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Seasons change: crystal meth addiction doesn't follow the rules of traditional rehabilitation. New Seasons clinic in California looks inside the brains of addicts to crack the code.


Skanda Miraglia started using crystal methamphetamine when his boyfriend promised, "We'll have the best mind-blowing sex if we do."

It was fun at first, but life under meth's influence wasn't. Miraglia lost his job, his boyfriend, and a group of friends. He lived in a state of total paranoia. With an embarrassed laugh, he says, "I thought people were always watching me and taking pictures."

Miraglia's remaining friends staged an intervention, which led to a series of rehabilitation programs, including a 10-day detox de·tox
v.
To subject to detoxification.

n.
A section of a hospital or clinic in which patients are detoxified.
 followed by six weeks of inpatient care inpatient care Managed care Services delivered to a Pt who needs physician care for > 24 hrs in a hospital  at Banner Good Samaritan Behavioral Health Center Moses Cone Behavioral Health Center (part of Moses Cone Health System)

The Behavioral Health is an 80-bed facility that specializes in helping children, adolescents and adults cope with mental health and/or addiction issues.
 in Phoenix, paid for through a state-funded program. Those efforts helped but only planted the seeds of recovery.

It wasn't until a few years later that Miraglia stopped using. That's when a fellow 12-stepper recommended that he pray. "I didn't know who I was praying to or what for--I just asked for help," he says. And slowly things started to change.

He found yoga, a guru (Ma Jaya Sati Bhagavati), and Crystal Meth Anonymous--a trifecta tri·fec·ta  
n.
A system of betting in which the bettor must pick the first three winners in the correct sequence. Also called triple.



[tri- + (per)fecta.]
 that has kept him clean for four years. But like a lot of other meth addicts, he had to take the initiative to find a treatment that worked. Traditional programs just didn't cut it.

Miraglia isn't the only one to find meth recovery programs lacking. Experts admit that what can work for other addictions often doesn't for meth. No drug approved by the Food and Drug Administration has been shown to reduce the craving for meth, though some are now being tested. Worse, recovering addicts can experience withdrawal symptoms Withdrawal symptoms
A group of physical or mental symptoms that may occur when a person suddenly stops using a drug to which he or she has become dependent.
 for months. Traditional inpatient detox programs, though, last only 10 days. Even after meth is out of a person's system, the seductive memory of its influence remains alluring.

"There's a myth out there that meth users are essentially a lost cause," says Joel Ginsberg, executive director of the Gay and Lesbian Medical Association
GLMA redirects here; it may also refer to the Great Lakes Mink Association (Blackglama).
The Gay and Lesbian Medical Association (GLMA) is an international organization of 2,000 lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered (LGBT) physicians, medical
. "Our ['Breaking the Grip'] project identified many successful strategies for helping gay and bisexual men overcome meth addiction, though there are only a handful of programs around the country that are able to provide the kind of tailored treatments that work best for this population."

Psychotherapist psy·cho·ther·a·pist
n.
An individual, such as a psychiatrist, psychologist, psychiatric nurse, or psychiatric social worker, who practices psychotherapy.
 Steven Orenstein opened the New Seasons clinic in Port Hueneme, Calif., as a tailor-made treatment center for meth addicts. He'd previously been the director of addiction programs at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Cedars-Sinai Medical Center is a world-renowned hospital located in Los Angeles, California. History
Cedars-Sinai is the result of a merger in 1961 between two major Los Angeles hospitals, Cedars of Lebanon and Mount Sinai Home for the Incurables, with Steve Broidy as
 in Los Angeles. But he could see that treatment programs offered at these hospitals, even good ones, weren't as effective as they should be.

"In a hospital you have to get someone in and out," Orenstein says. "You can't do that with meth addiction."

He argues that understanding what triggers someone's meth use takes time. Giving someone the specific tools they need to avoid temptation isn't something you can do in a cookie-cutter program.

"People who come to us have tried three or four different programs. These programs keep trying the same things each time. But when they do, they get the same results," Orenstein says.

New Seasons isn't cheap, and insurance doesn't typically cover this kind of care. But Orenstein argues it is more affordable than most programs. The primary program, which lasts a month, is an all-inclusive $28,000. The cost goes down each month a person stays in the program. The 13-month aftercare af·ter·care
n.
Follow-up care provided after a medical procedure or treatment program.



aftercare

the care and treatment of a convalescent patient, especially one that has undergone surgery.
 program is another $15,000.

The real key to New Seasons' success, Orenstein says, is the work it does with a meth addict's brain, a step most programs skip. "All the drug and behavioral therapy in the world isn't going to change meth's physical impact," he says.

Fighting the addiction is the first step, naturally, but crystal meth physically harms the brain, hampering how a person functions, much like a stroke, epilepsy, or Alzheimer's disease Alzheimer's disease (ăls`hī'mərz, ôls–), degenerative disease of nerve cells in the cerebral cortex that leads to atrophy of the brain and senile dementia.  does. Orenstein believes that a recovery program without neurocognitive rehab is incomplete.

At New Seasons, each patient is first administered a QEEG QEEG Quantitative Electroencephalogram/Electroencephalography  scan that assesses more than 293 dimensions of brain-wave activity to determine how meth has altered the function or structure of brain regions. These measurements are visually and quantitatively summarized in a brain map that serves as a guide to determine which areas need strengthening or balancing.

New Seasons then uses digital simulations, such as adaptations of computer games like Pac-Man, to stimulate regions of patients' brains. Subsequent scans are administered while patients perform tasks like playing a car-racing video game.

Clients view their scans so they can observe changes to their brain. "When you see those actual changes with the brain map, it's really exciting. It's had an incredible impact on my ability to focus," says Mike, a New Seasons outpatient client who asked that his last name not be used. Being able to see real, quantifiable progress, not just hear that he's doing better, was what he needed to stay focused on recovery. Mike has been in aftercare treatment three days a week since last October. In aftercare, clients are remapped See remap.  every couple of months (depending on their progress) to monitor improvement.

While brain mapping may seem clinical, New Seasons feels more like a spa than a hospital. Addicts are called clients, not patients. They aren't locked in and are free to explore the nearby beach. The grounds have meditation spaces, an outdoor dining area, a fire pit, and a beach volleyball court. Counseling is supplemented with acupuncture, acupressure acupressure
 or shiatsu

Alternative-medicine practice in which pressure is applied to points on the body aligned along 12 main meridians (pathways), usually for a short time, to improve the flow of vital force (qi).
, massage, yoga, herbal therapy, spiritual guidance, and psychodrama psychodrama /psy·cho·dra·ma/ (-drah´mah) a form of group psychotherapy in which patients dramatize emotional problems and life situations in order to achieve insight and to alter faulty behavior patterns. , poetry, and music therapies.

As the program has been open just over a year, it's tough to determine its effectiveness. But Orenstein has measured improvements in clients' cognitive function ranging from 20% to 40%. That level of success has prompted the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). , Los Angeles's Integrated Substance Abuse Program to launch a study of why the New Seasons methods appear to work.

The GLMA's study, "Breaking the Grip," didn't review New Seasons' program, but it did find that cognitive behavioral programs such as theirs can have success with meth users. The study, released last November, also concluded there aren't nearly enough recovery programs to meet the need.

Brian Dew, chair of the Atlanta Meth Task Force, agrees. Surveys he's conducted indicate treatment can still fall short, although some outpatient programs are being extended to deal with the long-term effects of meth withdrawal.

"I'm not surprised that there's a program with a more progressive approach out in California. They've been dealing with the epidemic a lot longer," Dew says. "I hope more comprehensive programs will be made available throughout the country."

Mike, who says he is eternally grateful to New Seasons, appreciates the tangible signs of his progress most of all--like when he plays Brain Builder, a New Seasons game that shows a series of disappearing dots he's then expected to remember. When he first came in, he could recall only five dots. He's up to 12 now, and he's excited about the progress. "It sounds like a minor thing," he says, "but I want to get even better. I want to remember 15."

RELATED ARTICLE: DIY DIY
abbr.
do-it-yourself


DIY or d.i.y. Brit, Austral & NZ do-it-yourself
DIY
abbr DIY
do it yourself a DIY shop/job.
 HIV testing.

Imagine if testing your HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States.  status were mot e like a home pregnancy test. You'd go to time bathroom prick your finger, transfer the drop of blood to a vial, and in about 20 minutes a positive or negative symbol would appeal. It'd be a snap--but is that how you'd want to find out?

Since 1986 the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has debated whether to approve just this kind of home self-test (HST (1) See Hubble Space Telescope.

(2) An earlier asymmetrical modem protocol from U.S. Robotics that included error control and compression and transmits from 4800 to 14400 bps in one direction and from 300 to 400 bps in the other.
). So far. only mail-in kits like Orasure Technology's OraQuick Rapid HIV-1 Antibody Test are available. They allow you to mail your blood sample anonymously to a lab and receive results via phone within two weeks.

In 1992, the United Kingdom made it illegal to sell or provide any type of HIV self-test, Commentary in the The Lancet early this year by Lucy Frith frith  
n. Scots
A firth.



[Alteration of firth.]

Frith woods or wooded country collectively. See also forest.
 of the University of Liverpool The University of Liverpool is a university in the city of Liverpool, England. History

The University was established in 1881 as University College Liverpool, admitting its first students in 1882.
 argues that the current ban is archaic.

"An estimated 31% of people with HIV in the U.K. are unaware of their HIV status," she writes. "People should be allowed to choose where, when, and how they are tested for HIV."

Two separate surveys conducted in the United States found that people preferred the anonymity and quick test results home self-testing (HST) allows. So what's the hold up?

Critics say the lack of individual counseling could be devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
. But Frith sees required counseling as a possible deterrent for some people. Besides, she adds, "telephone counseling would have to be available" and provided by the HST manufacturers.

Other opponents worry about difficulty using and interpreting results, as well as the potential for ethical violations like testing someone without his or her permission or suppressing a positive result. Frith says technology can be relied on for simplicity and accuracy. And as for ethics, laws must be drafted in the vein of DNA testing, making the use of nonconsensual results illegal. Writes Frith. "None of the arguments put forward to justify the harmfulness of self-testing are strong enough to merit the continued illegality of such tests."--Mogan Kroll

Christensen is an investigative producer for CNN CNN
 or Cable News Network

Subsidiary company of Turner Broadcasting Systems. It was created by Ted Turner in 1980 to present 24-hour live news broadcasts, using satellites to transmit reports from news bureaus around the world.
.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Liberation Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:HEALTH
Author:Christensen, Jen
Publication:The Advocate (The national gay & lesbian newsmagazine)
Date:Apr 10, 2007
Words:1507
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Next Article:Paths of glory: pathways to wellness, a holistic health center in Boston, mixes up a different HIV cocktail.(HEALTH)
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