 8-16 mg. The aim of the maintenance treatment is to rid the drug craving and decrease the anxiety. The dose is usually adjusted until the drug craving features are diminished.
Since Buprenorphine is a Schedule III drug, the physician is only allowed to prescribe 5 refills in 6 months.
Maintenance therapy
Although Suboxone can be used for detoxification, its intended use is for maintenance. The ideal candidate for maintenance therapy with Suboxone is an older individual who has previously been on drugs but now has a job and wants a stable lifestyle. The individual previously has failed detoxification and wants to live a simple life without the daily cravings of his previous addiction. The majority of past drug users immediately adjust to Suboxone as the cravings disappear immediately and a smoother life style are accessible.
Suboxone Control
Because of the great potential for abuse, FDA works closely with the drug manufacturer, Reckitt-Benckiser, and other agencies to develop an in-depth risk-management plan. The FDA receives quarterly reports from the manufacturer and pharmacies and maintains a comprehensive surveillance program. This monitoring allows for early detection of abuse of the drug. The major components of the risk-management program are preventive measures and surveillance. Preventive measures instituted include drug education, tailored distribution, Schedule III control under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA), child resistant packaging and supervised dose induction. The program regularly monitors local pharmacies and web sites. Numerous other agencies also monitor the abuse of Suboxone and these include:
-Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN). This agency run by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) gathers data from emergency rooms related to the illicit use of drugs or non-medical use of a legal drug.
-Community Epidemiology Working Group (CEWG). This agency monitors the use of buprenorphine.
-National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA). NIDA frequently sends newsletters to physicians about the addictive drugs and to report it if necessary.
Side Effects
The most common reported side effect of Suboxone includes:
- Cold or flu-like symptoms
- Headaches
- sweating
- insomnia
- Nausea
- Mood swings
- Pain
- restlessness
Like other opioids, Suboxone have been associated with respiratory depression (difficulty breathing) especially when combined with other depressants.
Cautions
Intravenous use of Suboxone usually in combination with benzodiazepines or other CNS depressants has been associated with significant respiratory depression and death. Suboxone has the potential for abuse and produces dependence of the opioid type with a milder withdrawal syndrome than full agonists. There are no adequate and well-controlled studies of Suboxone use in pregnancy. Due caution should be exercised when driving cars or operating machinery.
Addicts Seek Solace in Delray Beach Jul 09, 2008
Miami Herald — Most everybody in this neighborhood coffee haunt has been hooked on something. The high school dropout with beauty-pageant looks has been fending off a heroin habit for two decades. The former football player says he is clean now after years of popping pain pills. Santa Claus succumbed to alcohol.
Nineteen of the fallen are here tonight for therapy and healing, for a second — or a third or fourth — chance, hoping to reclaim a piece of their lives. They form a circle in the pebble garden behind KoffeeOkee, which is owned by Harold and Dawn Jonas, former users who now help others kick drug and alcohol habits and answer the question: What now?
A resort on the Atlantic in Palm Beach County, Delray Beach has another, less obvious civic profile: Florida’s sobriety capital. Like Hazelden in Minnesota and Utah’s Cirque Lodge and the communities that surround them, it is a place to dry out, clean up. Its recovery community is spirited and multilayered, a dense mesh of dozens of treatment facilities, counseling centers and residential housing that gives addicts a wide-reaching chance for recovery and permanent lifestyle change.
This is where people start over. And sometimes stay.
”You want to be here if you are struggling with an addiction,” says Anna O’Connell, 43, who has been in and out of detox for crack cocaine, heroin and alcohol over the past 20 years and attends therapy sessions at KoffeeOkee. “This is the closest thing to family; this is where you feel safe.”
Treatment for addictions that the medical community now accepts as chronic diseases ranges from private $10,000-a-month treatment centers to free coffee, counseling and karaoke at java houses such as this one, which hosts formal therapy sessions twice a week and informal gatherings even more often.
MANY, FROM ALL OVER
The size of South Florida’s recovery community is difficult to estimate because only one layer — facilities with residential treatment beds — is licensed by the state. Delray Beach alone offers more than 1,200 beds in transitional houses — a second layer — according to the South County Recovery Residence Association in Delray, which monitors halfway residences.
Every week in Delray, about 5,000 addicts attend 12-step meetings that stretch from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. At Crossroads Club, a squat stucco complex off Lake Ida Road, about 700 people walk through the doors every day to attend 120 meetings aimed at a swath of needs, from treatment for cocaine addiction to obsessive cluttering, says Susan Miller, executive director, a recovering alcoholic.
Addicts arrive from as far away as Oregon and Rhode Island and from as nearby as South Beach. They face daunting odds: Relapse rates range from 40 to 90 percent, depending on the client’s dedication and will power, sustained treatment, and follow-up care, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse.
”My parents sent me here to try to turn my life around,” Rani Canosa, 21, a pretty, petite college dropout offers one Monday night at KoffeeOkee. “Alcohol made me feel good. I would be really, really happy, then really, really sad, then just miserable.”
Canosa, from a Baltimore suburb, started drinking seriously as an 18-year-old freshman in college. Soon she could consume a 12-pack of beer and a half-bottle of vodka in a two-hour stretch.
She had tried treatment centers in Maryland and Pennsylvania but returned home only to relapse once she was back among friends and familiar haunts.
Canosa has been in Delray Beach since Aug. 29, out of treatment at the Wellness Resource Center in nearby Boca Raton since Feb. 5. She lives in a halfway house and works as a barista at KoffeeOkee.
”The truth is, if I was home, I would be drunk or looking to get drunk,” she says softly, never making eye contact. “I actually want to be here.”
COLLECTIVE STRUGGLE
But what distinguishes this vibrant recovery community from similar places elsewhere, is a growing sober social infrastructure, an informal network of places for people to mingle without the colossal temptations of drugs and alcohol.
”Delray Beach is a microcosm of the various layers of the recovery process,” says Howard Lerner, clinical director of the Addiction Treatment Program at South Miami Hospital. “Those struggling belong to a fraternity.”
Here, even in the midst of fighting for sobriety, addicts can go dancing at popular clubs that hold sober nights, sing karaoke at a sober coffee house, listen to live music at a sober juke joint, call in to recovery radio shows, roar into the sunset with a sober motorcycle club and pray at a Bible study just for them.
”The struggle with an addiction can be forever,” says Harold Jonas, a mental health counselor. “So all we really want is for people to be healthy and to laugh and have hope and be part of the world, not just the recovery community.”
The collective sobriety struggle here is no longer anonymous. Recovering addicts live among ”normies” and often work on Atlantic Avenue, the city’s glittering ribbon of sidewalk cafes and boutiques and galleries.
”When you are on this journey, it’s incredibly important to feel like you are not alone, to see and be around people just like you,” says nattily-dressed Jonah Yolman, now 22 months on the clean side of a wicked crack-cocaine addiction.
Yolman, 29, sitting in a Starbucks on Atlantic Avenue, quietly acknowledges two people ordering coffee who are in one of the dozens of 12-step anonymous programs. He talks casually about the familiar identifying signs of people in recovery: the relentless smoking and coffee drinking, the trails of cigarette butts and empty coffee cups and candy wrappers. And the most obvious sign: people tightly clutching books with dark covers, their 12-step guides.
”We are everywhere, living and working in this city,” says Yolman, a counselor at a local treatment facility who promotes two sober nights at area clubs. He and a partner are also launching a similar sober club night in August at a South Beach club (sobernightlife.com).
“People come here and enjoy the weather, the beaches, low-key atmosphere and try to start over.”
NATIONAL REPUTATION
In some ways, Delray’s recovery community draws its inspiration from a small, rural town in Minnesota that over the years became a magnet for recovering addicts, from marquee rock stars like Eric Clapton to the anonymous souls who came looking for peace and order.
Since 1949, addicts have famously flocked to Hazelden, which started as a farmhouse retreat in Center City for men working their way through programs based on the 12-step principles.
Over the years, teams of doctors, counselors and chaplains developed a holistic approach to rehab now emulated worldwide.
More than three decades ago, Delray’s first sober houses opened for people making the transition from residential care to independent living. The houses — a yellow clapboard with a sweeping porch on one street, a peach bungalow with a white-picket fence on another — are sprinkled within neighborhoods, around public squares, near churches.
Rents range from $125 to $175 weekly for a room and access to kitchens and family areas. Most landlords require random drug tests, and some perform bed checks or monitor whether their clients have reported to work.
Two years ago, Crossroads Centre in Antigua, a drug-treatment program founded by Eric Clapton, opened in the city. And in February, Lecreshia Hall, a Boca Raton psychiatrist, started Hallway of Life Recovery Center, a faith-based, 28-bed transitional facility for women, on a quiet residential street near downtown.
”When I did the research to find the best place to open, Delray Beach kept coming up,” says Hall, who leads Bible study on Tuesdays. “The idea of our center is to teach our clients how they can use the Bible to help in recovery.”
But Delray Beach’s national reputation as a recovery community has been unsettling for some residents.
”We don’t mind taking care of the people living here, but we don’t particularly like people coming from all over the country or the world to recover,” says City Manager David Harden. “But it’s a fact of life, and so we have tried to be supportive of the community.”
Harden says Delray Beach gives money each year to the Drug Abuse Foundation of Palm Beach County, the county’s oldest chemical-dependency treatment and prevention center. The Commission also sold city property to Crossroads Club several years ago, allowing the center to expand.
Over the years, residents have complained to city officials about the lack of security and control at some sober houses. Owners need only a landlord permit to run them, a reality that makes strict regulation difficult.
Jonas, who heads the South County association and runs the coffee shop, says problems stem mostly from unscrupulous landlords who hope to turn quick profits at the expense of fragile tenants and the surrounding neighborhood.
”You got some of these operators who don’t manage the property or the tenants, then they put the people out and leave them homeless,” Jonas says. “There are some operators we would all be better off without.”
FINDING SOLACE
Jonas came to Florida 20 years ago full of reasons to give up. But with the help of his father, who put him in a West Palm Beach treatment center, he cleaned up and stayed put.
A slight guy with a thick mustache and a thicker Philadelphia accent, Jonas sits in the lounge of his coffee shop one afternoon rattling off his story with sobriety’s detachment and confidence.
Pot by 13. Then acid and speed and cocaine. Graduation to alcohol. Bottomed out in the injection world of cocaine and heroin.
Jonas entered rehab in 1987. He married Dawn, a recovering cocaine addict (they met in a 12-step group), and went back to school, earning an online master’s degree in counseling psychology from Antioch University and a doctorate in addiction studies from International University in St. Kitts.
”You come out of a situation like that broken and with very little to hold on to,” Jonas says. ‘You come out of treatment and you say, `Now what?’ ”
So Jonas and his wife — who recently celebrated her 22nd clean year — began working to answer this huge question, working to help define what life after treatment really means.
In 2000, they launched sober.com, a Web clearinghouse for 30,000 recovery programs nationwide. And for 10 years, he operated a recovery residence in Delray Beach. She runs a home for women in recovery.
Two years ago, they opened KoffeeOkee, in many ways ground zero for the recovery community. Inside is a cozy mix of velvet wingback chairs and bistro tables and a small cafe offering every coffee, tea and juice imaginable but absolutely no alcohol. The walls are covered with bulletin boards offering testimonials, treatment and housing ads, and calendars outlining the month’s sober activities.
A piano sits in the corner with a dried white rose on top, a delicate memorial to Valerie, a drug counselor who died a year ago.
Of an overdose.
A Path Toward Inner Peace, One Yoga Pose at a Time Jul 09, 2008
Palm Beach Post — She has a strong grip and broad shoulders and a rage that was so out-of-control she was called The Hulk.
Jen is just 22 and already has suffered years of abuse, from a boyfriend who burned her, beat her and tried to drown her, and from her own self-directed rage.
She believed she found a release and control over her anger and pain by cutting herself.
"It was sick and twisted," she said, curled up in a couch that wrapped its arms around her. "I would have the biggest smile on my face watching the blood run down my leg."
She tried to kill herself nine times, drank and took every kind of drug she could get.
It took courage and knowing that she was hitting bottom, but she finally got the guts to go to her father, who knew little about her abusive and addictive lifestyle, she said. He helped her find The Orchid Recovery Center in Delray Beach.
The staff there, in turn, helped her find a path toward peace through, among other treatments, yoga training.
Enter Angel Lucia, whose mission is to help heal women in recovery through yoga and meditation at her Bindu Yoga Studio in West Palm Beach.
Lucia partners with The Orchid and teaches at the facility and in her own studio.
Jen clearly has a loving addiction to Angel, who nods encouragingly at her while Jen talks about her horrendous experiences.
Nearby are the tranquil-looking yoga mats, candles, books and tapes that are an important part of this lifestyle.
The women in recovery are a close-knit group. They don’t like outsiders watching their yoga, but Jen explains how she is going from an enraged self-mutilator to accepting that life can hold joy for her.
"She winds us all down," Jen, who has been sober a little more than four months, says.
"I can come in angry, jumpy, and the yoga releases all the bad emotions. I like the breathing techniques."
Jen says she is clinically depressed, bi-polar and suffering from short-term memory loss. Yoga and the camaraderie of Angel and the addicted women in recovery at The Orchid have helped her become more centered, she says. She’s starting to like her life.
Angel smiles knowingly. She, herself, had an alcoholic father who threw the family into turmoil. She knows what it’s like to walk on eggshells around a person who can explode at any moment.
She attended family rehabilitation with her parents.
It was yoga and meditation that helped her physically unwind from the effects of a former career as a surgical assistant and a past laden with strained family relations.
"Mentally, I felt more balanced," she says of the yoga she learned and is teaching. "I moved into a more neutral state."
Now, she says, she takes what she knows works for her and tries to transfer it to her students.
"I can’t say I’m floating," she explains. "I can stop and reflect on what is building up in me. What is it and how can I reduce that? If I hold it, it will make me ill."
She watches Jen look at her with a little half-smile. You can almost imagine this powerful young woman she is helping, and whose fists could put Angel on the floor, breathing softly and learning to control her runaway emotions.
"She does have that understanding from having been through something like what we are going through," says Jen.
"When I’m with Angel, I turn off that cellphone, and I am moving and getting that hour of focus."
Angel says some of the women moan and groan and fight off her efforts to help them, not physically, but by withdrawing. She sends them out of the room until they re-engage.
Jen defends that kind of self-protective behavior.
"The feelings are new to us. Any kind of emotion is a shock and completely hard to deal with," she says of women who have learned to numb themselves with drugs and alcohol.
"She helps to keep people sober. She helps with acceptance of a lot of things and letting go. My anger has gone from major to manageable."
Adds Angel, "Yoga helps us to fill a spiritual void. I’m another bridge for them to that. I don’t want to say that I’m better than anyone else this way, but I know what I’ve overcome and know how to apply it to them."
Dull Summer Can Lead to Drug Use by Teens Jul 09, 2008
Des Moines Register — Monitoring your teen’s activities is an important deterrent to drug use.
Research shows that more teens begin using tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana between spring break and the summer months than any other time.
Parents can play an important role in helping their teen stay drug-free by setting clear rules, knowing who their friends are, and by having open and honest discussions about drugs.
Q. Why is summer a risky time for teens?
A. Summer is a time that often has little structure for teens. This can lead to boredom.
According to a study by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, teens who report they are "often bored" are 50 percent more likely to smoke, drink, get drunk and use illegal drugs than teens who aren’t.
Another risk factor for teens during summer is having friends who use drugs. Teens are more likely to feel pressured to experiment with drugs if their friends do.
The summer months also have more unsupervised time, which can lead to involvement in risky behavior.
Q. My teen will be unsupervised at home for most of the summer. What can I do to make sure he stays out of trouble?
A. There are steps you can take to ensure your teen stays safe and healthy.
- Lean on other responsible adults in your neighborhood. Network with other adults in your community to build a safe environment for young people.
- Use technology to your advantage. Teens these days use many forms of communication technology including e-mail, cell phones, text messaging and instant messaging, to name a few. Use these forms of technology to check in with your teen each day.
- Get to know your teen’s friends. They can be an important factor in your teen’s decisions about alcohol, tobacco and other drugs.
- Plan regular check-in times throughout the day with your teen.
- Find supervised activities in your community that your teen enjoys. Youth who are involved in constructive, supervised activities during non-school hours are less likely to use drugs. Talk with your child about what she would like to do during the summer and see if you can find a summer program in your community.
Q. How do I start the discussion about drug use with my teen?
A. Teens need to be educated by their parents about drug abuse, expectations in the home, and consequences. This can be a difficult conversation to have but the steps below can help guide you though the process.
1. Talk with your partner to agree on rules and consequences if your teen does use drugs. This information should then be shared with your teen so he knows and understands the expectations.
2. Practice ahead of time what you are going to say to your teen. Be prepared for various reactions from your teen and practice how you will react.
3. Make an agreement with yourself to not get upset or angry. Stay as calm as possible. Remember, you are the parent and you are in charge. Be kind and direct in your statements to your child. Know that you are doing the right thing.
Q. What are some signs to watch for if my teen is using drugs?
A. Look for signs of depression, withdrawal from friends and family, carelessness with grooming, or hostility. Also ask yourself, is your teen doing well in school, getting along with friends, and taking part in regular activities? Some additional signs to look for are:
- Increased secrecy about possessions or activities.
- Increase in borrowing money.
- Unexplained injuries.
- Impaired short-term memory.
- Items or money missing from home.
- Illness, shakiness, or tremors.
Q. What other resources are available?
A. A great resource for parents is called "The Anti-Drug," which can be found at www.theantidrug.com. This Web site has a wealth of information for parents about drug education, support from other parents striving to keep their teens drug-free, and helpful articles and advice from experts in the parenting and substance abuse prevention field.
Addiction Recovery 2.0 Jul 08, 2008
InfoPackets.com — Major recovery organizations have been using the Internet to help individuals recovering from drug and alcohol addiction. An increasing number of support groups are springing up all over the web with one goal: to provide online, 24/7 assistance to people recovering from some form of substance abuse.
According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, almost 2 million people this year will find themselves entering some kind of rehabilitation for abuse of various drugs or alcohol. In the past 70 years or so, these alcoholics and addicts would have left various rehabilitation institutions to then begin a lifetime of meetings in church basements with fellow addicts or alcoholics, there to find the support and encouragement to continue their life clean and sober.
Typically, the online venues focus on the 12-step recovery approach — the recovery program outlined by Bill Wilson and Bob Smith, founders of Alcoholics Anonymous. It’s a popular program and, it seems, there is now a 12-step program tied to every possible substance abuse or behavior, including Nicotine Anonymous. Instead of holding daily or weekly meetings however, more and more of these 12-step groups are turning their attention to providing online chat, web forum, and list server-based recovery groups. The Internet is being used to connect similarly afflicted individuals and groups from all over the world. Over the world wide web, recovery meetings are no longer of an hour’s duration in a church basement, groups now meet for 24 hours a day with members checking in and out at will or as needed.
Alcoholics Anonymous the oldest of the recovery groups, now offers meetings using email list servers, VoIP, and chat. AA provides online meetings in 33 different countries and hosts them in more than 10 different languages!
Narcotics Anonymous has more than 20 internationally accessible email meetings and Cocaine Anonymous offers 6 internationally accessible email meetings.
Of course, for every benefit of online meetings, there are also some risks. The use of chat protocols, for example, opens up a portal to the user’s PC that may expose them to risk of being hacked. Email-based list servers also pose the problem of how to remain anonymous when the entire virtual room can see your email address.
There are also hazards from various unscrupulous recovery organizations that prey on individuals in early recovery or their families. Over the Internet, they seem like legitimate organizations, but they are not always. As with most Internet-based activities, various fraud, email harvesting, and identity theft schemes abound. But even in those cases, Internet-based solutions emerge. One organization, All Addictions Anonymous Watch, for example, focuses on keeping a watchful eye on some of the less scrupulous efforts to exploit recovering individuals.
Exploiting Internet technology may prove to be a great boon to people trying to shake addictions. It has truly become Addiction Recovery 2.0. Nonetheless, family members and recovering individuals would be wise to stick to the best known recovery organizations (e.g AA, NA, CA) and, if they choose to participate online, they should get a Yahoo!, Gmail, or Hotmail mailbox using a pseudonym to keep themselves truly anonymous.