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Dr. Milam’s Position Papers
The Alcoholism Revolution
A landmark position paper by the author of "Under the Influence"
Dr. James R. Milam
"This conformity make them not false in a few particulars, authors
of a few lies, but false in all particulars. Their every truth is not
quite true… so that every word they say chagrins us and we know not
where to begin to set them right." Emerson
No problem in America has been more costly in lives, misery, and money
than alcoholism, and no problem has generated more stubborn conflict
and confusion in all areas of society. In a historic development
during the 1970s, the intense focus on alcoholism research exposed the
underlying polarity, the clash of irreconcilable premises that has
always generated so much conflict. Although not yet widely known, by
the early 1980s this root conflict had been resolved by a scientific
and professional revolution, a paradigm shift.
This paper describes the polarity and the shift to the new model that
is transforming our entire view of alcoholism (and other drug
addictions). I have adapted the terms "psychogenic" (of psychological
origin) for the old paradigm and "biogenic" (of biological origin) for
the new.
The psychogenic model is based on the nearly universal belief that
alcoholism is a symptom or consequence of an underlying character
defect, a destructive response to psychological and social problems, a
learned behavior. The biogenic model recognizes that alcoholism is a
primary addictive response to alcohol in a biologically susceptible
drinker, regardless of character and personality. It will help at the
outset to realize that compromise is not possible, that the two are
not complimentary but mutually exclusive alternatives, like a
perceptual figure-ground reversal.
The contrast between the two paradigms can be illustrated by Robert
Louis Stevenson’s classic parable of addiction, "Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde." In the psychogenic view, the insane, murderous Hyde is the real
person, with Jekyll merely a facade. It taps into deep currents in
American thought—the notions of original sin and the Freudian Id—that
beneath the inhibiting veneer of civilization man is inherently evil.
Alcoholism merely releases this deeper ugliness by removing the
inhibitions. In vino veritas ["in wine is truth"]. The task of therapy
is to engage and civilize Hyde. Treatment fails because the
contemptible Hyde is willfully incorrigible. He deserves the stigma
and scorn of society.
Within the biogenic paradigm Jekyll is the real person, and Hyde is a
neuropsychological distortion created by the addictive chemical. Hyde
exhibits the same kind of deterioration of personality and character
as victims of such other progressive brain pathologies as brain
syphilis or a brain tumor. Body, mind, and spirit (including
willpower) are biologically compromised and subverted to serve the
addiction. Given time for healing, in alcoholism the brain syndrome is
reversible. The task of therapy is to restore Jekyll to sanity and
selfhood, and to start him on a path that will preclude a return to
the addictive, transforming chemical.
Although it is conformity to the psychogenic belief that continues to
distort and falsify all scientific and clinical knowledge of
alcoholism, as the given truth throughout history it has had the
advantage of being invisible, of not appearing to be a belief system
at all, but simple reality. This was the fatal flaw in the Jellinek
"disease concept" of alcoholism. For all his helpful descriptions of
the progression of the disease, he endorsed the false belief that
alcohol is primarily a sedative drug, and that alcoholism is caused by
excessive "relief drinking," drinking to relieve psychosocial stress.
Thus, as secondary consequence or symptom, the biology of alcoholism
could be largely ignored by the establishment in its diligent search
for the presumed primary psychiatric cause of the relief drinking.
Following Jellinek, many leading proponents of the disease concept
still try to have it both ways, to assimilate the fragments of
biological knowledge within the lingering psychogenic hegemony. This
conformity necessarily condones the misinformation that continues to
tear the country to pieces and helps to delay the emergence of the
biogenic paradigm.
Research
By 1960, research studies had determined that the rate of mental
illness among pre-drinking alcoholics was the same as among
non-alcoholics. During the 1960s and 1970s, a great many additional
research studies confirmed that the defective character, the mental
illness of alcoholism, is not primary, or underlying, or a "dual
diagnosis," but the neuropsychological consequence of the alcoholism.
When controlled for heredity (abundant independent evidence makes this
mandatory), no pre-drinking psychological or social variable of any
kind could be found to correlate with later alcoholism—not child
abuse, depression, antisocial attitude, poor self-image, or any other.
These problems are familiar consequences and complications of
alcoholism, but research clearly showed they are not contributing
causes or "risk factors." Also, the persistent belief in an "alcoholic
(or addictive) personality" was found to be false.
The search was broadened in the vain hope of finding some other kind
of evidence to validate the psychogenic paradigm. None could be found.
Responsible drinking could not prevent alcoholism, and alcoholic
drinking could neither be learned or unlearned. All prevention and
treatment efforts to modify the alcoholic’s progressive response to
alcohol failed.
Deep, broad, and powerful vested interests in the philosophy of
environmental determinism were increasingly threatened by the mounting
evidence against the psychogenic paradigm. In their desperate effort
to forestall its collapse, defenders of the paradigm resorted to an
increasingly blatant double standard, a kind of artificial life
support system. Editors, reviewers, critics, and other guardians of
the academic alcoholism literature increasingly rejected, distorted,
minimized, lacerated with extreme criticism, and ignored—one at a
time—the thousands of research and clinical reports that, only when
allowed to freely come together, form the biogenic paradigm, a
complete definition and explanation of alcoholism. Only small
fragments of biological data, out of context, have gotten into the
communications media.
In contrast, thousands of inadequate, shoddy, or even fraudulent
studies were uncritically approved and widely cited if they but seemed
to support the psychogenic premise. As an aid in warding off the
troublesome biogenic research evidence, alcoholism was renamed
"alcohol abuse," a psychogenic term of denial and moral censure. The
word "addiction" was then degraded and stripped of its profound
biogenic meaning by applying it to all manor of excessive or
repetitive behaviors. Of course it became impossible to identify or
diagnose alcoholism, and many researchers resorted to drink counting
instead, with arbitrary amounts of consumption to identify alcohol
"abusers." Alcoholism was trivialized out of existence as the academic
literature became a literature not about alcoholism but about itself.
In spite of this concerted attempt to disguise the fact, by the early
1980s the psychogenic premise had been totally discredited and
dismantled by legitimate research. This is the documented conclusion
of, among others, one of its most distinguished former advocates,
philosophy professor emeritus Herbert Fingarette. It is only from the
biogenic perspective that his landmark contribution can be fully
appreciated.
In 1988, in his notorious book, "Heavy Drinking," Fingarette declared,
from within the psychogenic paradigm, there is no such thing as
alcoholism. In his world he was right. The biogenic model has never
been assembled within the academic alcoholism literature because it is
impossible to do so. Its parts are either distorted or missing. With
no direct clinical experience of his own, Fingarette’s 15-year
investigation was limited to what he found in this mandarin
literature, and he didn’t find alcoholism. He unwittingly wrote the
obituary not for alcoholism but for the psychogenic model in which
alcoholism in fact does not exist.
There is a wry humor in this whole academic spectacle. It has been a
kind of acting out on a grand scale of the old joke about the
specialist: one who learns more and more about less and less until
eventually he knows everything about nothing. But these misguided
academic reveries have had devastating effects on public understanding
of alcoholism. For example, with Fingarette as its official consultant
on addictions, the U.S. Supreme Court wistfully argued in 1988 that
"…apparently nobody understands alcoholism…it appears to be willful
misbehavior."
Overshadowed by the multitude of researchers who were busy confirming
that the psychogenic paradigm is devoid of any data base, many others
were compiling evidence that alcoholism is a primary, biogenic
disorder. However, the task of assembling the biogenic paradigm is
elusive and difficult because not only the academic literature but the
whole of society has been limited by the psychogenic view. It is
impossible to see out of it. As Thomas Kuhn explained, and Fingarette
demonstrated, a new paradigm and its supporting evidence are invisible
from within the old. Be forewarned that, because the dominant premise
is false, "…every truth is not quite true." It is impossible to
assemble this myriad of half-truths into a coherent perception of
alcoholism.
To discern the biogenic model, a substantial amount of valid research
evidence and clinical knowledge must be winnowed from the psychogenic
chaff in the alcoholism literature and gleaned from original sources
scattered throughout the life sciences. It can then be transformed and
assembled in the new biogenic configuration, much as all knowledge of
geography and navigation were transformed for the earth to become a
globe after being flat for so long. No flat fields were lost, but is
was necessary to ignore them long enough to form the new model. Once
the global perception came together, there was a certainty and
finality about it, which to those still in the other paradigm seemed
totally unjustified by the obvious facts. It couldn’t be helped. The
flat earth was gone.
Similarly, the biogenic paradigm includes and is shaped by all valid
knowledge of alcoholism. It has an extremely broad data base. Nothing
is forced in or left out to argue about. And because all parts are
valid, the whole is also validated by internal consistency. It is not
a philosophy or a theory. It is a new gestalt, a compelling total
perception.
Data is found in many areas in many disciplines. Both animal and human
studies have shown repeatedly that alcohol addiction is hereditary. A
number of inborn, pre-drinking biological differences have been
discovered in alcoholics, along with many initial and progressive
differences in their biological responses to alcohol. Differences have
been found in brain wave patterns, in various enzymes, in nerve
transmitters, in liver functions, in alcohol metabolism, and in the
effect of alcohol on performance, mood, and mental abilities.
The problem is not a shortage of data, as frustrated researchers
suppose, but the fact that they have not been able to integrate the
abundance of scattered data. Both gathered and viewed within the
compromising psychogenic paradigm, each cluster of research data
stands alone in the scientific literature as an isolated anomaly,
barely acknowledged in the academic alcoholism literature. Because it
seems so self-evident that psychosocial factors must be contributing
causes, even biological researchers still think there must be more
than one kind of alcoholism.
Once all the biological data is assembled within the biogenic
paradigm, it explains why all learning theories have failed to
distinguish alcoholics from non-alcoholics, why alcoholic drinking can
be neither learned nor unlearned. It is the unconditional response to
alcohol that is different, initially and progressively. Alcohol is
selectively addictive, and the selection is biological.
Regardless of why, how, or how much an alcoholic initially drinks, the
addiction neurologically augments his original reasons for drinking,
pushing him to drink amounts consistent with his rising tolerance, and
beyond. In human experience there is nothing unusual about
physiological imperatives, like hunger for sex, creating mental
obsessions and driving and shaping behavior. There are not two or more
types of alcoholism. There are merely different complications and
different types of people who are alcoholic, with different levels of
concern and strategies of damage control.
All of the psychopathology of alcoholism, as alcoholism, is of
neuropsychological origin, but his fact is disguised because
alcoholism is never diagnosed until after character and personality
are distorted and normal emotions are neurologically augmented to
abnormal levels of chronic anguish, fear, resentment, guilt, and
depression. It is these distortions that clinically identify
alcoholism, not the original character and personality.
Most often alcoholism is hereditary, but many individuals become
chronic alcoholics through cross-addiction to other drugs
(prescription or illicit), or as the result of other brain or liver
insults. Whether or not accelerated by the potentiation of other drugs
or injuries, organic deterioration causes a loss of tolerance and
substantially reduced alcohol intake. To the drink counters, both
alcoholics progressing into the more ominous low-tolerance stages of
their disease and those who necessarily reduce their alcohol intake
while using substitute drugs are counted as cases of "spontaneous
remission" or improvement.
In addition to the early acute affects of alcohol—the mind-expanding,
life-enhancing stimulation and energy—three kinds of progressive brain
impairment participate in the personality and character
transformation, while augmenting the strength of the emotions and of
the addiction. Between drinking episodes:
All brain cells are in a toxic, malnourished state. Their
detoxification and stabilization take several weeks of total
abstinence from alcohol and other drugs.
Billions of brain cells are damaged. Repair and healing take several
months of abstinence.
Many millions of brain cells die. The loss is permanent, but during a
period of some four years of total abstinence surviving cells
compensate for those that are lost.
Ameliorating during the first several weeks of abstinence, the three
kinds of impairment have a combined effect on overall brain function,
producing both first-order psychological symptoms:
First-order symptoms are the direct neuropsychological disturbances,
such as mental anguish, memory defects, mental confusion,
disorientation, and emotional augmentation.
Second-order symptoms are the patient’s psychological reactions to the
first-order symptoms and include fear, denial, projection,
rationalization, depression, personality distortion, deteriorating
self-image and self-confidence, regressive immaturity, and other
mental and emotional aberrations.
A third order of symptoms is imposed by the psychogenic paradigm, the
cultural heritage of both patient and family members, the mistaken
belief that the first- and second-order symptoms are caused not by the
brain disorder but by an underlying or concomitant psychiatric
problem. Both subjectively and to the untrained observer, the symptoms
are the same. This wrongly places the blame for the abnormal behavior
on the person rather than on his organic disease (hence the term
"alcoholic abuse") and draws the family into sharing the blame.
Third-order symptoms include feelings of guilt, shame, remorse,
alienation, resentment, helplessness, despair, and depression. Complex
states, such as fear, depression, and regressive immaturity are
composites of first-, second-, and third-order factors.
When alcoholics quit drinking on their own, as many do, they must live
with the cultural stigma and the unrelieved symptoms of anguish,
guilt, shame, remorse, and depression. In this troubled state, without
an enlightened support group, it is not surprising they so seldom
achieve a lasting sobriety. These interludes "on the water wagon"
between drunks are also included as spontaneous remissions or
improvements by the drink counters.
Treatment
The attempt to force research findings into the psychogenic mold has
been paralleled by a similar distortion and suppression in clinical
practice.
Psychiatrists have always been regarded as the ultimate authorities on
alcoholism in spite of the fact they have never had academic courses
or field training in alcoholism. The credibility has always depended
entirely on the culturally shared premise that alcoholism is secondary
to psychological and social problems, areas in which they are
qualified.
Surveys during the 1960s found that alcoholics consulted psychiatrists
from 40 to 100 times as often as non-alcoholics and were hospitalized
some 12 times as often. They were never given a primary diagnosis of
alcoholism. There wasn’t a hospital in the United States that would
admit a patient under a diagnosis of alcoholism, and health insurance
would not pay for alcoholism treatment. Alcoholism recovery rates were
acknowledged to be zero for all types of psychiatric treatment.
Alcoholic drinking, obvious "psychiatric" disorders, and failure to
recover were all regarded as evidence of a mysterious perversity in
the patient’s character. Alcoholics were considered hopeless, pending
further psychiatric research.
Still under the psychogenic paradigm, the whole of the healthcare and
social service establishment, public and private, continues to be a
gigantic revolving door for undiagnosed and untreated, or wrongly
treated, alcoholics and drug addicts, who, together with their
victims, comprise conservatively 60 percent of all caseloads. The vast
majority of all prison inmates are there for crimes secondary to
addiction. The annual cost to society of tending to the multiple
effects of addiction—rampant "psychiatric" problems, family neglect
and abuse, poverty, violence and other crimes, illness and organ and
system failures, accidental injuries and deaths—is in the hundreds of
billions of dollars.
Because psychiatrists and other mental health specialists have such an
enormous vested interest in the psychogenic paradigm, it could be
anticipated that they would be among the last to discover the biogenic
alternative. But this alone does not explain why they continue to be
such stubborn believers in the face of the mountain of evidence that
they are wrong. Their most stultifying problem is that they are
trapped in a vicious circle, a self-fulfilling prophesy, that can be
seen only from the perspective of the other paradigm.
Alternative states of being supplant each other. The person as
transmogrified, transformed by the brain syndrome, enters treatment
alone. The original, authentic person is not present. He or she has
been superseded, replaced. All therapeutic dialogs with patients
during the first weeks of treatment, until Jekyll is allowed to
reappear, are dialogs with Hyde, through his "mask of sanity."
Within the psychogenic paradigm, both therapist and patient mistake
the characteristics of the wretched, contorted self of the brain
syndrome for attributes of the real self. After a few days of acute
detoxification, this miserable self-image is further authenticated as
the focus shifts to psychiatric treatment. The third-order symptoms of
guilt, shame, denial, defensiveness, resentment, and depression,
created by the psychogenic paradigm in the first place, are not
dispelled by healing and reeducation but are reinforced as emanating
from deep sources in the patient’s character and personality, an
underlying or concomitant psychiatric problem. It’s a self-validating
practice. The patient now has an iatrogenic (therapist-induced)
disease.
By locking the patient into this mistaken identity, the therapist
creates the chronic psychiatric problem that he then thinks he has
merely uncovered. Therefore the dual diagnosis rate is very high, and
the recovery rate is near zero. Of course, the patient gets the blame
for the treatment failure, the continuing "willful misbehavior," and
the therapist feels justified in his contempt for these uncooperative
patients.
In a sense, the recovery rate is worse than zero as many alcoholics
die of the iatrogenic disease. They are destroyed by the potentiation
of their alcoholism with routinely prescribed addictive drugs, in
combination with psychotherapy, which converts the otherwise
reversible organic insanity into a hopeless "mental illness" (Judy
Garland, Marilyn Monroe).
The biogenic approach is entirely different. By the 1940s Alcoholics
Anonymous had clearly demonstrated that alcoholics could stay sober
and be restored to sanity with continued total abstinence from alcohol
and all other addictive drugs. Special treatment programs came into
being to meet the need that AA was not designed to address, the need
for control and professional treatment during acute detoxification and
the troublesome early weeks of recovery.
The therapist is a kind of midwife in the rebirthing of the patient
into sanity and true selfhood (Jekyll). With medical management,
directive counseling, appropriate nutritional therapy, regulated rest,
moderate exercise, and complete reeducation to the neurological origin
of the "mental illness," within a few weeks the brain syndrome and the
craving subside. Understandably, in varying degrees all patients
experience a crisis of identity during the transition into unfamiliar
selfhood. Patients are extremely unstable, biologically and
psychologically, during this period. The four-week inpatient program
evolved to facilitate the healing and to protect patients from an
otherwise high probability of relapse during this period. There is no
attempt to reform or to do psychotherapy with the fading, counterfeit
self (Hyde). Like a bad dream, it is discredited as "unmanageable"
(AA’s first step), left behind, and disowned by the patient as
not-self (Betty Ford, Elizabeth Taylor).
Restored to sanity, and reeducated to the permanent nature of
addiction and how to recover, the alcoholic for the first time has a
valid moral choice. He can see that he has a moral imperative to live
the way of life that will assure his continued sobriety and recovery.
He must understand why he cannot rely on willpower alone. Willpower is
a fickle servant that can be quickly redirected at its biological
source to serve an awakened Hyde instead of Jekyll. As patients
stabilize in sobriety, they are ushered into Twelve Step programs for
long-term sobriety maintenance and self-realization. It is this
unbroken sequence that works so well with both alcoholism and other
drug addictions.
There is no question that in early recovery patients must face the
very depressing psychological and social damage caused by
alcoholism—their own and often that of their parents. But this is
reality, not mental illness. With proper addiction treatment, and
continuing in health and sanity within a Twelve Step program, patients
can cope with the damage and outgrow it. Reality-centered counseling
and other ancillary services may be needed or helpful during this
difficult period. As with all other chronic diseases, even with the
best of treatment relapses are often part of the recovery process.
Nonetheless, with this treatment model the addiction recovery rate is
high, and the actual rate of mental illness, the true dual diagnosis
rate, is low, around 5 percent.
From within the psychogenic paradigm the special treatment model is
incomprehensible, and the sequence seems arbitrary. Both AA and
treatment programs have been endlessly misrepresented in the academic
literature. AA is not a "treatment program," and special treatment
programs are not "Twelve Step programs." While AA properly stayed true
to its original nonprofessional form, by the 1970s, after several
decades of evolution, treatment programs had become fully
professional, multidisciplinary, and highly cost effective.
But the form and content of treatment evolved out of trial and error
experiences of tens of thousands of professionals treating hundreds of
thousands of patients in thousands of treatment programs over a period
of several decades. Born of the psychogenic paradigm and guided by
Jellinek, the movement of these programs toward the biogenic model was
not by central control or conscious design, but by the grass-roots
discoveries of what worked and what didn’t work in producing
recoveries. Those who have more coherently grasped the biogenic
paradigm have been rewarded by a quantum improvement in the rate and
quality of recoveries.
Nothing is arbitrary. The common sequence of four weeks minimum of
intensive inpatient treatment, followed by outpatient aftercare and a
start in a Twelve-Step fellowship, is simply an optimum program to
enable the wisdom of the body and the reeducation process to resurrect
the real person from the ashes of the disease, and to prepare him or
her to start life in sobriety. Effective alcoholism treatment is hard
work, and it takes time.
Through the special treatment programs, millions of alcoholics and
other addicts have escaped the revolving doors of the establishment
into total abstinence from alcohol and other drugs. After successful
addiction treatment, their social service and health costs drop to
levels below those of the general population. Cumulative costs saved
have been in the tens of billions of dollars. Of course, costs saved
by the special programs have been revenues lost to the establishment,
which, together with the threat to the psychogenic paradigm, explains
the hostile rejection of this major breakthrough in public health.
Because referral for effective treatment has become a very real
option, the traditional professions and agencies must now be seen as
primary "enablers" and the endless problems they subsidize as
iatrogenic.
Unfortunately, the success and high profile of the special addiction
treatment programs during the 1980s attracted investors and
professionals who brought into the field the psychogenic paradigm.
Their low rates of addiction recovery, their "discovery" of a high
rate of co-occurring disorders,
and their extraordinary high costs of vainly
treating the iatrogenic disorders have created major public relations
problems for the whole field of addiction treatment.
Not knowing that the dual diagnosis problems they find so prevalent
and so frustrating are iatrogenic, mental health professionals imagine
that special programs must also be confronting these same psychiatric
problems. It is therefore inconceivable to them that "Twelve Step"
programs could be having any more success with these stubborn patients
than they are. They even imagine that the special programs need their
expertise to better treat the difficult psychiatric problems. They
don’t. They don’t create them.
Whatever their assumptions, some mental health professionals have
diverted attention away from their own failure to get recoveries
(e.g., the Rand report) with outrageous allegations that enlightened
treatment programs also fail to get recoveries, calling them a
"rip-off industry." This loud minority has jeopardized the lives of
untold millions of alcoholics and drug addicts and inflated healthcare
costs by shifting public attention away from effective addiction
treatment over to a preoccupation with redesigning the whole health
care establishment to more broadly serve the endless iatrogenic
problems. It has also helped to unbalance the drug war by justifying
the neglect of intervention and treatment (of Jekyll) in favor of an
almost exclusive reliance on interdiction and punishment (of Hyde).
Citing the failure of alcohol prohibition in the attempt to justify
legalizing other drugs seems reasonable only from the psychogenic
premise—the denial of physical addiction that created and still
nurtures the drug epidemic. Again, the biogenic view is entirely
different. The 10 percent alcoholism rate among drinkers in America
always has been a marginally acceptable rate of addiction, barely
tolerable by society. Witness the anguish of prohibition and its
repeal. Using the disaster of alcoholism to justify legalizing
brain-damaging drugs with addiction rates edging toward 100 percent is
totally irrational.
The End Game
That there is no legitimate research evidence available to support the
psychiatric premise is highlighted by the fact that bogus research
reports are being cited in the media as part of the current political
battle to regain control of the patient population. A couple of recent
examples:
A report of drinking by fathers and sons purporting to show that
alcoholism is not a primary hereditary disorder. This was a ridiculous
drink counting study, not an alcoholism study. Alcoholism was not
diagnosed in either father or sons. It was found that amounts consumed
by sons were not affected by whether their fathers usually drank two
or more drinks per drinking occasion or customarily drank one drink or
less. Abstaining genetic alcoholic fathers whose sons are drinking
alcoholics are—of course—placed in the "one drink or less" group.
Psychiatrist Frederick Goodwin, then director of the Alcohol Drug
Abuse and Mental Health Administration, has co-authored a report
alleging that about a third of alcoholics have a dual diagnosis, a
psychiatric problem along with their alcoholism. Patients in an
alcoholism treatment program were merely asked if "ever in their
lifetime" they had been given a psychiatric diagnosis. Thus the rate
of historic and continuing misdiagnosis of alcoholics in the revolving
doors became, for these authors, a measure of the rate of dual
diagnosis.
In recent congressional testimony, psychologist Michael Hogan has
inflated this contrived statistic. Arguing that alcoholism funds
should be put back under mental health jurisdiction, he stated that
"…in over 60 percent of all people with a substance abuse disorder,
there is a concomitant mental illness." It is a frightening prospect
for the still sick alcoholic and drug addict that these agents of
iatrogenic disease aim to control and "improve" the special addiction
treatment programs.
It is impossible to counter the outrageous "research" reports one at a
time as they flow into the national communications media from the
professional and political high ground. No single research study can
refute a non-study, and the network of research knowledge that shows
it to be absurd is too complicated for a brief rebuttal. Only the
familiar standoff can be achieved: "Apparently nobody understands
alcoholism." Once and for all, it is the whole biogenic paradigm that
must be communicated.
Some steps have been taken in the right direction. During the early
1980s, the National Institute on Drug Abuse shifted their funding
emphasis to support research in the biology of addiction. It is hoped
they will finally recognize the effectiveness of nutritional therapy
and the wisdom of the body in healing the brain syndrome and craving,
and not just narrowly search for yet another toxic drug for
psychiatrists to prescribe. The destructive methadone program for
heroin addicts was never a legitimate model. It seemed promising only
in relation to the zero recovery alternatives known to its
instigators.
For the longer term, it is encouraging that in 1986 Harvard,
Dartmouth, and Johns Hopkins broke with academic tradition and
announced the were going to inaugurate courses in alcoholism in their
medical schools. In the same news release they frankly acknowledged
that none of their faculty, including their many psychiatrists, were
qualified to teach such courses. The word "inaugurate" underscores the
fact that the many thousands of psychiatrists already on university
faculties and out in society as authorities are not qualified in
alcoholism either by academic courses or clinical training where they
could witness recoveries. They are only authorities in the psychogenic
paradigm in which alcoholism does not exist. Deeply understood, this
paper is an attack not on these untutored professionals, but on the
destructive cultural paradigm that has held them in thrall.
Facing up to their deficiency, a significant number of physicians,
psychiatrists, and psychologists have already defected to the
enlightened treatment programs and organizations, first to learn and
then to provide professional leadership. They have been generally
ignored by mainstream professionals but will form an important nucleus
for education and training as larger numbers come over to join them.
Until the countless revolving doors are cleared of alcoholics, there
will be plenty of productive and highly rewarding work for all who are
willing to learn. As their numbers grow, they will finally provide the
legitimate clinical window that has been so urgently needed both to
guide and to integrate scientific research.
The biogenic paradigm has not yet been systematically articulated by
any major organization or presented to the public through any of the
national communications media, but having reeducated themselves to the
realities of addictive disease, these professionals are now leading
the inevitable movement towards the biogenic paradigm.
Two enlightened organizations, the American Society of Addiction
Medicine and the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence,
have jointly formulated a new definition of alcoholism that is
consistent with the biogenic paradigm, as follows: "Alcoholism is a
primary, chronic disease with genetic, psycho-social and environmental
factors influencing its development and manifestations." The
definition is further elaborated, but note especially that
psychosocial and environmental factors are no longer primary,
contributing causes of alcoholism.
Meanwhile, the ugly battle for control will continue in the political
arena. The public has recently heard the hostile allegations that
nobody understands alcoholism, that alcoholism does not exist, that it
is merely willful misbehavior, that since treatment doesn’t work
anyway, only the briefest and least expensive should be funded.
"…every word they say chagrins us…" because all of these criticisms
are true of the bankrupt psychogenic approach to alcoholism; none,
however, is true of the biogenic.
These attacks on the "treatment industry" are merely a reactionary
attempt to regain in the social and political arenas control over
alcoholism that has been irretrievably lost in scientific research and
clinical practice. Their effectiveness depends entirely on public
ignorance of the fact that the paradigm shift has already occurred.
With many millions of lives and hundreds of billions of dollars in the
balance, surely it is time to embrace and reveal the whole truth about
addictive disease to decision makers and the public, to present the
biogenic paradigm as the comprehensive successor to the disastrous
psychogenic model. It will be quickly validated and ratified by an
enormous latent fund of public experience and knowledge. Virtually
everyone has witnessed the reality of addictive disease and the
effectiveness of treatment, both first-hand and in media reports of
the lives of a multitude of recovering celebrities.
*** This paper is both a summary and a manifesto, a blueprint for
action. The discerning reader will realize that every valid piece of
addiction research evidence in every discipline has a vital place
within the biogenic paradigm when reviewed from this new perspective.
A monumental interdisciplinary task will be to scan, reevaluate,
winnow, and assemble the entire research literature in this new
configuration, and to publish this information in a series of reports.
To this end and to inspire and support the participation of others, a
nonprofit organization, The Biogenic Addiction Institute, is being
created.
*** To all who read this paper: please photocopy or otherwise
reproduce this monograph and circulate it as widely as possible. You
will probably want to save a copy for your own reference. While I have
copyrighted this work, I nonetheless grant permission for unlimited
reproduction in the interest of advancing the biogenic paradigm.
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