Describe and Evaluate Two Ways of Treating Substance Misuse, Including Drug Treatment in Heroin Dependence (the Biological Approach) and One Other – Aversion Therapy for Alcohol Abuse (the Learning Approach)

Methadone – treatment in heroin dependence (Biological Approach)

  • Synthetic opiate – similar in chemical structure to heroin – has a similar effect at the synapse – replaces heroin at synapse
  • Taken orally as a liquid
  • Addicts assessed and level of methadone is determined
  • Given in local pharmacy or clinic
  • Given daily to get rid of symptoms
  • Steady release into blood stream – constant
  • Don’t get a rush – function reasonably normal – less desirable
  • Supresses withdrawal symptoms
  • If a dose is missed, the body is less able to break it down
  • Dose decreased over a period of time
  • Therapeutic dose – 60 – 90 mg a day
  • NHS recommends medical checks are undertaken at least once every 3 months – monitoring level and stability of addiction – urine checks for drugs
  • Supervised until seen as trustworthy to take doses away

Evaluation

  • Very expensive – comes from tax
  • Can be seen as unethical
  • Doesn’t treat psychological dependence
  • Breaks link with drug dealers and needles
  • It isn’t mixed with other drugs
  • Hard to overdose on methadone – unless mixed in a cocktail of other drugs where it would become dangerous
  • Many addicts never try to detox
  • Withdrawal takes longer than heroin (about a month)

Aversion Therapy – treatment for alcohol dependence (Learning Approach)

  • Psychological treatment based on classical conditioning
  • Alcohol when consumed normally – metabolises into a toxic compound, acetaldehyde
  • If acetaldehyde builds up in the body it causes unpleasant symptoms associated with excessive drinking e.g. nausea, vomiting, dizziness, headaches, and palpitations
  • Acetaldehyde is normally oxidised very rapidly into acetic acid which is completely harmless
  • Aversion therapy gives patient disulfiram before consuming alcohol – blocks the oxidising of acetaldehyde so the individual experiences the unpleasant effects
  • Daily dosage of disulfiram is given orally
  • Pairing of alcohol with unpleasant symptoms is used to classically condition an aversion to alcohol
  • Association of taste and smell of alcohol with unpleasant effects creates learning by association and should put the alcoholic off drinking in the future
  • Given in hospital/specialised clinics
  • Could take months/years depending on reaction and motivation of clients

Evaluation

  • Very effective in short term due to unpleasant effects
  • Works well if linked to social support – continued abstinence needs to be reinforced
  • Deals effectively with physiological addiction – allows psychological reasons to be addressed separately
  • Relapse rates are high – when disulfiram is no longer being used the level of nausea experienced relies entirely on the conditioned response, which will gradually become extinguished
  • If nothing is done to resolve the psychological reasons why addiction started, relapse is almost inevitable
  • Only effective if drinker abstains completely from alcohol in the future – alcohol consumption without disulfiram would immediately activate reward system
  • Stimulus generalisation – may avoid all drinks, not just alcohol
  • Kraft & Kraft – looked at a case study; fingernail biter, cannabis smoker, obese, etc. – aversion therapy was most cost effective and rapid treatment
  • Some clients may be more motivated than others
  • Relatively successful method – 9 year study, 50% remained abstinent