Today (#OurDay) I was at
an event in Bournemouth where we were discussing how we could get the different
services to work efficiently and effectively together, when there’s decreasing resources at the same time as
many of the people who need support are facing increasing challenges, such as unstable housing, complicating
health conditions, unemployment, benefits cuts and so on. As one person described it, it’s a ‘perfect
storm’.
This isn’t news, and although the suggestions made by staff
were excellent, I want to focus on some conversations I had outside the main
discussions – over lunch.
The first thing to note is that despite the astonishing
passion and dedication of these staff, who are quite simply not paid enough, the
environment they are working in is taking its toll: those decreasing funds and
increasing challenges mean people are struggling to see that they’re genuinely
making a difference. Is it just pushing
water uphill? At one point do you decide
to stop propping up a system you don’t believe in?
And that brings me onto a bigger point about beliefs that I
want to focus on here.
I was surprised that there was still considerable passion not
just in the delivery of treatment, but in the recovery / harm reduction
debate. I had naively thought we’d
buried the hatchet, but it’s very much alive in terms of how people see the
decisions that different organisations and clinicians make. In a sense, that’s not surprising, though, and
it’s partly the fault of commissioners (and politicians) for doing one of two
things.
First (and this is my own typical failing) we’ve sometimes
been guilty of ducking the issue, of imagining that just saying things like ‘evidence
based’ or ‘Orange
Book’ will dissolve any conflict.
It won’t. We should be savvy
enough to know that there’s plenty of wiggle room in NICE and PHE
guidelines, and there’s always that black box of ‘clinical judgement’.
Second, and conversely, we’ve sometimes been too
definite. Sometimes issues have been
presented as ‘black and white’, with a proposal being ‘right’ and all other
options ‘wrong’. No wonder, then, that
as the goalposts seem to be moved staff feel betrayed or lied to: if the
previous policy was ‘right’, surely this one is ‘wrong – or vice versa.
We should all be a little more cautious when ‘selling’
policies, and open and honest about our motivations and the limits of our
knowledge. (We should also obviously be
careful not to introduce any genuinely ‘wrong’ policies in the first place.)
The problem is that when someone is presenting something as
a black and white issue, and you’re not sure you agree with their position,
it’s easy to get caught in that same binary way of thinking – when what I’d
prefer with most of this is to suggest that there isn’t a single right
approach, and if we want to talk about services that are tailored to the
client, we need to genuinely listen to them.
A one-size fits all approach, whether from a self-proclaimed ‘recovery’
or ‘harm reduction’ perspective is likely to be unhelpful for a number of
people.
If this all sounds a bit cryptic, that’s fine. My real point is something almost trivial
about the theory of addiction. (Which of
course is never cryptic.)
In my experience of discussions about ‘addiction’, certain
high-minded academics critique
the ‘disease model’ of addiction, and possibly even the whole
concept. Then they are
advised that the disease model, as
championed by NIDA, is valuable because it helps stop addiction
being stigmatised. If people are ‘ill’
rather than ‘bad’, then surely there’s no reason to marginalise them and not
offer reasonable healthcare and support?
It always feels to me that critiques of the disease model
are therefore labelled as abstract, idealistic, and not in touch with ‘real’
politics or treatment. This is brought
home even more by the
close links between the disease model and the ideas of fellowships like
Alcoholics Anonymous.
Of course this is naïve on two counts.
First, academics can also have lived experience. Marc Lewis,
who co-wrote one of the pieces linked to above, makes no secret of his. Indeed, it’s his experience that led him to a
different perspective on the issue. And
more broadly, these aren’t simply abstract, academic debates; they can shape
policy and treatment.
Second, the idea that being ‘ill’ isn’t stigmatising is
absurd. Any number of diseases and
illnesses have been considered moral failings, or simply dangerous and
therefore stigmatising, from leprosy to cerebral palsy, to HIV to name just a
few. We don’t manage to treat everyone
who is ill with dignity.
Is the disease contagious?
Is it somehow caused by someone’s ‘lifestyle’ (or that of their
parents)? These are key questions not
just for the stigma surrounding addiction, but many other illnesses. And they’re not easy to answer. (If
recovery is contagious, then isn’t addiction?)
But it seems to me that this remains the frame of the debate:
brain disease a realistic, pragmatic, stigma-reducing idea; critiques perhaps
well-intentioned, but abstract and academic.
Criticising the disease model is seen as a hobby of abstract academic
thinkers not grounded in the real world.
(Maybe that’s me being oversensitive, but stick with me.)
That’s why I was surprised to hear critics of ‘harm
reduction’ (self-confessed advocates of ‘recovery’) also criticising the
disease model. But of course this made
perfect sense. For them, the reliance on
methadone (and an emphasis on ‘optimal dose’ in the Orange Book that is
relatively high compared to much practice) represented a medicalising of
addiction based on a disease model. If
you diagnose a disease, our standard medical approach is to prescribe, well, a
medicine – in this case methadone. But
methadone is nothing like an antibiotic, or steroid. It doesn’t in itself fight an
infection or reduce swelling; it feeds a physiological dependency.
I don’t really want to get drawn into the details of this
debate. It would take too long and the
evidence isn’t always perfectly clear.
It would also mean conducting a debate in ‘bright
lines’ when the
reality is a little more muddy.
I just want to pause on this point: recovery advocates can
also be critics of the disease model.
This is of course completely coherent, and maybe it’s only me who’s
intrigued, but it highlights that these debates aren’t simply black and
white. If we had to choose a ‘side’
between ‘harm reduction’ or ‘recovery’ we might find ourselves alongside
with some people we don’t agree with regarding the very nature of ‘addiction’.
An overly prescriptive idea of ‘right’ and ‘wrong’
approaches to treatment actually contains the seeds of its own downfall. If your enemy’s enemy is your friend, you’ll
find that, actually, we’re all friends.
We shouldn’t be choosing sides.
Not when there’s bigger battles to fight – like that perfect storm.
Another great piece.Thanks Will. I am a person in recovery from alcoholism. I do have a problem with the disease model. It doesn't work for me or describe my experience. Yet, for all that, I am firm adherent to the 12 steps and 12 traditions of AA. When my friends and colleagues talk about "their disease" I choose not to hear that literally. Rather, I take it as some kind of shorthand for what I believe I suffer from - a spiritual malady as described best by Carl Jung. The cure for my alcoholism is connection; to my fellow humans and to the God of my understanding. I have just been at a convention in Spain and met one of my recovery heroes. Bob D from Las Vegas is 40 years in recovery from alcoholism. He says that some of us were born with something missing - a hole in the soul. This hole can be filled with many things: drugs, alcohol, sex, gambling, food, money, power, prestige. The problem is that these fillers or fixes can stop stop working and then what do you do? For me, that involves complete commitment to the process of the 12 steps and 12 traditions and through that process I get to fill the hole in my soul by service to others (for free, always for free) and a connection with the God of my understanding which sets me free from the bondage of my self. Now here's the rub (maybe?) I am also a firm advocate of harm reduction and have been all my life. I happen to think that harm reduction should always have the first call on resources and especially so in these stringent economic times. We *need* Opioid Substitution Treatment, Needle & Syringe programmes and testing and treatment of BBVs. Put bluntly, we do not *need* recovery services in the same way. It is nice to have recovery coaches, sobriety coaches, interventionists and residential rehabs but we dont need them in the same way we need harm reduction services. Asset Based Community Development tells us that we should never do for an individual or a community what they can and should do for themselves. We can do everything we need to do in communities for ourselves. The 5 ways to well being are all available today for anyone for free. We cannot prescribe OST or provide NSPs and BBV tests and treatment. Thanks again Will, I remain; yours truly a harm reductionist in recovery.
ReplyDeleteThank you both great reads.Will and Mark. I too dont buy into the disease model and I am of a 12 step background too. The book talks of an illness and a spiritual solution that Carl jung said we would need to recover and I am very much in the big book. I am also very passionate about harm reduction and different ways of delivering this.I also never rubbish any approach which works for the individual but as long as its about empowerment for the individual to move on due to their choice. At the moment cuts to services are not helping harm reduction I hear needle exchange budgets getting cut up and down the UK at the moment. I am working for Hepititis C Trust in the PHE move to elimnate Hep C I am the Peer Lead for West Yorkshire I am currently on the ground with a lot of entrenched drug and alcohol users. We are trying to find and treat people who are still not knowledgeable in the new medications and dropping of barriers to treatment.
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