“To be or not to be?”
If Hamlet were to present his soliloquy today he might phrase the
question a bit differently: To be a drug addict or not to be a drug
addict? That begs another question: Is addiction a disease or is it a
choice? The answer is a confusing: Yes.
In 2009, research
psychologist Gene Heyman published a book that presented a thesis
with the premise that drug addiction is not a disease but is rather
the consequence of a series of voluntary choices. Heyman is also a
lecturer in psychology at the Harvard Medical School, and his book,
“Addiction: A Disorder of Choice”, elicited a fury of responses.
His theory flies in the face of the prestigious U.S. National
Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) that works closely with scientists
around the world, including in Australia. NIDA has taken the position
that drug addiction is a disease of the brain.1
So who is right? Heyman
points out that many addicts quit taking drugs in their 30s as a
matter of choice, while people with chronic diseases like diabetes
cannot choose to stop being diabetic. He has a point, but since then
additional research on the impact of drugs on the brain have produced
new information that indicates Heyman’s thesis overly simplifies
the many facets of addiction. A 2009 study conducted by a group of
universities in Australia and Singapore reviewed the neurobiological
research on drug addiction. The researchers called addiction a
chronic condition as opposed to a chronic disease and discussed how
addicts make the choice to use drugs for various reasons. These
reasons include avoiding severe withdrawal symptoms and to achieve
rewarding effects (scientific terminology for “highs”).2
But the report also points
out that medical research had recently discovered there was a
neurobiological pathway that underlies all addiction. It was becoming
apparent that addiction is not just about making choices. Drug use
creates “specific pharmacological and anatomical changes in brain
activity” (Carter, p 32). Addiction is recognised as a complex
condition that requires “...genetic, molecular, cellular,
neurophysiological, cognitive, psychological and social explanations”
(Carter, p. 35). Changes in the brain’s chemistry seem to underlie
addictive behaviours, but the brain studies on addiction involved
animals and not humans.
Breaking the Brain
Thanks to technology,
medical professionals can now study human brains. In 2010,
researchers at the Neurocentre Magendie in Bordeaux discovered that
addiction could be the result of persistent impairment of synaptic
functioning in the brain.3 It is like using something over
and over again until it breaks, and you cannot fix it. The
researchers call it pathological cerebral modifications that reach a
point where the person is unable to overcome the modifications
brought on by drug use. This was an early study linking repeated drug
use to brain changes that cause addiction. How well a person can
overcome the brain modifications caused by drugs explains why some
people get addicted and some do not.
Since these studies,
application of technology has shown many times that brain functioning
can be altered by drugs. However, many people never reach the point
of no return and can choose to stop using drugs. Employers learn over
time that some employees are either truly addicted; enjoy using drugs
and do not intend on stopping; are influenced by peer pressure; or
are at a stage where choice and addiction are combating each other.
Each Worker is Unique
Drug addiction has both
psychological and physical elements. Each worker has a different
physiological makeup and psychological makeup. Random drug testing in
the workplace is effective because it does not differentiate between
people based on their reasons for using drugs. However, it is
important to understand exactly how complex drug addiction really is.
So the answer to the question, “To be drug addicted or not to be
drug addicted?” is still “yes.”
Medical
researchers are constantly discovering new information about the
pathology of addiction and the behaviours it produces. Employers need
to manage drug & alcohol testing programs with
updated information and a state-of-the-art screening services
provider like Mediscreen (mediscreen.net.au).
This article has been taken from : http://www.mediscreen.net.au/articles/do-addicts-choose-to-be-addicts/
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