Alcoholism - Treatment for Alcoholism
From DrKoop's partner site on breast cancer, MyBreastCancerNetwork.com
(Page 2) Overall Treatment GoalsThe ideal goals of long-term treatment by many doctors and organizations such as Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) are total abstinence. Patients who secure total abstinence have better survival rates, mental health, and marriages, and they are more responsible parents and employees than those who continue to drink or relapse. To achieve this, the patient aims to avoid high-risk situations and replace the addictive patterns with satisfying, time-filling behaviors. Because abstinence is so difficult to attain, however, many professionals choose to treat alcoholism as a chronic disease. In other words, patients should expect and accept relapse but should aim for as long a remission period as possible. Even merely reducing alcohol intake can lower the risk for alcohol-related medical problems. advertisement
AA and other alcoholic treatment groups are greatly worried by treatment approaches that do not aim for strict abstinence, however. Many people with alcoholism are eager for any excuse to start drinking again. There is also no way to determine which people can stop after one drink and which ones cannot. Evidence strongly suggests that seeking total abstinence and avoiding high-risk situations are the optimal goal for people with alcoholism. Inpatient Versus Outpatient TreatmentA number of treatment options now exist for alcoholism. It is first important to determine whether inpatient or outpatient care would best benefit the individual. Inpatient care is performed in a general or psychiatric hospital or in a center dedicated to treatment of alcohol and other substance abuse. It is recommended for the following people:
Some -- but not all -- studies have reported better success rates with inpatient treatment of patients with alcoholism. In those studies, patients who were hospitalized for treatment had fewer complications and re-hospitalizations, and longer abstinence rates, than patients treated as outpatients. However, newer studies strongly suggest that alcoholism can be effectively treated in a doctor’s office.
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