Proposing a New Diagnosis and Theory for Patients with Multiple Addictions
By James Slobodzien, Psy.D.,
CSAC
When considering that pathological
eating disorders and their
related diseases now afflict
more people globally than
malnutrition, some experts
in the medical field are presently
purporting that the world's
number one health problem
is no longer heart disease
or cancer, but obesity. According
to the World Health Organization
(June, 2005), "obesity has
reached epidemic proportions
globally, with more than 1
billion adults overweight
- at least 300 million of
them clinically obese - and
is a major contributor to
the global burden of chronic
disease and disability. Often
coexisting in developing countries
with under-nutrition, obesity
is a complex condition, with
serious social and psychological
dimensions, affecting virtually
all ages and socioeconomic
groups." The U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention
(June, 2005), reports that
"during the past 20 years,
obesity among adults has risen
significantly in the United
States. The latest data from
the National Center for Health
Statistics show that 30 percent
of U.S. adults 20 years of
age and older - over 60 million
people - are obese. This increase
is not limited to adults.
The percentage of young people
who are overweight has more
than tripled since 1980. Among
children and teens aged 6-19
years, 16 percent (over 9
million young people) are
overweight."
Morbid obesity is a condition
that is described as being
100lbs. or more above ideal
weight, or having a Body Mass
Index (BMI) equal to or greater
than 30. Being obese alone
puts one at a much greater
risk of suffering from a combination
of several other metabolic
factors such as having high
blood pressure, being insulin
resistant, and/ or having
abnormal cholesterol levels
that are all related to a
poor diet and a lack of exercise.
The sum is greater than the
parts. Each metabolic problem
is a risk for other diseases
separately, but together they
multiply the chances of life-threatening
illness such as heart disease,
cancer, diabetes, and stroke,
etc. Up to 30.5% of our Nations'
adults suffer from morbid
obesity, and two thirds or
66% of adults are overweight
measured by having a Body
Mass Index (BMI) greater than
25.
Considering that the U.S.
population is now over 290,000,000,
some estimate that up to 73,000,000
Americans could benefit from
some type of education awareness
and/ or treatment for a pathological
eating disorder or food addiction.
Typically, eating patterns
are considered pathological
problems when issues concerning
weight and/ or eating habits,
(e.g., overeating, under eating,
binging, purging, and/ or
obsessing over diets and calories,
etc.) become the focus of
a persons' life, causing them
to feel shame, guilt, and
embarrassment with related
symptoms of depression and
anxiety that cause significant
maladaptive social and/ or
occupational impairment in
functioning.
We must consider that some
people develop dependencies
on certain life-functioning
activities such as eating
that can be just as life threatening
as drug addiction and just
as socially and psychologically
damaging as alcoholism. Some
do suffer from hormonal or
metabolic disorders, but most
obese individuals simply consume
more calories than they burn
due to an out of control overeating
Food Addiction. Hyper-obesity
resulting from gross, habitual
overeating is considered to
be more like the problems
found in those ingrained personality
disorders that involve loss
of control over appetite of
some kind (Orford, 1985).
Binge-eating Disorder episodes
are characterized in part
by a feeling that one cannot
stop or control how much or
what one is eating (DSM-IV-TR,
2000). Lienard and Vamecq
(2004) have proposed an "auto-addictive"
hypothesis for pathological
eating disorders. They report
that, "eating disorders are
associated with abnormal levels
of endorphins and share clinical
similarities with psychoactive
drug abuse. The key role of
endorphins has recently been
demonstrated in animals with
regard to certain aspects
of normal, pathological and
experimental eating habits
(food restriction combined
with stress, loco-motor hyperactivity)."
They report that the "pathological
management of eating disorders
may lead to two extreme situations:
the absence of ingestion (anorexia)
and excessive ingestion (bulimia)."
Co-morbidity & Mortality
Addictions and other mental
disorders as a rule do not
develop in isolation. The
National Co-morbidity Survey
(NCS) that sampled the entire
U.S. population in 1994, found
that among non-institutionalized
American male and female adolescents
and adults (ages 15-54), roughly
50% had a diagnosable Axis
I mental disorder at some
time in their lives. This
survey's results indicated
that 35% of males will at
some time in their lives have
abused substances to the point
of qualifying for a mental
disorder diagnosis, and nearly
25% of women will have qualified
for a serious mood disorder
(mostly major depression).
A significant finding of note
from the NCS study was the
widespread occurrence of co-morbidity
among diagnosed disorders.
It specifically found that
56% of the respondents with
a history of at least one
disorder also had two or more
additional disorders. These
persons with a history of
three or more co-morbid disorders
were estimated to be one-sixth
of the U.S. population, or
some 43 million people (Kessler,
1994).
McGinnis and Foege, (1994)
report that, "the most prominent
contributors to mortality
in the United States in 1990
were tobacco (an estimated
400,000 deaths), diet and
activity patterns (300,000),
alcohol (100,000), microbial
agents (90,000), toxic agents
(60,000), firearms (35,000),
sexual behavior (30,000),
motor vehicles (25,000), and
illicit use of drugs (20,000).
Acknowledging that the leading
cause of preventable morbidity
and mortality was risky behavior
lifestyles, the U.S. Prevention
Services Task Force set out
to research behavioral counseling
interventions in health care
settings (Williams & Wilkins,
1996).
Poor Prognosis
We have come to realize today
more than any other time in
history that the treatment
of lifestyle diseases and
addictions are often a difficult
and frustrating task for all
concerned. Repeated failures
abound with all of the addictions,
even with utilizing the most
effective treatment strategies.
But why do 47% of patients
treated in private treatment
programs (for example) relapse
within the first year following
treatment (Gorski,T., 2001)?
Have addiction specialists
become conditioned to accept
failure as the norm? There
are many reasons for this
poor prognosis. Some would
proclaim that addictions are
psychosomatically- induced
and maintained in a semi-balanced
force field of driving and
restraining multidimensional
forces. Others would say that
failures are due simply to
a lack of self-motivation
or will power. Most would
agree that lifestyle behavioral
addictions are serious health
risks that deserve our attention,
but could it possibly be that
patients with multiple addictions
are being under diagnosed
(with a single dependence)
simply due to a lack of diagnostic
tools and resources that are
incapable of resolving the
complexity of assessing and
treating a patient with multiple
addictions?
Diagnostic Delineation
Thus far, the DSM-IV-TR has
not delineated a diagnosis
for the complexity of multiple
behavioral and substance addictions.
It has reserved the Poly-substance
Dependence diagnosis for a
person who is repeatedly using
at least three groups of substances
during the same 12-month period,
but the criteria for this
diagnosis do not involve any
behavioral addiction symptoms.
In the Psychological Factors
Affecting Medical Condition's
section (DSM-IV-TR, 2000);
maladaptive health behaviors
(e.g., overeating, unsafe
sexual practices, excessive
alcohol and drug use, etc.)
may be listed on Axis I only
if they are significantly
affecting the course of treatment
of a medical or mental condition.
Since successful treatment
outcomes are dependent on
thorough assessments, accurate
diagnoses, and comprehensive
individualized treatment planning,
it is no wonder that repeated
rehabilitation failures and
low success rates are the
norm instead of the exception
in the addictions field, when
the latest DSM-IV-TR does
not even include a diagnosis
for multiple addictive behavioral
disorders. Treatment clinics
need to have a treatment planning
system and referral network
that is equipped to thoroughly
assess multiple addictive
and mental health disorders
and related treatment needs
and comprehensively provide
education/ awareness, prevention
strategy groups, and/ or specific
addictions treatment services
for individuals diagnosed
with multiple addictions.
Written treatment goals and
objectives should be specified
for each separate addiction
and dimension of an individuals'
life, and the desired performance
outcome or completion criteria
should be specifically stated,
behaviorally based (a visible
activity), and measurable.
New Proposed Diagnosis
To assist in resolving the
limited DSM-IV-TRs' diagnostic
capability, a multidimensional
diagnosis of "Poly-behavioral
Addiction," is proposed for
more accurate diagnosis leading
to more effective treatment
planning. This diagnosis encompasses
the broadest category of addictive
disorders that would include
an individual manifesting
a combination of substance
abuse addictions, and other
obsessively-compulsive behavioral
addictive behavioral patterns
to pathological gambling,
religion, and/ or sex / pornography,
etc.). Behavioral addictions
are just as damaging - psychologically
and socially as alcohol and
drug abuse. They are comparative
to other life-style diseases
such as diabetes, hypertension,
and heart disease in their
behavioral manifestations,
their etiologies, and their
resistance to treatments.
They are progressive disorders
that involve obsessive thinking
and compulsive behaviors.
They are also characterized
by a preoccupation with a
continuous or periodic loss
of control, and continuous
irrational behavior in spite
of adverse consequences.
Poly-behavioral addiction
would be described as a state
of periodic or chronic physical,
mental, emotional, cultural,
sexual and/ or spiritual/
religious intoxication. These
various types of intoxication
are produced by repeated obsessive
thoughts and compulsive practices
involved in pathological relationships
to any mood-altering substance,
person, organization, belief
system, and/ or activity.
The individual has an overpowering
desire, need or compulsion
with the presence of a tendency
to intensify their adherence
to these practices, and evidence
of phenomena of tolerance,
abstinence and withdrawal,
in which there is always physical
and/ or psychic dependence
on the effects of this pathological
relationship. In addition,
there is a 12 - month period
in which an individual is
pathologically involved with
three or more behavioral and/
or substance use addictions
simultaneously, but the criteria
are not met for dependence
for any one addiction in particular
(Slobodzien, J., 2005). In
essence, Poly-behavioral addiction
is the synergistically integrated
chronic dependence on multiple
physiologically addictive
substances and behaviors (e.g.,
using/ abusing substances
- nicotine, alcohol, & drugs,
and/or acting impulsively
or obsessively compulsive
in regards to gambling, food
binging, sex, and/ or religion,
etc.) simultaneously.
New Proposed Theory
The Addictions Recovery Measurement
System's (ARMS) theory is
a nonlinear, dynamical, non-hierarchical
model that focuses on interactions
between multiple risk factors
and situational determinants
similar to catastrophe and
chaos theories in predicting
and explaining addictive behaviors
and relapse. Multiple influences
trigger and operate within
high-risk situations and influence
the global multidimensional
functioning of an individual.
The process of relapse incorporates
the interaction between background
factors (e.g., family history,
social support, years of possible
dependence, and co-morbid
psychopathology), physiological
states (e.g., physical withdrawal),
cognitive processes (e.g.,
self-efficacy, cravings, motivation,
the abstinence violation effect,
outcome expectancies), and
coping skills (Brownell et
al., 1986; Marlatt & Gordon,
1985). To put it simply, small
changes in an individual's
behavior can result in large
qualitative changes at the
global level and patterns
at the global level of a system
emerge solely from numerous
little interactions.
The ARMS hypothesis purports
that there is a multidimensional
synergistically negative resistance
that individual's develop
to any one form of treatment
to a single dimension of their
lives, because the effects
of an individual's addiction
have dynamically interacted
multi-dimensionally. Having
the primary focus on one dimension
is insufficient. Traditionally,
addiction treatment programs
have failed to accommodate
for the multidimensional synergistically
negative effects of an individual
having multiple addictions,
(e.g. nicotine, alcohol, and
obesity, etc.). Behavioral
addictions interact negatively
with each other and with strategies
to improve overall functioning.
They tend to encourage the
use of tobacco, alcohol and
other drugs, help increase
violence, decrease functional
capacity, and promote social
isolation. Most treatment
theories today involve assessing
other dimensions to identify
dual diagnosis or co-morbidity
diagnoses, or to assess contributing
factors that may play a role
in the individual's primary
addiction. The ARMS' theory
proclaims that a multidimensional
treatment plan must be devised
addressing the possible multiple
addictions identified for
each one of an individual's
life dimensions in addition
to developing specific goals
and objectives for each dimension.
The ARMS acknowledges the
complexity and unpredictable
nature of lifestyle addictions
following the commitment of
an individual to accept assistance
with changing their lifestyles.
The Stages of Change model
(Prochaska & DiClemente, 1984)
is supported as a model of
motivation, incorporating
five stages of readiness to
change: pre-contemplation,
contemplation, preparation,
action, and maintenance. The
ARMS theory supports the constructs
of self-efficacy and social
networking as outcome predictors
of future behavior across
a wide variety of lifestyle
risk factors (Bandura, 1977).
The Relapse Prevention cognitive-behavioral
approach (Marlatt, 1985) with
the goal of identifying and
preventing high-risk situations
for relapse is also supported
within the ARMS theory.
The ARMS continues to promote
Twelve Step Recovery Groups
such as Food Addicts and Alcoholics
Anonymous along with spiritual
and religious recovery activities
as a necessary means to maintain
outcome effectiveness. The
beneficial effects of AA may
be attributable in part to
the replacement of the participant's
social network of drinking
friends with a fellowship
of AA members who can provide
motivation and support for
maintaining abstinence (Humphreys,
K.; Mankowski, E.S, 1999)
and (Morgenstern, J.; Labouvie,
E.; McCrady, B.S.; Kahler,
C.W.; and Frey, R.M., 1997).
In addition, AA's approach
often results in the development
of coping skills, many of
which are similar to those
taught in more structured
psychosocial treatment settings,
thereby leading to reductions
in alcohol consumption (NIAAA,
June 2005).
Treatment Progress Dimensions
The American Society of Addiction
Medicine's (2003), "Patient
Placement Criteria for the
Treatment of Substance-Related
Disorders, 3rd Edition", has
set the standard in the field
of addiction treatment for
recognizing the totality of
the individual in his or her
life situation. This includes
the internal interconnection
of multiple dimensions from
biomedical to spiritual, as
well as external relationships
of the individual to the family
and larger social groups.
Life-style addictions may
affect many domains of an
individual's functioning and
frequently require multi-modal
treatment. Real progress however,
requires appropriate interventions
and motivating strategies
for every dimension of an
individual's life.
The Addictions Recovery Measurement
System (ARMS) has identified
the following seven treatment
progress areas (dimensions)
in an effort to: (1) assist
clinicians with identifying
additional motivational techniques
that can increase an individual's
awareness to make progress:
(2) measure within treatment
progress, and (3) measure
after treatment outcome effectiveness:
PD- 1. Abstinence/ Relapse:
Progress Dimension
PD- 2. Bio-medical/ Physical:
Progress Dimension
PD- 3. Mental/ Emotional:
Progress Dimension
PD- 4. Social/ Cultural:
Progress Dimension
PD- 5. Educational/Occupational:
Progress Dimension
PD- 6. Attitude/ Behavioral:
Progress Dimension
PD- 7. Spirituality/ Religious:
Progress Dimension
Considering that addictions
involve unbalanced life-styles
operating within semi-stable
equilibrium force fields,
the ARMS philosophy promotes
that positive treatment effectiveness
and successful outcomes are
the result of a synergistic
relationship with "The Higher
Power," that spiritually elevates
and connects an individuals'
multiple life functioning
dimensions by reducing chaos
and increasing resilience
to bring an individual harmony,
wellness, and productivity.
Addictions Recovery Measurement
- Subsystems
Since chronic lifestyle diseases
and disorders such as diabetes,
hypertension, alcoholism,
drug and behavioral addictions
cannot be cured, but only
managed - how should we effectively
manage poly-behavioral addiction?
The Addiction Recovery Measurement
System (ARMS) is proposed
utilizing a multidimensional
integrative assessment, treatment
planning, treatment progress,
and treatment outcome measurement
tracking system that facilitates
rapid and accurate recognition
and evaluation of an individual's
comprehensive life-functioning
progress dimensions. The "ARMS"-
systematically, methodically,
interactively, & spiritually
combines the following five
versatile subsystems that
may be utilized individually
or incorporated together:
1) The Prognostication System
– composed of twelve
screening instruments developed
to evaluate an individual's
total life-functioning dimensions
for a comprehensive bio-psychosocial
assessment for an objective
5-Axis diagnosis with a point-based
Global Assessment of Functioning
score;
2) The Target Intervention
System - that includes the
Target Intervention Measure
(TIM) and Target Progress
Reports (A) & (B), for individualized
goal-specific treatment planning;
3) The Progress Point System
- a standardized performance-based
motivational recovery point
system utilized to produce
in-treatment progress reports
on six life-functioning individual
dimensions;
4) The Multidimensional Tracking
System – with its Tracking
Team Surveys (A) & (B), along
with the ARMS Discharge criteria
guidelines utilizes a multidisciplinary
tracking team to assist with
discharge planning; and
5) The Treatment Outcome Measurement
System – that utilizes
the following two
measurement instruments: (a)
The Treatment Outcome Measure
(TOM); and (b) the Global
Assessment of Progress (GAP),
to assist with aftercare treatment
planning.
National Movement
With the end of the Cold War,
the threat of a world nuclear
war has diminished considerably.
It may be hard to imagine
that in the end, comedians
may be exploiting the humor
in the fact that it wasn't
nuclear warheads, but "French
fries" that annihilated the
human race. On a more serious
note, lifestyle diseases and
addictions are the leading
cause of preventable morbidity
and mortality, yet brief preventive
behavioral assessments and
counseling interventions are
under-utilized in health care
settings (Whitlock, 2002).
The U.S. Preventive Services
Task Force concluded that
effective behavioral counseling
interventions that address
personal health practices
hold greater promise for improving
overall health than many secondary
preventive measures, such
as routine screening for early
disease (USPSTF, 1996). Common
health-promoting behaviors
include healthy diet, regular
physical exercise, smoking
cessation, appropriate alcohol/
medication use, and responsible
sexual practices to include
use of condoms and contraceptives.
350 national organizations
and 250 State public health,
mental health, substance abuse,
and environmental agencies
support the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services,
"Healthy People 2010" program.
This national initiative recommends
that primary care clinicians
utilize clinical preventive
assessments and brief behavioral
counseling for early detection,
prevention, and treatment
of lifestyle disease and addiction
indicators for all patients'
upon every healthcare visit.
Partnerships and coordination
among service providers, government
departments, and community
organizations in providing
treatment programs are a necessity
in addressing the multi-task
solution to poly-behavioral
addiction. I encourage you
to support the mental health
and addiction programs in
America, and hope that the
(ARMS) resources can assist
you to personally fight the
War on pathological eating
disorders within poly-behavioral
addiction.
For more info see:
Poly-Behavioral Addiction
and the Addictions Recovery
Measurement System,
By James Slobodzien, Psy.D.,
CSAC at:
http://www.geocities.com/drslbdzn/
Behavioral-Addictions.html
Food Addicts Anonymous: http://www.foodaddictsanonymous.org/
Alcoholics Anonymous: http://www.alcoholics-anonymous.org/
James Slobodzien, Psy.D.,
CSAC, is a Hawaii licensed
psychologist and certified
substance abuse counselor
who earned his doctorate in
Clinical Psychology. The National
Registry of Health Service
Providers in Psychology credentials
Dr. Slobodzien. He has over
20-years of mental health
experience primarily working
in the fields of alcohol/
substance abuse and behavioral
addictions in medical, correctional,
and judicial settings. He
is an adjunct professor of
Psychology and also maintains
a private practice as a mental
health consultant.
References
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Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders,
Fourth Edition,
Text Revision. Washington,
DC, American Psychiatric Association,
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Placement Criteria for the
Treatment of Substance-Related
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June 18, 2005, from:
http://www.asam.org/
Bandura, A. (1977), Self-efficacy:
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Brownell, K. D., Marlatt,
G. A., Lichtenstein, E., &
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and Prevention (CDC). Retrieved
June 18, 2005, from: http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dnpa/obesity/
Gorski, T. (2001), Relapse
Prevention In The Managed
Care Environment. GORSKI-CENAPS
Web
Healthy People 2010. Retrieved
June 20, 2005, from: http://www.healthypeople.gov/
Publications. Retrieved June
20, 2005, from: www.tgorski.com
Lienard, J. & Vamecq, J. (2004),
Presse Med, Oct 23;33(18 Suppl):33-40.
Marlatt, G. A. (1985). Relapse
prevention: Theoretical rationale
and overview of the model.
In G. A.
Marlatt & J. R. Gordon (Eds.),
Relapse prevention (pp. 250-280).
New York: Guilford Press.
McGinnis JM, Foege WH (1994).
Actual causes of death in
the United States. US Department
of Health and Human Services,
Washington, DC 20201
Humphreys, K.; Mankowski,
E.S.; Moos, R.H.; and Finney,
J.W (1999). Do enhanced friendship
networks and active coping
mediate the effect of self-help
groups on substance abuse?
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Kessler, R.C., McGonagle,
K.A., Zhao, S., Nelson, C.B.,
Hughes, M., Eshleman, S.,
Wittchen, H. H,-U, & Kendler,
K.S. (1994). Lifetime and
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Morgenstern, J.; Labouvie,
E.; McCrady, B.S.; Kahler,
C.W.; and Frey, R.M (1997).
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65(5):768-777.
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appetites: A psychological
view of addiction. New York:
Wiley.
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C. C. (1984). The transtheoretical
approach: Crossing the boundaries
of therapy. Malabar, FL: Krieger.
Slobodzien, J. (2005). Poly-behavioral
Addiction and the Addictions
Recovery Measurement System
(ARMS), Booklocker.com, Inc.,
p. 5.
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Primary Care Behavioral Counseling
Interventions: An Evidence-based
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World Health Organization,
(WHO). Retrieved June 18,
2005, from: http://www.who.int/topics/obesity/en/
According to the World Health
Organization (June, 2005),
"obesity has reached epidemic
proportions globally, with
more than 1 billion adults
overweight - at least 300
million of them clinically
obese - and is a major contributor
to the global burden of chronic
disease and disability. This
article purports that the
poor prognosis in treating
patients with obesity may
possibly be due to not diagnosing
and treating thier other poly-behavioral
addictions simultaneously.
This systematic underdiagnostic
standard in the field of addictions
could be due to a lack of
diagnostic tools and resources
that are presently incapable
of resolving the complexity
of assessing and treating
a patient with multiple behavioral
and substance abuse addictions.
The Addictions Recovery Measurement
System (ARMS) is proposed
as a first step in fighting
this global War on Poly-behavioral
Addictions.
About the author:
James Slobodzien, Psy.D.,
CSAC, is a Hawaii licensed
psychologist and certified
substance abuse counselor
who earned his doctorate in
Clinical Psychology. The National
Registry of Health Service
Providers in Psychology credentials
Dr. Slobodzien. He has over
20-years of mental health
experience primarily working
in the fields of alcohol/
substance abuse and behavioral
addictions in medical, correctional,
and judicial settings. He
is an adjunct professor of
Psychology and also maintains
a private practice as a mental
health consultant.
http://www.geocities.com/drslbdzn/
Behavioral-Addictions.html
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