Harvard Medical School Overcoming Addiction: Paths toward recovery

Harvard Medical School Overcoming Addiction: Paths toward recovery

Author
Howard J. Shaffer, Julie Corliss, Scott Leighton
Publisher
Harvard Medical School
Language
English
Year
2008
Page
48
ISBN
1933812575,9781933812571
File Type
pdf
File Size
2.7 MiB

Product Description

For many years, experts believed that addiction stemmed only from using powerful drugs that co-opted the brain, the mind, and then the person. More recently, we ve recognized that excessive behaviors such as gambling, shopping, and sex also can lead to addiction. The hallmarks of this common problem are the 3 C s : craving for the object of addiction, which can be mild to intense, loss of control over the use of object of addiction, and continued engagement with the object of addiction despite adverse consequences. Several scientific advances have shaped our understanding of addiction. For example, new brain imaging technologies have revealed that our brains respond similarly to different pleasurable experiences, whether derived from drugs or behaviors. Genetic research has uncovered that some people are predisposed to addiction, but not to a specific type of addiction. Finally, medications developed to treat one addiction have, in some cases, proven helpful for treating a different type of addiction. This report describes a number of effective treatments for addiction, including self-help strategies, psychotherapy, medications, and rehabilitation programs. It also includes targeted advice on specific types of addiction, as well as information about coping with a loved one s addiction.

Review

No matter the addiction -- drugs, gambling, shopping, smoking, alcohol or more -- people who want to kick their habit in the new year might find help in a new Harvard University publication. "Overcoming Addiction: Paths toward recovery" offers guidance for breaking unwanted addictive habits. The advice applies universally, because what all addictions have in common, the Harvard experts say, is the way the brain responds to pleasurable experiences. --The Washington Post

About the Author

Howard J. Shaffer, Ph.D., C.A.S. Director, Division on Addictions, Cambridge Health Alliance Associate Professor of Psychology, Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

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