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Disease & Will Power, posted 11 Jan 2006 9:52 AM

I came across an article in my notes that better explains my thinking regarding the disease aspect of addiction and the need to take responsibility for recovery. Here's the full article, by Dr. Alan I. Leshner, former director of the National Institute of Drug Abuse. Here's a relevant paragraph:

Many people also erroneously still believe that drug addiction is simply a failure of will or of strength of character. Research contradicts that position. However, the recognition that addiction is a brain disease does not mean that the addict is simply a hapless victim. Addiction begins with the voluntary behavior of using drugs, and addicts must participate in and take some significant responsibility for their recovery. Thus, having this brain disease does not absolve the addict of responsibility for his or her behavior, but it does explain why an addict cannot simply stop using drugs by sheer force of will alone. It also dictates a much more sophisticated approach to dealing with the array of problems surrounding drug abuse and addiction in our society.

For those interested in the genetic piece of the jigsaw puzzle that is addiction, a new study by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill found that "many of the genes involved in smoking are in the same chromosomal region, or loci, as genes related to drinking behavior."

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