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Alternative Treatments for Addiction

Covers alternative addiction treatments such as acupuncture, hypnotherapy and ibogaine to treat addiction.

Covers alternative addiction treatments such as acupuncture, hypnotherapy and ibogaine to treat addiction.

Traditional addiction treatments, such as 12-step programs, have been highly successful for a lot of people. But there are some who just can't find success with these programs, no matter how much they want to stop drinking, doing drugs, smoking cigarettes, etc.

For these people, and also for those who may be doing well in a traditional program but who would like a little extra help, it's worth investigating some complementary therapies for addiction. There haven't been a lot of large studies done to verify the effectiveness of a many of the alternative therapies. But there are some treatments that can be used as an adjunct to traditional approaches. Here are a few:

  • Acupuncture: some studies suggest it can help decrease the severity of withdrawal symptoms and help make patients more receptive to traditional therapies
  • Hypnotherapy
  • Therapeutic touch: has been shown to prolong periods of abstinence among alcohol and drug abusers
  • Ethnic-based healing traditions: treatments that are tailored to address the cultural health beliefs of specific patients can improve outcomes of addiction therapy
  • Qigong: (a "soft" martial art similar to t'ai chi) may help counter the effects of withdrawal from heroin

Now being tested: a "chemical dependence interrupter"

In the year 2000, illicit drug addiction cost the U.S. $160 billion in medical care, lost productivity, crime and imprisonment. That's up from $117 billion in 1997. It's clear that while current treatments work for some, we still need more options for people who haven't found anything that works for them.

Down on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts, a woman named Deborah Mash, a highly respected researcher from the University of Miami Medical Center, is conducting a study to determine the effectiveness of a drug called ibogaine in the treatment of heroine and cocaine addiction. Ibogaine comes from a shrub-like plant called tabernanthe iboga.

Ibogaine first became known in the U.S. during the 1960s as a drug from Africa brought to New York by the so-called "hippies" of that era. Since then, it has gained respect and been the subject of serious research by the National Institutes of Health, which funded research but then stopped it in 1995, citing health risks to a few human study participants.


 


Ibogaine typically causes hallucinations, and that has been problematic for serious researchers who believe there's real potential for ibogaine to treat addiction. They claim that benefits of ibogaine include

  • Painless withdrawal
  • Increased receptiveness to recovery, which is important in gaining insight into their own reasons for become addicted in the first place
  • Improved control over the urge to relapse (start taking drugs again)

Shouldn't be taken outside the clinical trial setting

Some people try to overcome their addiction by taking ibogaine illegally, but this is dangerous. Anyone taking it should be under the strict supervision of a clinician, and right now the drug is not available on the market. For now, we'll have to wait for results of clinical trials like the one Deborah Mash is conducting in the Caribbean.

Sources:

  • American Journal of Public Health, October 2002
  • Alternative Therapy Health Medicine, January-February 2002
  • Holistic Nurse Practitioner, April 2000
  • National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine
  • Journal of the American Medical Association, 25 December 2002
  • Substance Abuse Services and Mental Health Administration

next: Alternative Treatments for Alcoholism and Addiction

APA Reference
Staff, H. (2008, November 22). Alternative Treatments for Addiction, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, November 14 from https://www.healthyplace.com/alternative-mental-health/addictions/alternative-treatments-for-addiction

Last Updated: November 24, 2016

Medically reviewed by Harry Croft, MD

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