Friday, April 19, 2024

ADDICTION: A CHOICE OR A DISEASE? by Martin Lockett

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Many have exclaimed, “Addiction is NOT a disease — it’s a choice!” A disease, they’ll say, is something that you have no control over; it suddenly afflicts you when you least expect it and wreaks havoc on your life. People don’t do anything to bring about diseases in their lives. Addiction, on the other hand, is something that people choose to engage in. No one makes anyone drink their first drink – or any drink thereafter. No one is forced to do drugs at any point in their life, yet drug addicts, they’ll point out, choose to participate in drug-seeking behavior, hang out with other drug addicts, and repeatedly make irrational, counterproductive decisions that invariably result in self-destruction. How can this possibly be tantamount to someone who has a disease that they didn’t ask for?

As I noted in my previous blog entitled “Understanding Addiction,” addiction takes root in the midbrain – otherwise known as the limbic system. The limbic system is home to what is known as the pleasure pathway – receptor sites that release chemicals that make us feel good when we engage in pleasurable behaviors like eating, sex, playing, etc. What differentiates an alcoholic/addict from someone who is not is the way in which this neural pathway is activated and affected by drugs and alcohol. What causes this is extremely complex, but what is consistently found lies in genetics.

Studies show that between 40 – 60% (DSM V) of the variability in alcoholics comes from parents where at least one has also suffered from alcoholism. When it comes to drug addicts, this variability hovers around 50% (DSM V). These findings were substantiated by countless identical twin studies that showed, despite being adopted into different homes where the environments were nurturing, wholesome, and drug/alcohol free, twins whose biological parents were addicted to alcohol were still likely to develop alcoholism than others reared in those environments who were not born to such parents. The variances in studies are endless, but the result was the same: genetics play a profound role in addiction. But what does this have to do with it being considered a disease and still not a choice?

Let’s look at diabetes, for instance, when we consider the affliction of disease. Diabetes results as a malfunctioning of the pancreas, which produces insulin. Either the body stops producing it altogether or in such low amounts that it is rendered ineffective to take in the nutrients from the food we eat. But what underlies diabetes? Why do people develop it? Well, a scant amount of unfortunate people are born with it or develop it as a child — this is known as Type One diabetes. But the vast majority of people develop Type Two diabetes as adults, which is attributable, in large part, to poor diet and lack of exercise. In other words, unhealthy lifestyle habits are predominately to blame for their disease. As a result, they go to a doctor who tells them to lay off certain fatty foods, start exercising, take a pill or insulin shots, etc. If they comply, they can go on to live good quality lives; if not, their condition will likely worsen, and death can ensue. Are choices involved in their prognosis? Did their lifestyle choices have anything to do with their disease onset? Yet, we don’t demonize and vilify them like we do an alcoholic or drug addict — why?

What I failed to mention in speaking about people who have diabetes is it’s not solely their poor lifestyle habits that doomed them to acquire a deadly disease. Think about it, some of the worst eaters and laziest people we know have never gained weight and will likely never get diabetes, congestive heart failure, high blood pressure, or any other dreadful health affliction — but why? Again, we find ourselves back at the genetics argument. People who are born to parents who have had a history of certain diseases are inherently susceptible to developing those diseases during their lifetime, but the key determinant is one’s lifestyle. The lifestyle choices they make will either stave off the genetic predisposition or allow it to take root and fully manifest.

To compare, in the same way one’s pancreas has changed when diabetes sets in, an addict’s brain chemistry has been permanently altered. In the same way one goes to a doctor and is prescribed insulin and instructed to change lifestyle habits to live more healthily, an addict is prescribed Methadone, Antabuse, Suboxone, etc. and ordered to enter treatment to develop new lifestyle habits to live more healthily. In the same way there is an onset, progression, and can lead to death if not managed well with diabetes, so there is with drug and alcohol addiction. With so many similarities and congruency between the two, why do we criminalize one and sympathize with the other? Why do we hold firm that one is a choice that deserves punishment and the other a disease that deserves sympathy?

Martin Lockett
DOC #12664175

  1. We treat addiction differently because intoxicants feel good. And most people do not become addicts.

    Diabetes may occur because of types of food an lifestyle, but those cannot be reduced to the same exact circumstance. Intoxicants, on the other hand, are specific: alcohol. Coke. Speed. Dope. Those are particular and identifiable substances that have one of two outcomes. Addict or not.

    Eating food and lifestyle is too vague and random.

  2. The disease idea of addiction is a concept. It looks like a disease, so we treat it like a disease. But it is not like cancer or diabetes which occur, again, as a specifically and particular situation. With no good or likeable aspects. Using dope does not make an addict, people like to drink. So what? being an addict is what makes it addiction. It is scary in a way that other disease are not. That’s why we are offended at addiction.

  3. What about HIV/AIDS? That is considered a disease but you CHOSE to have unprotected sex. I believe addiction is a symptom of a mental health disease and should be treated as so. I know everyone has choices, but what if you weren’t taught how to make the right choices, or you never had an example of what life is like when you start making positive choices at a young age so it just comes naturally for you as an adult? Addiction is still a touchy subject and I believe that until you go through it, its not something you can understand..

  4. “Why do we criminalize one and sympathize with the other?”

    Good question. There is no criminal behavior associated with the disease of diabetes mellitus. There often is, however with alcoholism and drug addiction. Such as: public intoxication, driving under the influence, assault and battery, domestic violence, vehicular homicide, possession, distribution, prostitution.

    “Why do we hold firm that one is a choice that deserves punishment and the other a disease that deserves sympathy?”

    Another good question. Hands down both diabetics and addicts BOTH are deserving of our sympathy.

    However, if a diabetic goes home and beats their spouse to a bloody pulp, they deserve punishment. If a drug addict or alcoholic does the same, so do they. If a diabetic is caught distributing drugs? off to jail for them, so too for the addict.

    It boils to breaking the law. The diabetic isn’t breaking any laws with their disease, the alcoholic and drug addict historically are.

    It may not be the Alcoholic’s or drug addict’s fault they were born with the propensity for the disease, but once they have the disease, it IS their responsibility to recover.

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