Addiction Treatment Gone
Astray
The problems of drugs and
addiction are not new. In fact, they have been around for
many centuries, long before we had the Food and Drug
Administration, the Drug Enforcement Agency, the American
Medical Association or the multi-billion dollar per year
industry of pharmaceuticals. However, even with these
watchful and protective agencies, the problem of drug
addiction appears to be worse than ever before, so much to
the point that many people have gone into complete apathy
over the subject of “The War on
Drugs.”
The timeline of the problem seems
to have escalated when alcoholism and drug addiction were
labeled a disease some fifty years ago and complicated
through ever-increasing types of diagnoses, and of course,
the new medications to go with them as the latest treatment.
Not only are millions of people told that it’s not
their fault, but many are given another drug to treat some of
the symptoms from their addiction, such as an anti-anxiety,
anti-depressant or anti-psychotic medication, which only
complicates the problem even more and also makes the person
less capable of being himself again.
This has become such the norm
that any person or program attempting to rehabilitate an
individual using simple approaches, without using other
drugs, and getting the person to take responsibility for his
condition is actually thought of as weird or is scrutinized
by those that have created the current mainstream idea of
treatment.
Though there may be many
contributing factors, the situation started with the
person’s decision to take a drug to solve a problem.
Therefore, the solution is for the person to recognize that
fact and then decide to take responsibility for it, which may
include using helpful tools to assist them in the process of
becoming drug-free, such as a true rehabilitation
program.
One set of tools is part of the
Narconon® drug rehabilitation and education program,
which is based on discoveries by American author and
humanitarian L. Ron Hubbard and achieves an incredibly high
success rate for ending addiction. The program is not
considered traditional treatment with new drugs and
diagnoses, thankfully, but an opportunity for a person to
once again be free from the downward spiral of
addiction.
In today’s society, an
individual ought to be able to think and find out for
himself. Our country was founded on freedoms and individual
rights and rebelled against those that tried to impose or
enforce ideas and customs upon us, why should it be different
with drug addiction?
Next Story©2003 Narconon of
Oklahoma, Inc. All Rights Reserved. NARCONON is a registered
trademark and service mark owned by Association for Better
Living and Education International and is used with its
permission.