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Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Ignore the Celebrity Drug Rehab Stigma



Celebrities seem to always get themselves into trouble. In particular, young celebrities, in their early 20s, seem to get into trouble with drugs and alcohol. These role models to our kids eventually find themselves on probation or in jail for drug related arrests. The courts eventually force them, in one way or another, to seek help through drug rehab clinics, or alcohol sobering facilities. What this does is create a stigma to the idea of getting help at a facility. The fact is that these clinics are not necessarily something anyone should dread, especially since they are there to help people get their lives back. The problem is most young adults cannot accept they have a problem to begin with so why attend these places to begin with. Once they get passed that, they seek help.



The fact is drug rehab clinics save lives and although they may not see the effects immediately, patients come to realize that over time, this was the only choice they had to break the bonds of their addictions. It used to be that the only solution was abstinence from alcohol and drugs, or going cold turkey. Nowadays doctors and physicians know better. The withdrawal symptoms can be extremely violent, and even deadly in some cases. Withdrawal can be the most agonizing pain one can endure and that drives people far away from any notion of breaking their addiction.



Studies have shown that there is a better solution. The best approach is to slowly wean the drug or alcohol over time. In other words, the patient will still intake the alcohol or drug they are addicted to, but in smaller doses over time, until the drug is out of their system. Of course, this is still a prevailing problem in most prisons, where the drug addict is immediately exposed to complete withdrawal. Speaking of prisons, drugs are so rampant that this is rarely the case for most users.



Studies have shown that there is a better solution. The best approach is to slowly wean the drug or alcohol over time. In other words, the patient will still intake the alcohol or drug they are addicted to, but in smaller doses over time, until the drug is out of their system. Of course, this is still a prevailing problem in most prisons, where the drug addict is immediately exposed to complete withdrawal. Speaking of prisons, drugs are so rampant that this is rarely the case for most users.

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