The Concept Of Obsessive Relapse

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People afflicted with obsessive addiction can not be rehabilitated. An obsessive addiction is when the routine actions of an addicted person or persons becomes an obsession, making treatment much more difficult, and in most recorded cases, borderline impossible. Those afflicted suffer psychological and sometimes physical pain or discomfort when cut off from their substance of choice. There are different types of obsession that require different kinds of treatments, making rehabilitation that much more difficult. Society as a whole does not know enough about addiction or obsession to deal with the current plague of addiction and relapse that everyone is affected by.
Relapsing from drug abuse is when a person with a previous drug addiction loses …show more content…

Because of the complexity of substance abuse, different concepts of relapse and reduction in drug use need to be examined. Relapse is a complex, dynamic process that must be examined carefully by researchers and clinicians. The extensive treatment histories of many clients entering and re-entering programs suggest that recovery from drug use is long term, and episodic relapses are experienced. The process of recovery occurs throughout the drug use and treatment career. A better understanding of this process should lead to improved treatment and aftercare services that will reduce overall relapse rates, extend remission periods, and reduce the duration of relapse …show more content…

Recently, there has been hope that these disorders may be controllable to pharmacological treatments that have been able to treat other psychopathological disorders. “Pharmacological” approaches to drug abuse tend to be guided by the primary drug used by the individual, though substitution has been the guiding principle in some instances, as in the case of methadone maintenance in opioid addiction. Alternatively, aggressively and abruptly removing the effects of the primary drug being abused has been tried, as in the case of using naltrexone to treat opioid or alcohol addiction. Though reportedly successful in some instances, it is not clear that these approaches effectively control drug cravings or a return to drug use as a response to stressful life experiences. Recent experimental studies of the factors that induce craving and relapse to drug use have shown that the effects of these different events are brought about by separable neural circulation. Another finding that came from these studies is that the motivation for substance seeking induced by events that have a part in relapse are intensified by the duration and amount of pre-exposure to a drug and time passed since withdrawal of the drug. One implication of such findings is that whatever approach is taken, treatment will have to be maintained over an extended period of time after the initial removal of drug

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