What Percent of Rehabilitated People Actually Are Cured?
Question by Maryy: What percent of rehabilitated people actually are cured?
ok so this is for a project….
does anyone know what percent of rehabilitated people get out and dont do the same mistake agian??? (i.e.- they would use drugs daily, went to rehab, then when they got out they quit completly)
i searched yahoo, google, and ask jeeves. i did all of my project and this is just a small part of it wich isnt really gonna be graded so keep your useless coments to yourself
Best answer:
Answer by raysny
Rehabs often claim amazing results, but the reality is less than spectacular.
According to Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcohol_addiction
“The effectiveness of alcoholism treatments varies widely. When considering the effectiveness of treatment options, one must consider the success rate based on those who enter a program, not just those who complete it. Since completion of a program is the qualification for success, success among those who complete a program is generally near 100%. It is also important to consider not just the rate of those reaching treatment goals but the rate of those relapsing. Results should also be compared to the roughly 5% rate at which people will quit on their own. A year after completing a rehab program, about a third of alcoholics are sober, an additional 40 percent are substantially improved but still drink heavily on occasion, and a quarter have completely relapsed.”
That estimate is based on information from Dr. Mark Willenbring of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and in my opinion, optomistic.
” About 80 percent of addiction patients will relapse, studies suggest, and long-term success rates for treatment are estimated at 10-30 percent.
“The therapeutic community claims a 30 percent success rate, but they only count people who complete the program,” noted Joseph A. Califano Jr., of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. “Seventy to eighty percent drop out in three to six months.” ”
http://www.addictioninfo.org/articles/1633/1/Little-Evidence-that-Costly-Treatment-Programs-Work/Page1.html
90-95% of rehabs in the US are 12step-based. The rest are Scientology or religion-based.
The 12step treatment method has been shown to have about a 5% success rate, the same as no treatment at all:
Although the success rate is the same, AA harms more people than no treatment:
1) Dr. Brandsma found that A.A. increased the rate of binge drinking, and
2) Dr. Ditman found that A.A. increased the rate of rearrests for public drunkenness, and
3) Dr. Walsh found that “free A.A.” made later hospitalization more expensive, and
4) Doctors Orford and Edwards found that having a doctor talk to the patient for just one hour was just as effective as a whole year of A.A.-based treatment.
5) Dr. George E. Vaillant, the A.A. Trustee, found that A.A. treatment was completely ineffective, and raised the death rate in alcoholics. No other way of treating alcoholics produced such a high death rate as did Alcoholics Anonymous.
http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-letters85.html
1) http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-effectiveness.html#Brandsma
2) http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-effectiveness.html#Ditman
3) http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-effectiveness.html#Walsh
4) http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-effectiveness.html#Orford
5) http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-effectiveness.html#Vaillant
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Plymouth woman who violated probation sent to rehab
22-year-old Taylor Hohmann admitted she violated probation for a deadly hit and run. The Plymouth woman appeared in court Monday, accused of driving drunk in Golden Valley on September 15th. Preliminary tests showed her blood alcohol level was more than twice the legal limit. Also in court were friends and family members of Michael Rymer, the man Hohmann was convicted of hitting and killing in the March 2010 hit and run. Hohmann was sentenced to a year in the workhouse and four years probation for his death. The Hennepin County Attorney’s office, as well as Rymer’s family, are hoping Hohmann’s latest incident puts her back behind bars for the probation violation. Monday, it was rehab, not more jail time, the judge ordered for Hohmann. Judge Ann Alton set a future court date of November 16 to address both the Golden Valley DWI and the probation violation. Until then, she is sending Hohmann to Minnesota Teen Challenge, a drug and alcohol treatment program. Judge Alton warned Hohmann that if she felt Hohmann wasn’t responding to treatment, she would send her back to prison for the probation violation. Michael Rymer’s wife Heather cried as she left the courtroom. “I think she can go on screwing up and screwing up and screwing up and nothing’s going to happen,” said Heather. “How many chances? How many more chances does she get before there’s a consequence for her actions?” Renee Banot twelve.tv www.facebook.com twitter.com 12 News is on Comcast cable channel 12 in the …
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