Pubdate: Thu, 13 Nov 2008 Source: Vue Weekly (CN AB) Copyright: 2008, Vue Weekly. Contact: http://www.vueweekly.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2918 Author: Connie Howard Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) HOPE FOR ADDICTS The week of November 16 is National Addictions Awareness Week, and we're in sore need of awareness to not only the heartbreak of debilitating addiction and the homeless, but also to the infinitely more common and closeted addictions of those checking our groceries, cutting our hair and writing our prescriptions. Functional addicts to legal, illegal, hard and soft drugs fill our suburbs and office towers, and they're finding willpower alone-and often willpower together with all the available psychological supports-to be insufficient to help them walk away. But the approach used by Vancouver's Agora Regeneration Clinic chases addiction-even hard-core, long-standing addiction-with surprising success, and does so with minimal withdrawal discomfort. "One of our success stories is that of a 73-year-old woman who'd been on addictive prescription medications for 45 years," Maggie Gold tells me over the phone from Vancouver. "She went through our 15-day program and now no longer needs her sleeping pills, pain killers or anti-depressants." The cornerstone of their approach is amino acid therapy, and it gets at the heart of what starts and then feeds chemical dependencies. Addiction is known to be tied to genetic predisposition, and it's known to be triggered by psychological and social factors such as trauma and the absence of integration into family and culture-but is also known to be inextricably linked to faulty neurotransmission of brain chemicals. What happens when stress or pain or drugs disrupt neurotransmission is that we begin to experience any number of unpleasant and sometimes debilitating symptoms: a reduced ability to experience pleasure in the ordinary, irritability, anxiety, low self-esteem, sleep disturbances, lack of motivation, physical pain, depression, obsessions, rage. To manage those symptoms, many of us resort to ever-increasing doses of prescription or non-prescription options, or our own unique mix of both. But things that affect brain function further damage neuroreceptors, keeping the fire of addiction and faltering neurotransmission stoked. The good news is that amino acid, essential fatty acid, vitamin and mineral therapies can repair neuroreceptors and restore normal neurotransmission. Those who've tried it often say they've never felt "normal" before, never felt this good, never really heard the music before. At Agora, it's all done on an out-patient basis. Amino acids are administered intravenously, which delivers optimal absorption. Extensive lab testing, specific full-spectrum vitamin, mineral and essential fatty acid nutritional support, infrared sauna, acupuncture, massage and psychological components round out the program. Its sister clinic in Colorado, NORA, operating longer than the one-year-old Agora Clinic, has helped over 14 000 people get off everything from alcohol and street drugs to prescription pain and psychiatric meds with amino acid therapy, 80 per cent of which are still clean and sober five years later. This, in light of the high relapse rates of conventional addiction therapies is astounding success. It's a shame Agora is Canada's only naturopathic detox centre, and it's a shame they have no government funding and that many seeking this kind of treatment simply can't afford it. I'd think our government, in its opposition to InSite and its absolute certainty that the only moral thing to do is to get addicts off drugs might want to promote and fund programs such as Agora's. We need to address addiction from all angles. We need to set aside moral superiority and judgment, and respect those unable to commit to rehab by offering safe injection until they're ready to take that plunge. We need to fund prevention programs for those at risk due to the genetic, social or trauma cards they've been handed. We need prevention programs that go beyond "just say no" and include real education about risk factors. And we need to give the reality of faulty neurotransmission involved in addictions due respect. Agora's holistic focus delivers respect for the underlying issues and offers the chemical building blocks necessary for healing. Edmonton needs its own Agora; naturopathic doctors wanting more information can contact Maggie Gold through Agora's website agoraforlife.net for more information. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin