July 8, 2022

Why Relapse?

After beating the odds and conquering the demons of addiction, why would anybody voluntarily choose to return to their previous self-destructive state? It is not uncommon for those in recovery to experience sobriety for a long period of time, and on an impulse restart the self-destructive cycle. This is what we call relapse.

Although the behavior may seem inexplicable, understanding brain chemistry sheds some light on the situation. Because the effects of drugs are so powerful, it changes the brain structure and chemistry of the user. Prolonged usage of such addictive substances leads to a reprioritization of what the brain ranks as important. With time the addict’s brain can even prioritize the use of the drug above natural survival responses such as eating and sleeping.  The addict’s brain convinces itself that the consumption of the drug is more important than their life.

Our survival responses are powerful, to say the least. We are hard-wired to do whatever it takes to ensure the preservation of our lives. I once witnessed a mouse stuck in a trap chew off its own arm to escape. Just like the mouse, any of us would go to undeniably extreme measures to survive in a life-threatening situation.

Because of the effects of reprioritization, addicts will go to similarly extreme measures to ensure they can continue the usage of their substance. In short, addiction knows no limits. There is no price too expensive, no situation too dangerous, and no risk too great. Even after enjoying years of sobriety, there is still a danger of relapse. This is why addiction treatment must extend beyond the sphere of treatment centers. Truly, quitting the use of the drug is just the first step.

July 24, 2017

Insurance Reimbursements: Clinicians Are the Key

Clinicians are incredibly important to a treatment center’s overall success. Good clinicians can truly make, or break a treatment facility. Your patient’s satisfaction depends in many ways on the efforts of your clinicians, as they are the ones providing the help and care. Additionally, clinicians play a central role in helping your treatment center get the correct insurance reimbursements.

Although your clinicians may be your strongest ally when working with people, they can potentially be harmful to your treatment center’s finances.

Addiction treatment is very expensive to say the least. The necessary care provision is very intensive and complicated. Although the ideals and principles behind care centers are very altruistic in nature, good intentions alone cannot sustain a business. At the end of the day somebody has to pay the rent, utilities, and wage costs associated with these centers.

The combination of the expensive treatment fees, and the likely economic instability of the patients, leaves us with a difficult question: Who is going to pay for the patient’s recovery? In many cases the answer is insurance companies.

For obvious reasons, insurance companies manage their funds very carefully. Although they are obligated to help in varying extents depending the situation, it is within their own interest to ensure that they do not pay any more than required. To ensure fairness in distribution of these funds, there are specific guidelines and prerequisites that are attached to these obligations, and if not met, they are under no obligation to pay.

 

Herein lies the danger: regardless of the reality of a patient’s needs, the funds provided by an insurance company are determined from your clinician’s notes and records.” (Stevens, Matt)

 

The only way to prove that patients qualify for higher insurance reimbursements is through the notes taken by clinicians that worked with them in their recovery

Imagine that as a treatment facility owner you have a clinician that is great at working with patients, and successful in helping them recover, but bad at note taking and other routine tasks involved in their day to day work. Would this be a clinician you want on your team? Although such a clinician has the potential to do a lot of good within the facility, if they do not make it a priority to help the center receive its merited insurance reimbursements, they will likely be a sizable liability to the center’s overall success.

Here at Alleva we designed our EMR with solutions to these issues in mind. Through innovations such as word minimums on all notes taken, medical term word banks, and deadline alert systems, clinicians will be guided to take their notes in such a way that the facility they work for can qualify for their appropriate share of insurance reimbursements.

Although the solutions are very simple, they have considerable value. When applied, these small changes will save any given treatment facility thousands of dollars in lost insurance reimbursements. But most importantly, they allow the center to focus on what really matters; the people under their care.

 

 

Stevens, Matt. "How to Clinician-Proof Your Treatment Center For an Audit." Recovery Brands. Recovery Brands, 18 July 2017. Web. 22 July 2017.<http://blog.recoverybrands.com/improve-documentation-emr/>.

June 29, 2017

Incarceration vs. Rehabilitation

Incarceration vs RehabilitationIncarceration vs rehabilitation methods have been hotly debated over the years and recent research has emerged that has greatly improved practices and progress in treating addiction as a health issue.  However, some practices are in direct conflict with what others consider proper care.

With rising opioid use across the country, there are those who would argue that in-jail treatment offers the best solution.

Inimai Chettiar and Grainne Dunne of the NYU School of Law responded to the incarceration vs rehabilitation argument, stating “We should certainly improve treatment in jails. But by focusing on building drug treatment infrastructure inside the criminal justice system, we further institutionalize its placement there. This reinforces the belief that people battling addiction deserve punishment — undoing years of progress to understand addiction as a health issue.”

Even improving treatment within the justice system could not be enough to rehabilitate those struggling with addiction.  The consequences, stigmas, and stereotypes that accompany someone who has gone through the justice system are often too difficult to overcome and while they may receive some medical or therapeutic treatment, rehabilitation includes being accepted back into society and that often cannot occur.

Treatment should be given in the appropriate environment, facilities that are designed for rehabilitation, not punishment.

In the rehabilitation vs incarceration debate, what do you support? Comment below.

June 20, 2017

Anti-Drug Laws

The number of laws in place to discourage illicit drug abuse have only increased with time. However, despite the array of anti-drug laws put in place for its prevention, Illicit drug use in the United States has been increasing rather than decreasing
The expected decrease in drug abuse associated with the creation of more laws and anti-drug related institutions has not proven to be certain. In reality, drug abuse has continued to increase despite the implementation of these new systems. This is not to suggest that the establishment of institutions in any way causing an increase in drug abuse; rather that it has been unsuccessful in achieving its primary purpose of diminishing such abuse.
Never has the attempt to stop the consumption of illegal substances been made more official as during the prohibition. Although the prohibited substance in that time was alcohol rather than opiates and narcotics like we see modernly, the lesson learned is entirely applicable. The institutional opposition was so official that it was even included as an amendment in the constitution, which is more powerful and binding than any law. Even with the political strength that uniquely the constitution can bring, the best estimates are that the consumption of alcohol only declined by thirty to fifty percent during the prohibition.
Half, and potentially seventy percent of the designed sobriety was unsuccessful even when backed by arguably the most powerful political document in this nation. However, this bleak statistic does not suggest that the problem is unconquerable. Rather, it suggests that fifty to seventy percent of progress towards a drug-free society will not be achieved by the creation and enforcement of anti-drug laws.
 

June 19, 2017

Recovery Reinvented

The Governor and First Lady of North Dakota have announced that on September 26th 2017 there will be a day of “facilitated conversations” about addiction recovery. The event, Recovery Reinvented, will be a conference centered on teaching people that addiction is a chronic disease that is treatable.

They plan on bringing together state and national experts in recovery to share innovative practices that will directly help people take action against their addictions. It is going to be a very personable and applicable event, North Dakota’s First Lady Kathryn Helgaas Burgum even plans on sharing her experiences as a recovered alcoholic to help others that are similarly struggling. This event should have a very positive effect on increasing awareness and helping improve the national addiction epidemic within their state.

It is great to see that North Dakota is taking action against addiction especially keeping in mind that they have a relatively less severe problem with drug addiction. Hopefully other states will follow their example, and work towards raising awareness and providing solutions within their own spheres of influence.

June 13, 2017

Who Suffers From PTSD?

Who suffers from PTSD?

Often when we think of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, the first image that comes to mind is a veteran haunted by nightmares of painful memories that he or she experienced in their service on the battlefield. This image is not mistaken: many veterans suffer from the effects of PTSD after their return to normal life.

However, PTSD is not a veteran-exclusive ailment. It is a psychiatric disorder that can occur after any traumatic experience. War is obviously filled with a lot of trauma; hence many who experienced the horrors of war will experience the effects of PTSD. However, it can also follow other painful experiences like natural disasters, serious accidents, sexual or physical assault, severe illness, or even witnessing another person experience these traumatic situations.

Everybody will experience something painful in their life, however, the majority of people will recover and be able to move on within a few weeks or months following the episode. Unfortunately, many will develop PTSD and will subsequently be harrowed by the memory of this painful experience.

 

Just like any other disease, physical or mental in nature, the effects of PTSD are very real and painful. Whether experienced because of a traumatic experience in war, or in civilian life, its effects truly hinder the individual’s ability to function. However, just like any other disease, there are professionals who know of remedies and cures to tame and eventually conquer its effects.

If you're a clinician looking to help people with this affliction, our mental health EMR can help. You can see the benefits and features of our software here. Or fill out the form below to schedule a demo. 

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June 12, 2017

Everything You Know About Recovery is Wrong

Innovators, like Johann Hari, help us understand better those who struggle with addiction and helps us challenge our preconceived ideas on the criminalization of drug use. He helps us ask the hard questions. What is addiction? How does addiction happen? How can we help those who struggle from addiction to achieve recovery? And he gives us surprising solutions as he makes striking statements like, "the opposite of addiction is connection".

 

June 9, 2017

Drug Use Statistics by State

The term "opioid epidemic” is in the news almost hourly. We hear tragic stories of lives destroyed by addiction. Some states are notorious for a specific type of drug use- think Montana with meth, or California with cocaine. But a recent WalletHub report published the drug use statistics on every state, ranked by “overall drug problem”, drug use and addiction, law enforcement and drug health issues and rehab. 

Where does your state rank? The answers may surprise you. 

Source: WalletHub

Here are the top 10 states in terms of the overall drug problem:

  1. District of Columbia
  2. Vermont
  3. Colorado
  4. Delaware
  5. Rhode Island
  6. Oregon
  7. Connecticut
  8. Arizona
  9. Massachusetts
  10. Michigan

Colorado also ranked #1 in teen AND adult drug users, while Alabama made a name for themselves as having the most opioid prescriptions per 100 citizens. West Virginia has the most overdose deaths per capita, and South Dakota has the most drug arrests per capita.

 

If you were surprised (like we were!), there's more to learn and more to do.

June 8, 2017

We’re Official! The Best EMR Goes Live

Our one-of-a-kind EMR software is taking off and we couldn’t be more excited to share the news. Our super-cool first press release was published earlier this week.  “We knew we could make a difference in the realm of addiction recovery simply by improving communication between therapists, clients and families,” said co-founder Matt Stevens when interviewed for the press release.

Our HIPAA-compliant secure video conferencing, treatment plans, client app, and other unique features make our EMR the best on the market.

We want to thank our team members in our San Clemente and Provo offices for their hard work, creativity, and stunning good looks. We also want to thank our beta customers: Acqua Recovery, Miramar Recovery Center and Solara Mental Health for jumping on board and letting us be part of their teams.

We’re excited to see what’s next!

June 6, 2017

Sobriety: More Than Just Willpower

Man Takes Field Sobriety Test

Addiction has long been characterized by researchers and observers as a result of a lack of willpower.  Many assumed that those who struggled to achieve sobriety just had a weakness and so it was necessary to remove temptation.

A recent study found that just the opposite is true.  A study of 69 participants in recovery over the span of three years found that most identify as being strong-willed and yet they still have addictions to various substances.  This suggests that addiction is less cognitive and therefore requires prevention strategies that are not focused on cognitive processes.

Those who participated in strategies rather than sheer willpower had more success in staying sober and in progressing in their recovery. 

This is not to say that willpower in sobriety is irrelevant.  The researchers explain, “It probably takes willpower to deploy strategies at all. Because willpower is likely fragile...such a use of willpower is successful because it need not continue; the person who effortfully deploys the strategy of blocking out the sales pitch of the dealer with headphones doesn't need willpower to resist that pitch. Willpower is best used strategically, and the participants mention several strategies for doing so. They ‘pick their battles’.”

Treatment can teach those in recovery how to harness willpower and deploy strategies to lead to a more effective and long-lasting recovery. You can learn more about which drug addiction treatment is best here. 

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Copyright 2019 - Alleva Corp. All Rights Reserved.

Copyright 2019 - Alleva Corp. All Rights Reserved.

Copyright 2019 - Alleva Corp. All Rights Reserved.