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Electric Monk

(13,869 posts)
Tue Feb 4, 2014, 07:47 PM Feb 2014

Why Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Death Is So Scary

(cross-posted from GD)

[font size=+2]Why Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Death Is So Scary[/font]
[font size=+1]The ever-present danger of relapsing.
[/font]
http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/medical_examiner/2014/02/philip_seymour_hoffman_s_drug_death_the_science_of_addiction_recovery_and.html

I cried when I heard about Philip Seymour Hoffman. The news scared me: He got sober when he was 22 and didn’t drink or use drugs for the next 23 years. During that time, he won an Academy Award, was nominated for three more, and was widely cited as the most talented actor of his generation. He also became a father to three children. Then, one day in 2012, he began popping prescription pain pills. And now he's dead.

The root causes of addiction, like those of many multifactorial diseases, are frustratingly elusive, a nebulous mixture of genetics, exposure, and environment. Addiction runs in families, but plenty of addicts come from families with no history of the disease. Availability plays a role, too—but having access to crack doesn’t make someone a crack addict. The science about recovery is also hazy: Alcoholics Anonymous, the most widely used form of treatment in the country, has no set structure or methodology, which makes it tough to evaluate its effectiveness. (There’s also the fact that its core principle—that members never publicly acknowledge their presence in the program—makes broad longitudinal studies difficult, to say the least.) In-patient treatment centers, like the one Hoffman checked himself into last May, have been accused of obfuscating their success rates.

If anything, the science on relapses is even more slippery. (We do know that relapse rates for drug and alcohol addiction are comparable to people’s inability to control other chronic illnesses, such as type 2 diabetes, asthma, and hypertension.) The challenges are as basic as agreeing on a definition for long-term sobriety. In a graphic titled “Extended Abstinence is Predictive of Sustained Recovery,” the National Institute of Drug Abuse says, “After 5 years—if you are sober, you will probably stay that way.” I unconsciously added a “forever” to the end of that sentence—but the study that chart is based on ran for eight years, a bar Hoffman cleared easily.

My first attempt at recovery came in 1991, when I was 19 years old. Almost exactly two years later, I decided to have a drink. Two years after that, I was addicted to heroin. There’s a lot we don’t know about alcoholism and drug addiction, but one thing is clear: Regardless of how much time clean you have, relapsing is always as easy as moving your hand to your mouth.

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Why Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Death Is So Scary (Original Post) Electric Monk Feb 2014 OP
Being Scared Old Codger Feb 2014 #1
I hope many read this article cally Feb 2014 #2
K and R thanks for posting.. Stuart G Feb 2014 #3
 

Old Codger

(4,205 posts)
1. Being Scared
Tue Feb 4, 2014, 08:06 PM
Feb 2014

And staying scared helps me stay sober...even after 30 years...remembering how bad it was reminds me how bad it can be....

edited to add: One of the sayings around the tables has always been true" Some will die in order for some to stay sober" The deaths keep reminding us of what we can become.

cally

(21,704 posts)
2. I hope many read this article
Tue Feb 4, 2014, 08:16 PM
Feb 2014

because I think it describes what it's like for recovering folks. So much of the reporting, seems to not understand the disease.

Stuart G

(38,726 posts)
3. K and R thanks for posting..
Tue Feb 4, 2014, 08:28 PM
Feb 2014

I know many who have relapsed. Addiction is extremely difficult to deal with, and it can only be "one day at a time" one moment at a time.. That vortex that is discussed in this article, is real for those of us who have to deal with this. It is a great and honest article, and I recommend all to read it.

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