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Please Explain: Addiction

Friday, April 17, 2009
Sanjay Gupta

There are more than 20 million substance abuse addict in America today and about 2 million of them turn to residential rehab each year. CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta joins us to explain the science behind addiction and the toll it takes on individual addicts.


Comments

  • [1] jo from manhattan April 17, 2009 - 09:53AM

    I am concerned that my 13 year old son is addicted to an internet game. Is this type of addiction similar to substance addiction? Is his current behavior an indcator for developing other addictions in the future? We are trying to address the issue - it's very tough.


  • [2] Margaret Pettit from Huntington New York April 17, 2009 - 10:36AM

    We have addiction in our family and am very concerned about my son's addiction to video games. It seems he has been consumed by them since he could play them, but lately, as a 16 year old it takes over all of his free time. How do we help him? Does a bottom need to occur for this type of addict like it would for a drug addict in order for the person to seek help?


  • [3] Leonard Epstein from Chestnut Ridge, NY April 17, 2009 - 11:07AM

    Physicians typically espouse a biochemical and heredity model of addiction. I doubt that a "Budweiser gene" will ever be found that directly causes people to pick up and abuse substances. As a psychologist, I have treated addiction as learned maladaptive behavior or habits, helping individuals manage their impulses and needs (often including anger and dependency) in more functional ways. The same applies to people who overeat.


  • [4] sara from nyc April 17, 2009 - 01:36PM

    I wonder why you are interviewing a fellow correspondent, albeit one with a medical degree, rather than someone who actually works in the field as a researcher or clinician. I do not watch CNN and I'd rather not be subjected to its brand of coverage by one of its celebrity correspondents in the form of a "please explain" segment on your show.


  • [5] Neal from Manhattan April 17, 2009 - 01:37PM

    I've struggled with depression for years, can studying serotonin in addicts help understand depression?

    Thanks,

    Neal


  • [6] Phyllis from NYC April 17, 2009 - 01:39PM

    He is a good explainer.


  • [7] John Eiche from Queens ny April 17, 2009 - 01:43PM

    Does addiction to a substance such as marijuana necessarily lead to an addiction to a substance more powerful because the receptors no longer respond to the less powerful substance?


  • [8] Ana from Summit, NJ April 17, 2009 - 01:44PM

    How about food adiction?


  • [9] Waheed from Elmhurst, NY April 17, 2009 - 01:47PM

    Do Coffee drinkers, soft drink, Tea or any such food consumers give out same brain activities as Marijuana smokers.


  • [10] Victor from NJ April 17, 2009 - 01:48PM

    I have a good deal of pleasure in listening to science shows and interviews with smart people on the radio. Is this an addiction?


  • [11] M. Carroll from Downtown Manhattan April 17, 2009 - 01:48PM

    Repy to sara from nyc,

    Lenny has had many specialist MDs on his program over the years. I like this gentleman because he is giving a good broad overview of the subject.


  • [12] rachel from east village April 17, 2009 - 01:50PM

    Is there any research on whether there is a higher rate of addiction for people who had add as kids.


  • [13] Eric from Jersey City April 17, 2009 - 01:52PM

    Isn't meth addiction much more about dopamine than serotonin? Also not all antidepresseants are SSRIs. Gupta's answers seem oversimplified.


  • [14] Roberta Sutton from NYC April 17, 2009 - 01:57PM

    What about the role of being raised by a family with codependent and or addictive behavior??


  • [15] Amy from Manhattan April 17, 2009 - 01:57PM

    Rachel [14]: I'm a medical editor, & I've worked on reports that say substance use disorders (as well as depression & several other mental health problems) are indeed more common in people who have ADHD, both as children & continuing into adulthood. Often one "masks" the other, so the ADHD goes untreated; treatment of both disorders together is much more successful than treatment of just one.


  • [16] Amy from Manhattan April 17, 2009 - 02:01PM

    And Eric [14], Gupta didn't say all depressants were SSRIs. The question was about serotonin, so an answer about SSRIs was appropriate.


  • [17] speedy0314nyc from manhattan April 18, 2009 - 03:04PM

    i know i'll probably get some heat for this, but i listened with great interest to this interview having battled alcohol & drug dependency most of my life.

    i'd say that dr. gupta's presentation & answers were mostly even-handed & informative. i'm still not entirely sold on the notion that addiction is a 'disease' analogous to diabetes or cancer, but i won't quibble over semantics.

    when the subject of AA & the 12-step method's 'effectiveness' came up, dr. gupta talked around the issue -- citing only hazelden's totally unsubstantiated 53%/1 year figure. most scientific studies come up with figures closer to 5 - 10%, much closer to the harvard medical school's finding of a 5% self-remittance rate.

    as to the caller who recommended AA meetings & noted that AA members 'aren't all religious fanatics', i would say the following: 1) the caller violated AA's tradition 11 by 'promoting' AA in a public forum; 2) as a one-time AA member (6 years), i will agree that most AA members aren't 'religious fanatics'.

    most AA members are 'go along/get along types' who drift away from the fellowship right around the same time i did. that said, some of the most emotionally unstable people i've ever met in my life were long-time AA members who used their 'sober time' & AA's theologically-driven 'big book' to bludgeon members into being exactly like them.

    AA works for a very select few in the long-term. for most, it is a temporary respite or a completely useless, humiliating waste of time & commitment.

    i'm glad to hear dr. gupta talk frankly about pharmaceutical approaches as well as the notion of 'alcoholism' being measured on a continuum, rather than AA's intransigent stance of 'progressive [spiritual] disease'.


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