Marijuana Addiction Treatment: Treating Marijuana Addiction

Marijuana is a dangerous addiction that affects and threatens the physical, emotional and professional well being of an individual. Its ill effects have made most countries ban its import except for therapeutic use. Yet it is smuggled through mysterious channels and is available to addicts at phenomenal prices. Marijuana addiction is awful, as it becomes an all-consuming passion, leaving room for little else in the addict’s mind. It alters the way his mind functions and makes it incapable of rational, intelligent thinking. Hence treating this addiction is crucial.

Treating the addiction to marijuana does not simply entail getting the addict to stop smoking it. It is a process of education where the addict has to be taught about its ill effects, short term, which he must be experiencing, and long term, which will ruin his life and that of his family as well. The three-step knowledge he needs is about addiction, recovery phase and the relapse. It is also important for the family to understand the reasons that pushed the addict towards marijuana, as often negativism, low self esteem, lack of confidence lead to a low sense of self worth and there is a need for an emotional anchor, which appears in the form of marijuana. It gives them the ability to feel good and be happy for sometime, till it becomes obsessive.

Marijuana addicts need to know how the drug works and how it affects their bodies. New addicts feel confident in being able to shake off their addiction, but it is not so easy. The starting point is always the addicts inclination to leave his addiction and his willingness to accept help. The treatment has to be customized to his needs and requirements, and requires a lot of family support and encouraging signs like reemployment opportunities and other feel-good factors. The process is long drawn and requires medication as well. Residential programs are available in many centers that have perfected techniques of de-addicting patients.

But both in-house and outpatient programs need a minimum 90-day period to show significant improvement in the patient. It is not unusual to find addicts leaving before completing the treatment and then falling back into the marijuana trap. This makes the rehabilitation program even more difficult. Family support to work as a preventive for this would be ideal and could motivate the addict to complete his treatment join back where he left off at home, as a parent and possibly at work as well.

As in the case of other addictions, marijuana addictions also need to be treated sensitively, with family support and tenderness. Educating the addict about times ahead, the prospect of enjoyment even without marijuana, reinstilling confidence and making them feel responsible, all contribute to strengthening their resolve to fight this addiction.

 

A Move on Marijuana in New York

Filed under: marijuana addiction treatment

It's addictive for about 10 percent of users. According to the Department of Health and Human Services, 104 million Americans 12 or older have used marijuana at least once. Addiction is a disease, and you cannot treat a disease with jail time.
Read more on New York Times

 

Plague of dodgy prescriptions puts illicit drugs in the shade

Filed under: marijuana addiction treatment

In Britain, a February survey by the National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse found that almost 80 per cent of GPs routinely prescribe drugs to which they believe the patient may be addicted. Canadian leaders in the health industry were shocked …
Read more on Wyndham Weekly

 

Why do some people want drugs to be legal?

Filed under: marijuana addiction treatment

Ten years ago, the Portuguese government decided to decriminalise all drugs, hard and soft, and, while still prosecuting traffickers, give heroin addicts clean needles, therapy and treatment with methadone. It seems to have worked in as much as it has …
Read more on Telegraph.co.uk

 

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