This blog covers mental health, drugs and psychotherapy with an emphasis on the role of family dysfunction in behavioral problems. It discusses how family systems issues have been denigrated in psychiatry in favor of a disease model for everything by a combination of greedy pharmaceutical and managed care insurance companies, naïve and corrupt experts, twisted science, and desperate parents who want to believe that their children have a brain disease to avoid an overwhelming sense of guilt.
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Monday, April 27, 2020
Friday, April 24, 2020
Drug Abuse “Intervention:” Why it Works
In
Jonah’s Berger’s excellent new book, The Catalyst: How to Change Anyone’s Mind, he
discusses effective ways to get people to look at things in new ways. Even die
hard ideologues can sometimes be reached using many of his methods. He also
talks about why persuasive arguments and presenting new information in an
effort by one person to get another person to reconsider entrenched positions
usually does not work.
In the chapter called “corroborating evidence,” he uses a successful “intervention” with a drug abuser to illustrate how, in influencing others, having multiple people give information is often much more powerful than just one person’s speaking , especially when the multiple sources are all operating at or near the same time.
In the chapter called “corroborating evidence,” he uses a successful “intervention” with a drug abuser to illustrate how, in influencing others, having multiple people give information is often much more powerful than just one person’s speaking , especially when the multiple sources are all operating at or near the same time.
In the Intervention technique in substance abuse treatment, the actual intervention is having an outside therapist come in and coach the family members to write out a speech about how much they care about the user and how his or her behavior is hurting everyone. They are instructed to avoid telling him what to do. Nonetheless, the therapist has a rehab facility lined up in hopes that the object of the intervention will agree to do something about his “problem.”
They
each say how sad they are because of the problem and how much they miss him and
want the drug abuser “back.” They also give the addict the message, “If you
want to be an addict, we can’t stop you. But if you want to get high, you
aren’t going to do it here.”
With families, Berger points out, several members have often - over time and individually – “asked, begged, yelled, screamed, and threatened. All to no avail.” But then he goes on to say things that consist of the usual wisdom about these sorts of things, such as “They (addicts) don’t believe they have a problem.” They are “in denial.” They may not remember wrapping a car around a lamp post” because they “blacked out.” If an addict doesn’t think he has a reason to quit, “is one person really going to change their mind?”
That
sounds reasonable, but is it really? Doesn’t the addict find out what happened
to the car after he comes to? Isn’t losing a good job and resorting to crime to
finance an addiction considered by the drug abuser to be problems? As I often
say, he would have to have the IQ of a kumquat – or maybe a rutabaga, I’m not
really sure – to not “know” he had a problem. So what’s really going on here?
Berger
attributes the relatively high success rates of organized family
“interventions” to the number of people giving a similar message. He's partly
correct. But he also seems subliminally aware that there is something else
going on here. He states, “In order to get addicts to change, their entire
ecosystem has to be altered. Without realizing it, friends and family members
may be unintentionally enabling the problems. So for change to stick, the whole
system has to change…”
Was the
particular family the author described enabling the abuser, “Phil”? Why as a
matter of fact, quite so. In the author’s description, the family didn’t seem
to think of him as an addict for extended periods, especially at first, because
he had a job and didn’t steal to support his habit. He did start to steal a bit
later. They sent him to rehab 19 different times even
though each of them was unsuccessful. They repeatedly let him move back home.
They resorted to having him sign a contract promising to turn over a new leaf,
but all that did was to “train him to be a better liar.”
Hearing
this, it might seem fairly clear why Phil may have thought his family was
actually invested in him continuing to be an addict, because they made it so
damn easy! Unlike most of us, they know that family members are not that stupid
even if they seem to be “in denial.” Of course, I have to put the usual caution
here: since I haven’t personally evaluated this family I can’t say what follows
with certainty, although IMO what I am about to describe is extremely likely.
Another hint that the above formulation may be on the mark is a statement by the book author that "family was everything to Phil." The author thinks that Phil realizing he was tearing the others to shreds was the motive for quitting. But again, how could Phil possibly think that this hadn't been the case all along? Because he thought the family needed him to be an addict!
In
dysfunctional families with shared conflicts over certain behavior, say for
example puritanical attitudes towards work and intoxication, several members
are usually involved in either enabling or refusing to notice the problems of
the addict. The addict is actually taking the cue to deny that he has a problem
from the family. When one member occasionally seems to object about addict-like
behavior, another family member may give the addict the opposite message. In
such a situation, this can become a game without end even more
easily than when just two people are stuck in this game. So no wonder the
addict ignores the asking, begging, yelling, screaming, and threatening from
any one family member.
However,
when the whole family comes together to give the same message – that they all will no
longer deny that the addiction has become a problem — and all clearly
state that all of their enabling behavior in toto is going to cease, their
wanting him to stop becomes far more believable. So it isn’t just multiple
sources of info as Berger assumes, but the fact that they are all indirectly
acknowledging their own contributions to the addict’s
continuing addiction.
Of
course, the addict may still be skeptical. If Phil leaves yet another rehab
program without success, and his parents still let him return home, nothing
will stick. In this case, that fortunately did not happen.
Wednesday, April 1, 2020
Family Dynamics and the Brain: Implications for Psychotherapy
IMO, the most
important contribution of neurobiology to psychotherapy is our understanding,
albeit quite partial and preliminary, of the mechanisms by which we are
programmed to respond to attachment figures. This understanding is sort of what
is meant by sociobiology, if I may
use a politically incorrect term.
I found early on in treating personality disorders in therapy that I was no match for a patient’s parents in triggering or reinforcing their problematic (or even their positive) behavior patterns in the long term. I could coach them on how to be assertive with difficult family members ‘til the cows came home, and this might even work for a time, but after a while the old patterns of self-defeating behavior almost invariably re-emerged unless something was done about this.
I found early on in treating personality disorders in therapy that I was no match for a patient’s parents in triggering or reinforcing their problematic (or even their positive) behavior patterns in the long term. I could coach them on how to be assertive with difficult family members ‘til the cows came home, and this might even work for a time, but after a while the old patterns of self-defeating behavior almost invariably re-emerged unless something was done about this.
Even
so-called “oppositional” behavior follows this path: oppositional children think and later automatically respond to their family as if the family wants
or needs them to be a black sheep for various reasons.
Therapy
outcome studies seldom follow patients with self-destructive or self-defeating
behavior patterns for more than a year after therapy ends, but the few studies
I’ve seen that do are consistent with this clinical experience. So I had to figure out a
way to help patients to make changes in their long term repetitive dysfunctional
interactions with attachment figures.
When mothers
and their babies interact, huge numbers of synaptic connections in the brain
are made every second (see https://developingchild.harvard.edu/science/key-concepts/serve-and-return/). These large numbers are “pruned” significantly during
adolescence. We don’t know exactly how or why certain synapses are retained, but I
suspect it is those that keep us aligned with the social behavior of our kin
group and tribe. There is preliminary
evidence that the pruning is dependent, much like the strength of many brain
neural connections, on how often a particular neural pathway is stimulated.
Another
factor involved is something called the myelination
of neurons in existing neural pathways. This is the process of coating the body of
each neuron with a fatty coating called myelin, which protects the neuron and helps it conduct
signals more efficiently. This process does not become complete until an
individual reaches late adolescence.
With these two processes, we lose some
flexibility in the brain, but the proficiency of signal transmission improves.
Since we are talking in particular about those that form during
interactions in infancy, it is reasonable to suspect that these interactions
continue to do this. In particular, behaviors that occur in response to social
cues may become more automatic in order to preserve higher thinking ability for
novel situations.
In
addition to this, fear tracks formed early in life in particular are not as
plastic as are other tracks in the brain. They never really go away,
although they can be overridden by newly formed neural pathways. (Lott, D. A.
[2003]. Unlearning fear: calcium channel blockers and the process of
extinction. Psychiatric Times, May, 9-12).
According
to Neuroscientist David Eagleman on his PBS show,
The Brain, about 80% of our behavior is done automatically in response to
environmental cues (especially social cues, I might add) without any conscious
deliberation. In a sense they are subconscious.
This does not mean that we lack the capacity to decide to
think about and break the social rules we are usually bound by. We certainly
can – this is where the family systems theorists have been wrong. But when we
do, we are often faced with massive invalidation by our families, which is
extremely powerful in delivering the message, “You’re wrong, change back.” When we
distance ourselves from our social alliances, our level of the attachment
hormone oxytocin dips and we start to feel unsafe.
The negative feelings generated by this invalidation is probably
the biological price we pay if we don’t: the highly disturbing feeling of
groundlessness described so eloquently by Irvin Yalom. This is nature’s way of
telling us to behave ourselves for the good of our kin group. This has survival
value for the group.
The
implications for therapy are clear. In order to prevent problematic automatic
behavior patterns that have been and that are continually reinforced through this
powerful process, neither insight into which behaviors are performed automatically, nor
which automatic belief systems keep us on the straight and narrow for our
kin group, is usually enough. These patterns need to be
interrupted at their source in order to help patients extinguish bad habits of
thinking (or, more often, not thinking) and behavior.