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Helping Philosophy ALL SERVICES ARE CONFIDENTIAL AND PROVIDED BY JAN EDWARD WILLIAMS, MS, JD, LCADC, A LICENSED, RECOVERING ADDICTIONS COUNSELOR Talk to Jan Williams About His Online Addictions Counseling Services: 443-610-3569, Or e-mail Him "[Human beings] are not destroyed by suffering; [they] are destroyed by suffering without meaning." Victor Frankl
Revised May 17, 2008 |
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AlcoholDrugSOS Services, LLC Licensed Addictions Counseling Online Confidential Protections Are you worried about confidentiality and identity theft issues? The information you supply on this site is protected by Federal Confidentiality Laws. The site is also protected by firewall and encryption. ALL SERVICES ARE PROVIDED BY JAN WILLIAMS, A LICENSED ADDICTIONS COUNSELOR AND MEMBER OF THE LICENSED CLINICAL PROFESSIONAL COUNSELORS OF MARYLAND Do you want to talk to Jan Williams in person? Call him on his cell phone: 443-610-3569. Or Contact Jan Williams by e-mail with any questions or reactions to anything on this site. For examples of responses by Jan Williams to alcoholism questions, click here. |
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Click on Home
for information about addictions
counseling services online from Jan Williams.
See also Free Screening
Tests
to see if you,
or someone you care about, may have
a drug or alcohol problem. The words "alcohol dependence" or "addiction" are
often used without definition. So, let's first look at an addiction
definition. As used in this web site, alcohol or drug addiction
means that a person's alcohol or other drug use has reached the
point that the person cannot use without loss of control over use
of the substance and/or cannot use without producing adverse
consequences in significant life areas, and has developed a
psychological and/or physical dependence upon the substance. An
addicted person will continue to use the substance in the face of
adverse consequences. The term alcohol or drug dependence is often used
interchangeably with addiction, but here I use the term dependence
to mean physical dependence on a substance, meaning that stopping
use of the substance will result in withdrawal symptoms. A person
can develop dependence on a substance without developing addiction;
the best example of this physical dependence would be the person
who takes a narcotic analgesic (pain killer such as oxycodone or
morphine) as prescribed by a doctor long enough to be physically
dependent on the drug, a natural, inevitable consequence of chronic
use of such a drug. Under these circumstances, abruptly stopping
use of the substance will result in the withdrawal syndrome typical
for the class of substance involved. Most persons with addiction (
for ex., alcoholism) are NOT physically dependent on their drug and
will not experience the full blown physical withdrawal for the
substance. They will experience cravings, sleeplessness, and other
symptoms caused by their psychological dependence on the drug. Alcohol or other drug problems fall within two
diagnostic categories: abuse or addiction (as I said, often called
dependence). Abuse basically means the person has developed a
pattern of use of the substance in the face of adverse consequences
in significant life areas (medically, financially, legally,
problems in relationships). Addiction is summarized in the first
paragraph on this page. Alcoholism and other drug addictions are
devastating disorders which negatively impact affected individuals
and all who care about them, physically, emotionally and mentally,
and spiritually. For persons diagnosed with full blown addiction,
I favor an abstinence based treatment model, meaning a model whose
basic ultimate (it may take a while to get there) goal is
abstinence from use of alcohol or other drugs. This model should
include education, cognitive behavioral counseling, and use of
Twelve Step (for ex., AA) spiritually based principles. Online
addiction treatment can be helpful in itself and/or as part of a
comprehensive treatment program that includes traditional
face-to-face counseling and other treatment interventions. For persons whose alcohol or other drug use has
not yet reached the severity of an addiction diagnosis, but
indicates abuse, I favor interventions See Cautionary Information.
Successful treatment of persons with full blown alcohol or other
drug addiction may require a comprehensive treatment program beyond
that offered by online addiction treatment. Such a comprehensive
program should be staffed by helping professionals from many
disciplines. Staff should include physicians to address medical
issues such as withdrawal, mental health professionals such as
psychiatrists or psychologists, to treat co- or pre-existing
psychiatric disorders that may be present, and last but not least,
certified, licensed addiction counselors, preferably a significant
number of whom are in long term recovery themselves. Such a Treatment Program
should also provide individual and group counseling, educational
groups, and, as important as any of the treatments, access to
Twelve Step self-help groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous,
Narcotics Anonymous, Al-Anon and Nar-Anon (for loved ones), and
ACOA (Adult Children of Alcoholics), to name but a few. An
evaluation will reveal the extent of the treatment required. See Services. |
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