12-Step Recovery - Making Sense of Adolescent Neuropsychosis

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NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL EDUCATION AND THE 12 STEPS: RECLAIMING A VIABLE RECOVERY OPTION FOR ADOLESCENTS

MAP Challenges to 12 Step Recovery History of 12 Step Recovery Overview of the 12 Steps Alternatives to 12 Steps Adolescent neurodevelopment Research on efficacy of 12 Step Integrated Approach Experiential Neuropsychological Education An effective approach to an integrated model

12 STEP: WHY NOT? Efficacy of alternatives Difficulty of buy-in among adolescents Resistance to the spiritual component Lack of efficacy of 12-Step

12 STEP: WHY NOT? 12-step programs do not work and are not backed by science do not foster access to care are no better than doing nothing are no more than religious efforts that reinforce powerless and helplessness Genetics do not play a role in addictions. They are not diseases.

12 STEP: WHY NOT? 12-step programs do not work and are not backed by science There is overwhelming evidence that AA and programs that facilitate patients engagement within groups are among the most effective and best-studied treatments for addictive behavior change. -Kelly and Beresin, 2014

12 STEP: WHY NOT? 12-step programs do not foster access to care AA is free, and can be accessed almost anywhere and at any time in the United States and many other countries notably at high-risk relapse times when professionals are not available. -Kelly and Beresin, 2014

12 STEP: WHY NOT? 12-step programs are no better than doing nothing Evidence shows that 12-step programs foster a safe community and sound principles that promote abstinence, and taking responsibility for additional efforts that might be needed. -Kelly and Beresin, 2014

12 STEP: WHY NOT? 12-step programs are no more than religious efforts that reinforce powerless and helplessness The truth is that in the midst of an addiction, one has, in fact, lost control over impulses to use the drug. Admitting one is powerless is merely facing a fact of his/her life that is a part of the neurobiology of the illness, and which ultimately leads to one taking responsibility to his/her recovery. Many attending 12- step programs do not perceive a need for God, and do not accept the interpretation of a higher power. -Kelley and Beresin, 2014

12 STEP: WHY NOT? Genetics do not play a role in addictions. They are not diseases. This assertion also contradicts scientific evidence; research demonstrates that about half of the risk for addiction is conferred by genetics. -Kelley and Beresin, 2014

EFFICACY OF 12-STEP RECOVERY What can we do to prevent the scourge of addiction? Surely we all want a magic bullet. But, we also want care that is based on sound scientific research and evidencebased treatments. There are no cures. But, there is hope for recovery and sobriety, and, while not being cure-alls themselves, research demonstrates that AA and 12-step treatments are some of the most effective and cost-efficient approaches to addressing chronic diseases of addiction in our society. John F. Kelly, PhD Gene Beresin, MD

ALTERNATIVES CBT SMART MBRP Harm Reduction Secular Organization for Sobriety LifeRing Celebrate Recovery Self Help Network Women for Sobriety Men for Sobriety Medication The Seven Challenges

WHY ALTERNATIVES ARE ATTRACTIVE Shedding of lifelong labels Emphasis on Internal Control Secularity Evolving Approaches

HISTORY OF 12 STEP RECOVERY History of Alcoholics Anonymous Synanon and its legacy NA, and other As The Minnesota Model, 12-Step Plus Contemporary 12 Step Alternative Peer Groups

THE STEPS: BASICS Steps 1-9: Building a Foundation 1-3: From denial to making a decision to change 4-7: Gaining self-awareness 8-9: Establishing accountability and taking action to reinforce it

THE STEPS: BASICS Steps 10-12: A Way of Life 10: Continued personal honesty 11: Accepting help in sustaining recovery 12: Helping Others

THE STEPS: BASICS Daily structure of 10-12: Daily Inventory (at night) Establishing intention (in the morning) Accountability ( 10th Stepping ) The Fellowship

ENCOURAGING BUY-IN Prepare the student for orthodoxy, dogma and strange ideas Break it down Encourage critical thinking Show them the parallels EMPOWER Love & Connection Pragmatism Addressing spirituality HP Meaning & Purpose Transcendence

ADOLESCENT BRAIN The world is novel and ever expanding Right hemisphere dominant I know everything but, I cant focus right now. Over crowded pre frontal cortex I know how to but what is the best choice? Prefrontal cortex and emotional system is developed but does not have the mileage. Peer fact checking Baird Experiment I see it so I know I ve done it Mirror neurons

AREAS OF THE BRAIN ASSOCIATED WITH DRUG USE Reward Circuitry Prefrontal Cortex- Thinking, planning, mood regulation Ventral Tegmental Area- Identifies needs. Hunger, Thirst, ETC. Nucleus Accumbens- Motivation towards reward. Amygdala- Mood regulation and response Hippocampus- Memory

THE DRUG EFFECTED ADOLESCENT BRAIN Hyper-emotionality Misguided Motivation Brain functions directed at pleasure seeking behaviors Increased rationalization Excessive concern with self in comparison to others Distorted perception of individuation

WHAT DOES IT TAKE TO ENGAGE WITH THE STEPS Decreasing emotional reactivity and misperception Seeing the steps as a tool and structure for practice rather than a pass/fail curriculum. Identifying WHY? Aren t the steps some arbitrary requirements made up by an old guy a long time ago?

EXPERIENTIAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL EDUCATION Neuropsych Education How is your brain working Drug Effects on the brain 12 STEP effects on the brain Qeeg quantitative electroencephalograph Helps the student : Understand their experience through the functional areas of the brain. Objectively look at what contributes to their behaviors, decisions, and emotional states. Recognize how and why drugs effected them a certain way. Be more aware of why they have trouble with pieces of the 12 step process. Mindfulness/Guided Visualization

QEEG EXAMPLE

12 STEPS ON THE BRAIN Steps 1-9: Building a Foundation 1-3: From denial to making a decision to change 4-7: Gaining self-awareness 8-9: Establishing accountability and taking action to reinforce it

AN INTEGRATED AND EMPOWERING APPROACH Creating an empowering experience Pragmatic promotion of positive peer support Exposure vs. immersion Promoting critical thinking (Integrating MI, ACT) On balance, more focus on psychoeducation regarding the rewards of abstinence and recovery than on the negative consequences of substance abuse Experiential Neurobiological Psycoeducation in parallel with The Steps

QUOTES Why were you resistant to 12 step recovery? AA was written by old people a long time ago so they really don t relate to us How does understanding your brain help? It helps to know that my brain is telling me to do things and that my impulsivity is not just my choice. It makes me pay more attention to what I do.

REFERENCES Alcoholics Anonymous. (2001). Alcoholics Anonymous, 4 th Edition, New York: A.A. World Services. Janzen, R. A. (2001). The rise and fall of Synanon: a California utopia. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Facilitating involvement in Alcoholics Anonymous during out-patient treatment: a randomized clinical trial. Walitzer KS,Dermen KH, Barrick C. Addiction, 2009 Mar;104(3):391-401. Doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2009.02467.x Alternatives to 12-Step Addiction Recovery, Christina Reardon, MSW, LSW Social Work Today, Vol 13, No. 6, P. 12 Can encouraging substance abuse patients to participate in self-help groups reduce demand for health care? A quasiexperimental study. Humphreys K, Moos, R. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2001 May;25(5):711-6. In Defense Of 12 Steps: What Science Really Tells Us About Addiction, 2014 Apr, commonhealth.wbur.org/2014/04/defense-12- step-addiction

REFERENCES Giedd, J.N. et al. October 1999. Brain development during childhood and adolescence: a longitudinal MRI study. Nature. Vol 2, No 10, pp. 861-863. Sokhadze, T. M., Stewart, C. M., Hollifield, M(2007.)Integrating Cognitive Neuroscience Research and Cognitive Behavioral Treatment with Neurofeedback Therapy in Drug Addiction Co morbid with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Conceptual Review. Journal of Neurotherapy: 11(2) Mercado, E (2008)Neural and Cognitive Plasticity: From Maps to Minds. The Psychological Bulletin 134(1), 109-137. doi: 10.1037/0033-2909.134.1.109 http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/002003.htm Finkelberg, A., Sakhadze, E.T., Lipatin, A.A., Shubina, 0., Kahorina, L., Shak, A., & Shtark, M. (1993). The application of alpha-theta EEG biofeedback training for psychological improvement in the process of rehabilitation of patients with pathological addictions. Biofeedback: Magazine of the Association for Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback, 37. Peniston, E.G. & Kulkosky, P.J. (1989). Alpha-theta brainwave training and beta endorphin levels in alcoholics. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Results, 13(2), 271-279. Winterer, G., Kloppel, B., Heinz, A., Ziller, M., Dufeu. P., Schmidt, G. L., Hermann, M.W. (1997). Quantitative EEG (QEEG) predicts relapse in patients with chronic alcoholism and points to a frontally pronounced cerebral disturbance. The journal of Psychiatry research 78 (1-2)101-113. Doi: 10.1016/S0165-1781(97)00148-0