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Chapter 9 of TAP 11: Treatment for Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse: Opportunities for Coordination
Chapter 9-Relapse Prevention
Addiction is a chronic relapsing disorder,
thereby making the prevention of relapse one of the critical elements
of effective treatment for alcohol and other drug (AOD) abuse.
Studies have shown that 54 percent of all alcohol and other drug
abuse patients can be expected to relapse, and that 61 percent
of that number will have multiple periods of relapse. It is not
unusual for addicts to relapse within one month following treatment,
nor is it unusual for addicts to relapse 12 months after treatment;
47 percent will relapse within the first year after treatment
(Simpson, Joe & Lehman 1986). Although relapse is a symptom
of addiction, it is preventable. A key factor in preventing relapse
is improved social adjustment (Joe et al. 1985a). The poor social
adjustment by criminal offenders makes them especially prone to
relapse and to associated criminal behavior.
Relapse prevention methodologies are
critical to the success of substance abuse treatment. This chapter
will examine the process of relapse, along with information about
recognizing its "warning signs," or triggers, and the
elements of relapse prevention treatment methodologies.
Understanding Relapse
Relapse does not occur within a vacuum.
There are many contributing factors, as well as identifiable
evidence and warning signs which indicate that a patient may be
in danger of returning to substance abuse. Relapse can be understood
as not only the actual return to the pattern of substance abuse,
but also as the process during which indicators appear prior
to the patient's resumption of substance use (Daley, 1987).
Relapse, however, is not an automatic
sentence to a lifetime of substance abuse for an individual. Studies
of lifelong patterns of recovery and relapse indicate that approximately
one-third of patients achieve permanent abstinence through their
first serious attempt at recovery. Another third have brief relapse
episodes which eventually result in long-term abstinence. An additional
one-third have chronic relapses which result in eventual recovery
from chemical addiction (Gorski, Kelley & Havens, 1993).
Because relapse is a common occurrence
during the process of substance abuse recovery, it is imperative
that it be examined carefully. Treating the disease of AOD abuse
is not possible without a thorough understanding of the role that
relapse prevention plays.
Whether or not treatment and criminal
justice personnel provide initial treatment services, these personnel
have a significant opportunity and responsibility to intervene
with recovering persons when they recognize signs of relapse.
Some of the skills required include assessment, education, confrontation
of denial, brokering of community resources, and building support
systems.
In order for relapse prevention to be
successful, effective systems coordination is necessary. This
involves coordination and communication between various agencies
and systems. Community treatment programs must work cooperatively
to ensure that relapse prevention programming is an integral part
of treatment for all patients. State and community decision makers
need to recognize that relapse prevention is a critical component
of the treatment process, and consider and coordinate policy and
funding decisions with this in mind. When it is treated as such,
with comprehensive efforts on the parts of all involved agencies
and systems, treatment dollars are spent most effectively.
Several situations may lead to relapse,
such as social and peer pressure or anxiety and depression. Studies
have indicated that the highest proportion of high-risk situations
for alcoholics involve interpersonal negative emotional states,
while the highest proportion of high-risk situations reported
by heroin addicts involves social pressure. (Marlatt & Gordon,
1985).
Contributing Factors
An understanding of some of the personal
factors which may contribute to substance abuse relapse is useful
in any discussion of relapse prevention. These may include (Peters,
1993):
- inadequate
skills to deal with social pressure to use substances;
-
frequent exposure to "high-risk
situations" that have led to drug or alcohol use in the past;
- physical
or psychological reminders of past drug or alcohol use (e.g.,
drug paraphernalia, drug-using friends, money);
-
inadequate skills to deal with
interpersonal conflict or negative emotions;
-
desires to test personal control
over drug or alcohol use; and
-
recurrent thoughts or physical
desires to use drugs or alcohol.
Drug and alcohol addiction is a chronic
and relapsing condition. Recovery requires changes in attitudes,
behaviors, and values. Because of these issues, recovery is not
a static condition; it is an ongoing process. Relapse occurs when
attitudes and behaviors revert to ones similar to those exhibited
when the person was actively using drugs or alcohol. Although
relapse can occur at any time, it is more likely earlier in the
recovery process. At this stage, habits and attitudes needed for
continued sobriety, skills required to replace substance use,
and identity with positive peers are not firmly entrenched (Nowinski,
1990).
Categories of Patients
According to Gorski & Miller (1986),
chemically addicted individuals can be categorized according
to their recovery and relapse history. Patients are: prone to
recovery; briefly prone to relapse; or chronically prone to relapse.
Individuals who are relapse-prone can be further divided into
three subgroups:
- Transition
patients.
Transition patients do not accept or recognize that
they are suffering from chemical addiction, even though their
substance abuse may have created obvious adverse consequences.
This usually results from the patient's inability to accurately
perceive reality, due to chemical interference.
- Unstabilized relapse-prone patients.
Unstabilized patients have not been taught skills to identify
their addiction. In such cases, treatment fails to provide these
patients with the necessary skills to interrupt the process and
disease of addiction. As a result, they are unable to adhere to
a recovery program requiring abstinence, treatment, and lifestyle
change.
- Stabilized relapse-prone patients. Stabilized patients recognize and are
aware of their chemical addiction, that abstinence is necessary
for recovery, and that an ongoing recovery program may be required
to maintain sobriety. Despite their efforts, however, these individuals
develop dysfunctional symptoms which ultimately lead them back
to AOD abuse.
It has been estimated that 40 to 60
percent of persons who are recovering from chemical dependence
relapse at least once following their first serious attempt at
treatment. Studies have shown that offenders who are actively
using drugs are involved in approximately three to five times
the number of crime days as non-drug users; thus, relapse tends
to accelerate the level of subsequent criminal activity (Bell,
1990; Peters, 1993).
It is often thought that most relapse-prone
persons are not motivated to recover. This is particularly common
for those working with individuals in the criminal justice system,
where relapse to drug use coincides with a return to criminal
activity. Clinical experience, however, does not support this
perception. In one study of relapse-prone patients at a national
relapse prevention center in Maryland, over 80 percent of the
patients had a history of cognizance of their addiction, as well
as motivation to follow recovery recommendations. In spite of
this, the individuals were unable to maintain abstinence on their
own (Gorski et al., 1993).
Adolescent Risk
Adolescents are at particularly high
risk for relapse because of their developmental stage. Many typical
adolescent issues include physical and emotional changes which
exacerbate relapse tendencies. Chemical dependency may have delayed
normal development, making it difficult for recovering youth to
function in age-appropriate ways. This produces discomfort in
the all-important social milieu of youth. Some may return to substance
use as a way of managing these uncomfortable feelings (Bell, 1990).
Bell (1990) also indicates there are
predisposing factors and precipitating events that may result
in relapse for adolescents. Predisposing factors place youth (and
adults, as well) at increased risk and include elements such as:
- learning
disabilities;
- dual
or multiple diagnosis;
-
high stress personalities;
-
inadequate coping skills;
-
lack of a support system;
-
dysfunctional families; and
-
lack of impulse control.
Precipitating factors are upsetting
events that interfere with adolescents' abilities to work through
recovery. Examples of these include:
- divorce
or separation of parents;
-
moving away from old friends;
changing schools;
- loss
or death of family members; and
-
breakup of relationship with
boyfriend or girlfriend.
Precipitating events for adults might
include loss of job, loss of significant others, and similar
events. Relapse prevention emphasizes teaching recovering persons
to recognize and manage relapse warning signs. Peters (1993)
offers some suggestions for relapse prevention among criminal
offenders. While these are specific for populations of incarcerated
adults, many of the recommendations could be applied to youth
in various parts of the juvenile justice system. The program approaches
he suggests include:
- Assessment
of past relapses.
This approach involves development of an individualized
description of the sequence of events leading to relapse. This
should include structured programs providing education and opportunities
for rehearsal of coping skills. Relapse prevention should be provided
well before an individual's expected release from a program to
allow time for building relapse prevention skills.
-
Strategies to aid community re-entry.
Persons who have been removed from the community need assistance
with the transition and help in establishing contact with needed
treatment services. Frequent monitoring for drug use also may
be important.
- Court-ordered
treatment.
Follow-up community treatment may be stipulated by
the court as a condition of probation or after-care. Requiring
substance abusers to participate in relapse prevention programs
can aid in successful recovery. Community supervision can provide
needed incentives to sustain the recovery process until internal
motivation can be strengthened through peer support, confrontation,
and other methods. Court-ordered treatment is effective in preventing
relapse for persons who are unlikely to attend treatment on their
own.
Principles and Procedures of Relapse
Prevention
Gorski et al. (1993) have isolated a
number of principles underlying relapse prevention therapy. They
include:
- Self-regulation
and stabilization.
As the patient's capacity to self-regulate
thinking, feeling, memory, judgment, and behavior increases, the
risk of relapse will decrease. Self-regulation can be achieved
through stabilization. Stabilization may include:
-detoxification from alcohol and
other drugs;
- recuperation
from the effects of stress that preceded the chemical use;
-resolution of immediate interpersonal
and situational crises that threaten sobriety; or
-establishment of a daily structure
including proper diet, exercise, stress management, and regular
contact with both treatment personnel and self-help groups.
The
risk of relapse is highest during this period of stabilization.
- Integration
and self-assessment.
As understanding and acceptance increases,
the risk of relapse will decrease. During this phase, it is important
to explore the presenting problems which may have led to relapse
in the past, and which might trigger future relapse.
-
Understanding and relapse education.
An understanding of the general factors which cause relapse will
aid patients in relapse prevention. Basic information provided
in this phase should include, but not be limited to:
-medical, clinical, and social
models of addictive disease;
-developmental model of recovery;
- common
"stuck points" in recovery;
-complicating factors in relapse;
- identification
of warning signs;
- management
strategies for relapse warning signs; and
-planning for effective recovery.
It should be noted that many relapse-prone patients may have memory
problems associated with the chemical abuse, which may impede
the learning process and retention of educational information.
- Self-knowledge
and identification warning signs.
This process teaches patients
to identify the sequence of problems that has led from stable
recovery to chemical use in the past, and then to synthesize those
steps into future circumstances that could cause relapse.
- Coping skills and warning sign
management.
This process involves teaching relapse-prone patients
how to manage or cope with their warning signs as they occur.
- Change
and recovery planning.
Recovery planning involves the development
of a schedule of recovery activities that will help patients recognize
and manage warning signs as they occur in sobriety.
- Awareness and inventory training.
Inventory training teaches relapse-prone patients to do daily
inventories that monitor compliance with their recovery program
and check for the development of relapse warning signs.
- Significant others and involvement
of others.
Relapse-prone individuals need the help of others during
the process of recovery. Treatment should ensure that others
(e.g., family members, 12-step sponsors, supportive peers) are
involved in the recovery.
- Maintenance and relapse prevention
plan updating.
Ongoing outpatient treatment is necessary for effective
relapse prevention. Even highly effective short-term inpatient
or primary outpatient programs will be unable to interrupt long-term
relapse cycles without the ongoing reinforcement of some type
of outpatient therapy. A relapse prevention plan update session
may involve:
- a review of the original assessment, warning sign list, management
strategies, and recovery plan;
-an update of the assessment by
adding as an addendum any documents that are significant to the
patient's progress or problems since the previous update;
-a revision of the relapse warning
sign list to incorporate new warning signs that have developed
since the previous update;
-the development of management
strategies for the newly identified warning signs; and
-a revision of the recovery program
to add recovery activities, to address the new warning signs,
and to eliminate activities that are no longer needed.
Conclusion
Chemical addiction is a disease, and,
like many diseases, there is always the possibility of relapse.
The process of AOD abuse is complex, and is impacted by social,
clinical, and medical factors. The solutions to the problem of
chemical addiction are multi-faceted. Treatment strategies benefit
from a relapse prevention component in virtually every case. It
is a definite means of stretching the effectiveness of State treatment
dollars. In order for relapse prevention to work, agencies and
systems must cooperate and communicate in their search for the
best means of successfully intervening with substance abusing
patients.
References
Bell, T. (1990). Preventing adolescent
relapse: A guide for parents, teachers and counselors. Independence,
MO: Herald House/ Independence Press.
Daley, D. (1987) Relapse prevention
with substance abusers: clinical issues and myths. Social Work,
45(2), 38-42.
Gorski, T. T., Kelley, J. M., &
Havens, L. (1993). An overview of addiction, relapse, and relapse
prevention. In Relapse prevention and the substance-abusing criminal
offender (An executive briefing)
(Technical Assistance Publication
Series 8). Rockville, MD: Center for Substance Abuse Treatment.
Gorski, T.T., & Miller, M. (1986).
Staying sober-A guide for relapse prevention. Independence, MO:
Independence Press.
Joe, G.W., Chastain, R.L., Marsh, K.L.,
& Simpson, D.D. (1985a). Opioid recidivism factors: 12-year
followup of 1969-1972 admissions to DARP drug abuse treatments.
College Station, TX: Texas A&M University, Behavioral Research
Program.
Marlatt, G.A., & Gordon, J.R. (1985).
Relapse Prevention. New York: Guilford Press.
Nowinski, J. (1990). Substance abuse
in adolescents and young adults: A guide to treatment.
New York:
W.W. Norton & Company.
Peters, R.H. (1993). Relapse prevention
approaches in the criminal justice system. In Relapse prevention
and the substance-abusing criminal offender (An executive briefing)
(Technical Assistance Publication Series 8). Rockville, MD: Center
for Substance Abuse Treatment.
Simpson, D.D., Joe, G.W., Lehman, W.E.K.,
& Sells, S.B. (1986b). Addiction careers: Etiology, treatment,
and 12-year followup outcomes. Journal of Drug Issues, 16(1),
107-121.
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