Harm Reduction Project News Digest June 19, 2007
News & Opinion This Week
1. Physical Dependence Or Addiction?
2. 23% Of American Adults Say U.S. Lives Worth More Than Others'
3. The Sanguine Sex: Abortion And The Bloodiness Of Being Female (Essay and review)
4. HIV Rates On The Rise In Iran
5. [More on the US'] Surgeon General Nominee's Gay Fascination
6. New Sex-related Infection Passes Gonorrhea
7. NIDA Study Suggests Crystal Methamphetamine Use In Young Adults Higher Than Previously Reported (NIDA News Release)
8. Ukraine: Methadone Scale Up Authorized
9. Of Groceries, Abortions, and Nice, Classic Handbags
10. Russia: More Funding, But HIV/AIDS On The Rise
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I. Physical Dependence Or Addiction?
Maia Szalavitz, May 14, 2007 ~ STATS at George Mason University
Distinctions are important when it comes to dealing with drug abuse, so why did the Archives of General Psychiatry confuse the press last week by misrepresenting a study in its journal?
Last week, the Archives of General Psychiatry published a study finding that at some point during their lifetimes, 10.3% of Americans will suffer from disorders related to drug misuse.
Unfortunately, the coverage that resulted was marred by a press release that incorrectly defined addiction, and then spun to suggest that the study shows a great need for expanded addiction treatment, which was not reflected in the actual data. Both errors show that when the media covers drugs, reporters are simply not paying attention.
The erroneous addiction definition was picked up without question by Reuters, resulting in flawed reports on MSNBC, CNN and even the website of Scientific American.
Defining addiction is not just an academic matter: it has profound implications for when it is legal to use certain medications to treat pain and, as a result, whether the 20-30 million Americans with severe chronic pain have access to appropriate treatment.
The press release defined "substance dependence," which is what addiction is called in psychiatry, as "physical dependence on a drug." In fact, physical dependence on a drug is neither necessary nor sufficient to define addiction; people can become addicted to substances like cocaine, which does not produce physical dependence; they can also become physically dependent on blood pressure medications, which do not cause addiction.
Unlike the press release, the actual study used the correct DSM definition of addiction, which boils down to compulsive use of substances despite ongoing negative consequences. The study also looked at the more common substance-related disorder, known as "substance abuse" which involves using drugs in potentially dangerous ways, but without being addicted to them.
Virtually all pain patients who take opioid medications like morphine or Vicodin for long periods of time will become physically dependent, but only a tiny proportion of those without a history of drug problems will become addicts.
Because it is illegal for doctors to "maintain" addicts on opioids (except under special circumstances using methadone or buprenorphine), defining addiction as physical dependence can suggest that treating chronic pain with opioids is illegal.
Doctors who equate the two may deny adequate pain care to their patients, and patients can come to believe they are addicts when, in fact, they simply suffer physical dependence. Worse, doctors who try to treat pain aggressively may wind up incarcerated, when prosecutors who believe physical dependence and addiction are synonymous target them.
Political reporters have been taking a great deal of flack lately for simply being stenographers; unfortunately, this story shows that the problem is not limited to politics.
A spokesperson for the Archives of General Psychiatry (which is published by the American Medical Association) said in an email that the press release was "reviewed and approved by both the JAMA editors and the paper's corresponding author." While conceding that "our definition of dependence could have been more precise," she said that a correction will not be forthcoming because "we don't feel it is strictly inaccurate, in part because we refer to illicit substances - pain patients on prescribed or over-the-counter medications would not fall into this category."
Perhaps it is wrong to blame the press when medical authorities like the editors of one of the nation's leading psychiatry journals are themselves unclear.
But even the coverage that did not contain the misleading definition spun the story the way the National Institute on Drug Abuse presented it - as showing that most people with drug problems who "need" treatment do not get it.
The study did find that only 38% of addicts ever received treatment for their disorder. However, it also showed that only 23% of those who had ever been addicted to drugs were currently addicted. This means that 77% recovered: just over double the amount who reported receiving treatment.
More and better drug treatment is undoubtedly a good idea, but the data in the study really can't be used to draw the conclusion that it is needed. The media needs to think carefully when it covers addiction, and not simply parrot the interpretations of research given in press releases.