Blogs
We have four blogs on our site, each with its own focus:
How to Talk so Someone With Addiction Will Listen (Families) is a question-and-answer format blog that provides help for families struggling with an addiction problem.
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How to Talk so Someone With Addiction Will Listen (Clinicians) is a question-and answer format blog serving as a discussion forum for treatment clinicians & recovery pros.
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Tips for Treatment Programs is a question-and-answer format blog that gives practical tips for people who want to run excellent treatment & recovery programs.
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Thinking About Addiction is a more traditional “sharing our thoughts” blog that responds to news, information, and whatever’s happening for us right now. It’s too long a title to call it “Thinking About Addiction, Treatment, and Recovery” but that’s a better description.
Here’s a feed of all the posts to all of our blogs:
In the News: Polypharmacy and Tom Petty
It’s the result of a problem in medicine that’s been going on since before I ever started working in the field. The drugs have changed, but the results haven’t.
Topics: celebrity, mortality, prescription medications
Nature vs. Nurture Again
We can’t predict in advance which user will turn out to be in which category, and frankly, neither can they.
Topics: addiction and the brain, epidemiology, opioids, research
Secretary for Drug Crises?
I thought that blue ribbon commission did a pretty good job with its 60 recommendations, but I haven’t seen much subsequent action, have you?
Topics: mortality, opioids, systems
Drug Prices: The Blame Game
As a former insurance VP once put it, you spend your day looking at spreadsheets, you forget there are real people out there depending on you.
Topics: prescription medications
Alcohol Tax Cut
…those users have fewer resources to pay for healthcare and legal problems that often result from more drinking. So who picks up the tab?
Topics: alcohol
The Epidemic Rolls On…
There are plenty of steps we could take, supported by research and common sense, that would produce measurable gains in a relatively short span.
Topics: epidemiology, mortality, opioids