You Can Moderate The Amount of Alcohol You Consume

According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism and many other independent researchers, there are four times as many problem drinkers as alcoholics in this country. Yet there are very few programs that specifically address the needs of beginning stage problem drinkers as a treatment of alcoholism, while there are literally thousands of programs for the smaller population who are seriously alcohol dependent.

By the time people reach serious stages of alcohol dependency, changing drinking behavior becomes more difficult, and treatment is costly. A support group called Moderation Management, or MM, believes that this situation needs to be remedied in the interest of public health and human kindness with early intervention and harm reduction programs. Alcoholism help in the form of moderation is seen as a less threatening first step, and one that problem drinkers are more likely to attempt before their problems become nearly intractable.

Not surprisingly, approximately 30% of MM members go on to abstinence-based programs. This is consistent with research findings from professional moderation training programs. Outcome studies indicate that professional programs which offer both moderation and abstinence have higher success rates than those that offer abstinence only. Clients tend to self-select the behavior change options which will work best for them. Moderation Management offers a nine-step professionally reviewed program, which provides information about alcohol, moderate drinking guidelines and limits, drink monitoring exercises, goal setting techniques, and self-management strategies.

Problem drinkers can make informed choices about alcohol moderation or abstinence goals based upon educational information and the experiences shared at self-help groups. Harm reduction is a worthwhile goal, especially when the total elimination of harm or risk is not a realistic option. Moderation is a natural part of the process from harmful drinking, whether moderation or abstinence becomes the final goal. Most individuals who are able to maintain total abstinence first attempted to reduce their drinking, unsuccessfully. Moderation programs shorten the process of “discovering” if moderation is a workable solution by providing concrete guidelines about the limits of moderate alcohol consumption.

The basic premise of moderation is that behaviors can be changed. MM agrees with many professionals and researchers in the field that alcohol abuse, versus dependence, is a learned behavior (habit) for problem drinkers, and not a disease. This approach recognizes that people who drink too much can suffer from varying degrees of alcohol-related problems, ranging from mild to moderate to severe. A reasonable early option for problem drinkers is alcohol moderation. Seriously dependent drinkers will probably find a return to moderate drinking a great challenge, but the choice to accept that challenge remains theirs.

Moderation is not a good approach for every person with a drinking problem or who wishes to control drinking. No one solution is best for all people with drinking problems. There are many possible solutions available to each individual, and MM is good place to begin to address a drinking problem. If moderation proves to be an ineffective solution, the individual is encouraged to progress to a more radical solution.

If you need help deciding whether alcohol moderation is best for you, I suggest that you contact Marc F. Kern, Ph.D., one of the original founders and a member of the MM Board of Directors of Moderation Management Network, Inc., through his website at http://www.habitdoc.com/, where one-to-one help is offered.

Rehab Treatment Center, isted Recovery Midwest, Offers Drug, Vivtrol, to Stop Alcohol Cravings

If there was medication to keep habitual drunk drivers off the road, would you want our courts to include the therapy in a sentence? The isted Recovery Centers of America located on Chippewa Avenue in South St. Louis does. It’s where alcoholics and drug abusers go for monthly injections of Vivitrol coupled with counseling.

Jamie Wienstroer had his share of DWI’s. He consumed a case of beer a day with vodka. Once he even blacked out, fell from a bridge and was hit by a metro-link train which caused him to suffer frontal lobe damage.

But with this treatment, he hasn’t had a drink in ten months. Nothing prior to Vivitrol, not even Alcoholics Anonymous worked in the past. Clayton attorney Travis Noble Jr. is a former police officer who busted countless drunk drivers. He’s now a supporter of Vivitrol and the treatment alcoholics and drug abusers get at ARCA. He’s trying to get more courts and Mother’s Against Drunk Drivers to climb on board. He says harsh jail sentences are not enough. When someone gets out, they just start drinking again. Vivitrol along with psychiatric care blocks the high that triggers alcoholics to keep drinking.

Assisted Recovery Centers of America is located at 6651 Chippewa and they can be reached at 314-646-6840. Visit www.arcamidwest.com for more information.

From: ST. LOUIS, MO (FOX2now.com)
South St. Louis Treatment Center Offers Drug to Combat Alcoholism

Treatment Center Offers Drug to Stop Alcohol Cravings

By John Pertzborn
April 27, 2009

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Are You an Alcoholic?

Many famous people and celebrities have been battling with alcoholism. The list seems to be endless–from Alexander the Great to Josef Stalin, Ernest Hemmingway and modern-day Hollywood actors and singers. What is the right approach to alcohol? How can you determine whether you are becoming addicted to alcohol? Where should you turn for help?

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Find the Balance Dare to Dream

DVD on alcohol and the challengeof moderation

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Alcohol Abuse- Health Connection

When it comes to drinking alcohol, how do you know you might have a problem ? Dr. Peter Miller discusses this issue. This video is brought to you by the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston, South Carolina.

Visit http://www.muschealth.com/cdap to learn more about MUSC’s Center for Drug and Alcohol Programs.

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Can you break alcoholism without treatment?

I have drank on a daily basis (beer) only for 20 years now. Sometimes between 10 and 18 beers a day. I have stopped now, it has been seven days and I have not had a single DT from it. I still have the urge but out of boredom and routine. Can I break this without any help? And if so what are any methods that could help me.. keep in mind I own a bar…. thanks

Yes, definatelty. It will be quite difficult, but so far you seem to be doing a good job. It’s all about willpower, if you really want to you should be able to. But, most likely, you will need some support — especially if you own a bar. You should ask your friends to quit drinking with you for a few days each just so you have some one to be sober with. But hey, if you find it difficult to quit without help there is absolutely NO shame in getting a little bit of help on the side.

Best of luck.

Is there any medications to help recovering from damaged brain by the alcoholism?

It looks like my brain may have been damaged by alcoholism.

Is there any medication to help repairing my brain?

What are the names?

Or do you suggest any vitamins?

Thanks!

B vitamins are good, Niacin and Thiamine in particular. Alcoholics often have Thiamine deficiencies from what I’ve heard.

I doubt if you have any serious brain damage, though. Your spelling is excellent and you had only one minor grammatical error in your question.

If you seriously think you might have that problem, maybe you should talk to a doctor.

Alcohol treatment that teaches moderation?

Is there a treatment for alcohol abuse that doesn’t teach such a strict 12-step program where you have to do all the God stuff and teaches you to have a drink once a week in a social setting? The AA people I’ve met treat it like a religion, and I’m a free spirit. I just want to cut down, but enjoy a drink at parties with friends. This seems to go against the AA mantra.

Can anyone help me? Thank you so much.

I hear you, buddy. It’s hard to go from drinking in excess (alcoholic,to most people) to drinking socially like "normal" people do.

But I’ve done it. It wasn’t easy, and it’s still a struggle, but here’s a site that gives you some basic info.

Don’t give up.
http://www2.potsdam.edu/hansondj/controversies/1109212610.html

does moderate drinking of alcohol delay the onset of Alzheimer disease?


No, it would seem that the person would be in a state of constant confusion even more.

Does the medical profession still use antibuse in the treatment of alcoholism?

If so why or why not?

Antibuse is used whenever the patient is most likely to repeat his or her abuse of alcohol. It is not used as often as it was 20 years ago, because they found that some chronic alcoholics could and would drink even when ON Antibuse. The preferred treatment these days is intensive therapy with a counslor, while admitted to a treatment facility combining one on one and group counseling. A great deal is dependent on the willingness of the patient to stop abusing substances, so the focus has turned to getting to the root of the dependence problem, and eliminating the posibility of other mental health problems being present that feed the need for dependency. This seems to be more sucessfull, i.e. treating the patient as a whole rather than by one of many symptoms that may present themselves.

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