Rock Bottom ... and Other Lies

so this past winter i was asked to speak

uh on the top of

of addiction say a topic i i know well

i worked in it as a ceo of the local

agency for

the last 10 years and i have my own

struggle with

mental health and addiction and so the

original talk i was gonna

to give you um really focused in on that

focused uh

you know i know how these these talks go

um you hear a little bit about my

background

with those struggles i tell you some

anecdotes about

crashing a car spending a night in jail

about living in chicago in my 20s

running from pain waking up

next to women that i forgot meeting

actually in my case more more honestly

was waking up with half-eaten burritos

that i don’t remember buying

but since that time

that was five months ago and the world

has changed

and so the context of my talk changed

we’ve met a pandemic that

has completely changed the world so i

spent the last 10 years of my career

running up and down the halls of our

state capitol and even washington dc

yelling fire to anybody that would

listen to me

and not that we’ve been traveling lately

but had i been in those halls now

i don’t think i’d be yelling fire i

think i’d be politely opening the door

and saying come on in coronavirus this

is your time now we need to figure you

out

oh excuse me black lives matter didn’t

see you coming

but i should have so in a matter of a

number of months

this pandemic has halted our world

economy

devastated millions of lives

and has the world scientists working on

on cure and treatment then just a few

months later the black life

matter movement comes to fruition

and is right now the largest

social justice movement in the history

of the world

that’s all just happened folks and so

how do i talk about addiction

when this was the most important public

health

uh crisis in our country uh in the in

that context

and we see that those public crisis

are are having effect we see

what’s happening in science and we’re

going to figure this out

we also see with the black lives matter

movement things are starting to change

some some really odd things

nascar banning a confederate flag elmo

talking to our kids

about the protests

but the most significant thing that’s

happened i think in my mind relative to

this

is that we’ve named these things uh in

particular racism and systematic racism

a public health crisis

cities across the country are naming

that a public health crisis

and i think that’s significant for us as

health care professionals as we think

about

rethinking health we’ve now elevated

that

to a

to a status that that

matches hiv and aids in the 80s suicide

gun violence and yes addiction

because i think one thing that we have

seen

through both of these pandemics is that

health outcomes for folks of color are

horrific

and i think for a lot of americans for

the very first time

we’re seeing an impact of that disparity

on peoples of

people of color and it’s not just

uh covet so in the state of michigan

with 14 of the population

being black 40 of folks dying

are black and that’s not just about

covet that’s about those underlying

conditions

that are complicating uh the

mortality rates for covet so

it is a public health crisis regardless

of political

uh i know this is a hot topic and

it’s uh but it is a public health crisis

and so that brings me back to a little

bit of

where my talk was to talk about public

health crisis and what is a public

health

crisis what is a public health strategy

well the public health strategy first

really is naming a thing identifying a

thing

so that we can get our head around it

and put strategies in place

to to make sense of that thing

and that thing is something that we’ve

identified as having a

significant negative impact on a

population

so i know that i know that well for the

field that i work in

and so we also look at

if we look at these two new epidemics

the the kova 19 pandemic that’s a little

clear to understand from public health

strategy

we have scientists working on the issue

we have

uh treatment vaccines we know to wear

our masks we know about hand washing

yesterday i just read i better shut the

toilet lid um

now to uh mitigate the the spread

so we’re learning that’s a public health

strategy that’s clean we understand it

racism less so that one’s pretty messy

and again i acknowledge that that is a

messy topic

but by definition it is a public health

strategy

and that’s significant because

the way we need to think about public

health strategies is that they do not

live in isolation they are not

strategies in isolation

um they they cross

they intersect so if we take a there’s a

public health strategy in this country

around obesity where a third of

americans

are obese and uh the work that we do

there affects

other public health strategies like

diabetes which is another crisis in our

country

and and those interplay with each other

and have positive effects on other

things like

like blood pressure so it’s important to

bring it up

i think and to acknowledge

that addiction is one of those public

health strategies

and why i think it’s important is

because it’s really hard to talk about

addiction

and how we manage addiction in this

country

without acknowledging the negative

impact it’s had

on people of color

but i think the other reason to talk

about it is that for the first time in

40 years which is essentially the

time frame of our field we we believe

i’m

i’m an optimist i think we are on the

cusp of not only

now that we’ve identified a public

health strategy but that we are actually

going to

implement that public health strategy

we’re inching closer to it

in addiction

but it sure feels different now we’re

wondering whether we still have

the right even to have this conversation

and whether we have enough wind in our

sails to to to

get done uh and further the work that we

already have

my field’s an interesting thing because

we have lots of opinions

there’s leaving work the other day and

somebody you know i was a little

disheveled and said man this is tough

work right now and you know i got the

let’s fake it fake it till you make it

um it’s a popular adage

um we you know we i’ve been told that

because

i’m not involved in a 12-step program

that i’m not really in recovery

we have folks that believe that if you

take a drug to help your

a prescribed drug to to help your

addiction that you’re not really

in recovery folks have their own

pathways and they belie believe in those

and we mostly allow for that but one

thing that we’ve

really done in the last few years that i

think i’m proud of

is that we have really honed in on that

definition

of what a public health strategy is for

our field so i want to name what those

are

we understand now that the neurobiol

biology of substance use misuse in

in addiction we understand that this is

a brain disease

the science is clear the evidence is

there we know it we understand

it it’s not for debate we know that

prevention programs and policies work

we can keep people from getting addicted

we know that we have the evidence

and we’ve agreed on that as a collective

we know that early intervention and

treatment

are possible so if somebody does become

addicted we do not have to wait for them

to get really sick we can early we can

have early intervention

and that we can have better treatment

and that when they post treatment we can

help people and manage them we can we

can do that

and that the data shows us that

there’s many pathways to recovery

there isn’t just a singular way and at

the health care system

and substance abuse system have to work

in concert with each other

we realize that now for 40 years we

essentially said

as as a field we got this we’ll take

care of our own we understand this

but the fact of the matter is despite

the focus on opiates right now

in the opiate epidemic which is a

sub-epidemic of our addiction epidemic

addiction rates have not changed in this

country in those 30 years we are still

as addicted as we ever were

despite seeing some gains yes more

people are dying because the

drug of choice in this moment is opiates

and that’s devastating but we have an

addiction epidemic

so i i say that for two reasons the

first is that i don’t think that some of

that probably jives with folks our

common understanding of what addiction

is and how we treat addiction

and if folks listening to this um

might not get that but the leaders in

our field

and all the data says that is our public

strategy i didn’t make that up that is

what our strategy is that is what our

goals are and we’ve been working towards

that now for a number of years

assume i take a bite out of an apple and

i hold it to you

and ask you to describe that apple

you’re going to describe

red shiny but that’s not my reality

looking at it from this side in the bite

and that’s what this field and i’d say

our new public health the caution for

our new public health crisis is that

that are joining us

is that both realities are valid

but how do we get to see that whole

apple how do we

how do we value that both of those

perspectives are are

are true

we go to our elders we go to our

scholars

and we go to the data and the science

and so um

we have to admit that our field is

lacking the data but we’re doing some

good things

we’re starting pilot programs where we

can learn from each other we’re getting

funding from the feds

to uh to implement strategies that that

make sense based on those public health

strategies that i talked about

and that’s good stuff uh our little

organization is a

is a is an opiate health home so we’re

we’re actually doing primary care for

folks that that are struggling with

addiction and that is significant that

is something we wouldn’t have conceived

of a number of years ago

but the system we have isn’t reflective

of that and the reason for that

in other words the system that we have

in place does not reflect that public

health strategy yet

even though we’re inching towards it and

that’s because of stigma that’s because

of

of uh the biases that we have

one of them is this notion that that

folks need to hit rock bottom

right we know that everybody almost it

like it it’s

it’s hard for us to think that isn’t the

truth but it isn’t

in fact it’s inhumane it’s disgusting

and it’s wrong

it allows us to justify oppression it

allows us as healthcare professionals to

wait

and wait and watch as you get sicker

and then for some people that haven’t

died

we’ll catch you and we’ll help you

we won’t give you any aftercare because

that doesn’t exist so agencies like mine

can’t get

assistance in in really helping folks

throughout that disease process

another bias that we have is that

relapse

is is devastating we’ve seen the slo-mo

videos or the movies right is he going

to take that final drink after the hard

day he’s been in recovery for six months

and we judge when that happens i just

watched a movie the other night where

that was that was it

most folks relapse this is a chronic

relapsing disease but our system is

built around

not having those systems in place if we

had more uh

early intervention we had more

prevention we had held people in a path

of recovery

we would have less death we know that

again the data is there

the criminalization of addiction is

another

just devastating reality

there’s nothing in our strategy that

says addiction is a crime

we understand where this narrative came

from in the war on drugs but it that has

been the

one of the largest public health

failures in the history of this country

and unfortunately now the result is that

the largest system

that manages our mentally ill and

addicted folks in this country

are our prison systems by far

which brings us to the to my last point

that that this is a moral

failure of some sort this is a character

deficit that folks struggling with

addiction

are somehow defective we know that’s not

true the science tells us

that’s not true the data tells us it’s

not true but our systems don’t allow for

that

so i’m interest i mentioned the

intersection between diabetes and

obesity as a simple clean intersect

there’s also an intersect between what’s

happening in the world right now

and addiction work so as a question

what’s our role in this

i challenge our profession that this is

the moment

the world is upside down and it’s not

gonna if you listen to this talk five

years from now this is gonna have

relevance because this is not a

a a quick moving train

when we look for those intersects just

think about what we could do in our

field that would have an impact

on what we’re seeing what if instead of

calling the police on an intoxicated

person instead somebody that looks like

me as a social worker shows up there

and a first responder and we with mental

heal

mental health first aid and we get some

folks some help

what if we didn’t have local judges that

would put people in jail for taking a

prescribed medication by their doctor

to manage their addiction that’s

disgusting

but we allow it to happen what if our

local hospitals

didn’t defund behavioral health programs

but understood the public health

impact that a robust

behavioral health program that treats

mental health and treats addiction will

have on

on public health but we’re seeing just

the opposite happening

what if we tended to the trauma

of people and understood that poverty

understood that abuse understood that

unstable homes

are trauma and we build systems to help

folks manage those

as as desmond tutu talked about let’s

stop picking people up downstream and

figure out why they’re falling in the

first place

what if we embrace harm reduction

strategies that build systems to reduce

people’s harm

or even better yet that we build systems

that don’t cause that harm in the first

place

what if we agreed that life has value

and that we need to treat people when

they’re struggling we need to

identify that

what if we didn’t automatically keep

drug users from voting

what if organizations like mine were

empowered to do early intervention

and to do after treatment so that we

could keep people out of the system

my system instead of incentivizing that

they embrace my system and come back to

my system and we wait for you to come

back

what if we educated the public about the

things i talked about what addiction is

and isn’t

it would change our whole narrative

because what we believe about a thing

what we believe about a thing is is the

start of how we policize it

and how we build interventions around it

so that belief system has to change

we are at a moment in time where we’re

defining that

we have a path we have a plan in our

field

the public health crisis of of

systematic racism there’s no plan yet

but we understand that the things that

we do

in our field this is a call to action

this is a once in a generation once in a

lifetime opportunity as the world is

upside down

for us to step in and make a positive

difference

and that’s not an understatement i

believe that strongly

we have an opportunity to have a public

health impact

that is like nothing we’ve ever seen

before

and i’m not trying to to give you an

exhaustive list

um those are just examples and those are

examples of things that are already

happening that we’re learning from

so they’re real if you don’t believe the

intersect

of addiction and what’s happening

right now in our world let’s go back to

the murder of george floyd and what the

other officer

said during that time to the crowd of

onlookers

don’t do drugs kids this is a moment in

time where we get to

redefine what health care looks like

what addiction care looks like in our

field

and for the first time i believe ever

we can say that the disproportionate

impact that this has on the people of

color

is a good thing

so i hope we can seize this moment thank

you

所以在过去的这个冬天,我被要求

就成瘾问题发表演讲,说一个我很清楚的话题

在过去的 10 年里,我曾担任当地机构的首席执行官,我一直在

心理健康和成瘾作斗争,并且 所以

我要给你的最初的谈话

,嗯,真的很专注于那个

重点,嗯,

你知道我知道这些谈话是怎么回事,

嗯,你听到了一些关于我

在那些挣扎中的背景,我告诉你一些

关于

撞车花费的轶事 在监狱里的那个晚上,

关于我 20 多岁时住在芝加哥的

痛苦

,在我忘记见面的女人旁边醒来,

实际上在我的情况下,更

老实说,醒来时吃到一半的墨西哥卷饼

,我不记得买过,

从那时起 五个月前,世界

发生了变化

,所以我演讲的背景也发生了变化,

我们遇到了一场

彻底改变了世界的流行病,所以

我在职业生涯的最后 10 年里,

在我们州议会大厦的大厅里跑来跑去

,甚至 曾是 辛顿特区

对任何愿意听我的人大喊大叫,

而不是我们最近一直在旅行,

但如果我现在在那些大厅里,

我想我不会大喊大叫,我

想我会礼貌地打开门

, 说冠状病毒来吧,

现在是你的时候了,我们需要弄清楚你

哦,对不起,黑人生活问题没有

看到你来,

但我应该在

几个月内这样做,

这种流行病已经停止了我们的世界

经济,

摧毁了数百万人 生命

和世界科学家

致力于治疗和治疗,然后仅仅

几个月后,黑人生命

物质运动取得了成果

,现在是世界

历史上最大的社会正义运动,

这一切都刚刚发生,伙计们,所以

如何

当这是我们国家最重要的公共卫生危机时,我会谈论

成瘾吗?在

那种情况下

,我们看到这些公共危机

正在产生影响,我们看到

科学领域正在发生什么,我们将

继续前进 为了弄清楚这一点,

我们还看到黑人生命问题

运动开始改变

一些非常奇怪的事情

纳斯卡禁止同盟旗埃尔莫

与我们的孩子

谈论抗议

但我认为发生的最重要的事情

在我的脑海中相对于

就是我们已经将这些事情,

特别是种族主义和系统性种族主义

命名为公共卫生危机全国各地的城市都在将其

命名为公共卫生危机

,我认为这对我们作为医疗保健专业人员来说意义重大,

因为我们正在考虑

重新思考健康我们' 现在已经将其提升

与 80 年代自杀式枪支暴力和上瘾相匹配的艾滋病毒和艾滋病的状态,

因为我认为我们在

这两种流行病中看到的一

件事是,有色人种的健康结果是

可怕的

,我 对于很多美国人来说

这是我们第一次看到这种差异

对有色人种的

影响,而不仅仅是

呃 cov 等等,在密歇根州,

有 14

人是黑人,死亡的人中有 40 人

是黑人,这不仅仅是

觊觎,而是那些使

觊觎死亡率复杂化的潜在条件,

所以

这是一场公共卫生危机,无论政治如何

嗯,我知道这是一个热门话题

,嗯,但这是一场公共卫生危机

,所以这让我回到

了我的演讲是关于

公共卫生危机以及什么是公共卫生

危机什么是公众 健康

策略 公共卫生策略首先

实际上是命名一个事物来识别

事物,

这样我们就可以了解它

并制定策略

来理解那个事物,

而那个事物就是我们已经

确定为具有

对人口的重大负面影响,

所以我知道我对我工作的领域非常了解

,所以

如果我们看一下这两种新的

流行病,kova 19 流行病是一个点燃的流行病

从公共卫生

战略中

可以清楚地理解我们有科学家在研究这个问题

我们有

治疗疫苗我们知道要戴

口罩我们昨天知道洗手的知识

我刚刚读到我最好关

上马桶盖

嗯现在减轻传播

所以 我们正在学习这是

一项干净的公共卫生战略 我们对它的

理解较少

关于

公共卫生战略,他们不是

孤立地生活,他们不是

孤立的战略,

它们交叉

它们相交,所以如果我们采取a

,这个国家

有一个围绕肥胖的公共卫生战略,其中三分之一的

美国人肥胖,嗯,工作 我们在那里所做的事情

会影响

其他公共卫生战略,例如

糖尿病,这是我们国家的另一场危机

,并且这些战略

相互影响 e 对血压等其他方面的积极影响,

所以我认为重要的是

提出它

承认成瘾是这些

公共卫生策略之一

,为什么我认为它很重要,

因为很难谈论

成瘾

以及我们如何管理 在这个国家上瘾,却

没有承认它对有色人种的负面

影响,

但我认为谈论它的另一个原因

是,

这是 40 年来第一次,这基本上

是我们领域的时间框架,我们相信

我是

我 我是一个乐观主义者,我认为我们不仅现在处于

风口浪尖,

因为我们已经确定了一项

公共卫生战略,而且我们实际上

实施该公共卫生战略,

我们在成瘾中逐渐接近它

但它确实感觉不同 现在我们

想知道我们是否

仍然有权进行这次谈话,

以及我们是否有足够的风来

完成我们已经完成的工作

现场是一件有趣的事情,因为

我们有很多意见

,前几天要下班,

有人你知道我有点

衣冠不整,他说,伙计,现在这是一项艰巨的

工作,你知道我得到了

让我们假装它假装它直到你成功

这是一句流行的格言,

嗯,我们你知道我们被告知,

因为

我没有参与一个 12 步计划

,我并没有真正处于康复中,

我们有些人认为,如果你

服用药物来帮助

你 处方药来帮助你

上瘾 你并没有真正

处于康复中 人们有他们自己的

途径,他们相信这些

,我们大多允许这样做,但我

认为我

在过去几年中真正做过的一件事

‘令我们感到自豪的

是,我们已经真正磨练了

对我们领域公共卫生战略的定义,

所以我想说出

我们现在所理解的那些东西,因为

药物滥用成瘾的神经生物学生物学

我们明白这一点

是脑病

科学很清楚 证据就

在那里 我们知道 我们理解

这不是为了辩论 我们知道

预防计划和政策是有效的

我们可以防止人们上瘾

我们知道我们有证据

并且我们作为一个集体就这一点达成了一致

我们知道早期干预和

治疗

是可能的,所以如果有人真的

上瘾了,我们不必等

他们真的生病了

帮助人们并管理他们 我们

可以做到

这一点 数据向我们表明

有许多康复途径

不仅仅是单一的方法

在医疗保健系统

和药物滥用系统中必须相互配合

意识到现在 40 年来,我们

基本上说

作为一个领域,我们得到了这个,我们会

照顾好我们自己的,我们理解这一点,

但事实是,

尽管目前

在 t 阿片类药物

流行病是我们成瘾的一个亚流行病 在这 30 年

里,这个国家的流行成瘾率没有改变,

尽管看到了一些进展,但我们仍然像以往一样上瘾,是的,越来越多的

人正在死亡,因为

在这 片刻是鸦片剂

,这是毁灭性的,但我们有一个

成瘾

流行病所以我说有两个原因

首先是我不认为其中一些

可能与人们对

成瘾的共同理解

以及我们如何治疗成瘾

以及如果 听这个的人

可能不明白,但我们领域的领导者

和所有数据都表明这是我们的公共

战略,我没有编造这

就是我们的战略,这就是我们的

目标,我们一直在努力

多年来,

假设我咬了一口苹果,

我把它拿给你

,让你描述那个苹果,

你将描述

红色闪亮,但这不是我

从这个 si 看它的现实 咬一口

,这就是这个领域,我会说

我们的新公共卫生对

我们新的公共卫生危机的警告是

,正在加入我们的

是这两个现实都是有效的,

但我们如何才能看到整个

苹果如何

我们如何看待这两种

观点

都是正确的,

我们去找我们的长辈,我们去找我们的

学者

,我们去找数据和科学

,所以

我们不得不承认我们的领域

缺乏数据,但我们 正在做一些

好事

我们正在启动试点项目,我们

可以相互学习

我们的小

组织

是一个是一个阿片类药物健康之家,所以

我们实际上是在为

那些正在与成瘾作斗争的人们提供初级保健

,这很重要,这

是我们

多年前无法想到的

但是系统 我们所拥有的技术并没有

反映这一点,其

原因换句话说,我们现有的系统

并没有反映

公共卫生战略,

即使我们正在慢慢走向它,

那是因为耻辱,那是

因为呃 我们的偏见

之一是

人们需要达到最低点的想法

我们知道每个人几乎都

喜欢

它很难让我们认为这

不是事实但事实上并非不人道 这很恶心

,而且是错误的

它让我们能够为压迫辩护 它

让我们作为医疗保健专业人员

等着等着看着你

病得更厉害 然后对于一些没有死的人

我们会抓住你 我们会帮助你

我们赢了 不要给你任何善后护理,因为

那不存在,所以像我这样的机构

无法

在整个疾病过程中真正帮助人们获得帮助

或电影 是不是他

要在辛苦的一天后喝最后一杯

他已经康复了六个月

,我们判断什么时候发生这种情况我前几天

晚上刚看了一部电影

那是

大多数人复发这是一种慢性

复发性疾病但是 我们的系统是

建立在

没有这些系统的基础上 如果我们

有更多的

早期干预 我们有更多的

预防 我们让人们走上

了康复之路

我们将减少死亡 我们知道

再次有数据

成瘾的刑事定罪是

另一个

只是毁灭性的现实

我们的战略中没有任何内容

说成瘾是一种犯罪

我们知道这种说法是

从毒品战争中来的,但这一直

是这个国家历史上最大的公共卫生失败之一

,不幸的是现在的结果 到目前为止,在这个国家

管理我们的精神病患者和成瘾者的最大系统

是我们的监狱系统,

这将我们带到了我的最后一点

这是某种道德上的

失败 这是性格

缺陷 与成瘾作斗争的人

在某种程度上是有缺陷的 我们知道这不是

真的 科学告诉我们

那不是真的 数据告诉我们这

不是真的 但我们的系统不允许

所以我很感兴趣,我提到

糖尿病和肥胖之间的交叉点

是一个简单

的交叉点,

现在世界上正在发生的事情

和成瘾工作之间也有交叉点,所以作为一个问题

,我们在这方面的作用是什么,

我挑战我们的职业,这是

世界颠倒的那一刻,

如果你在五年后听这个演讲

,这将不会有

相关性,因为这不是

一个快速移动的火车,

当我们寻找那些交叉点时,

想想我们可以在我们的领域做些什么

这将对

我们所看到的产生影响 那里

有一个急救人员,我们有心理

治疗

心理健康急救,我们得到

一些人的

帮助,如果我们没有当地法官

会因为人们服用

医生开的处方药

来控制他们的成瘾而将他们送进监狱,这太

恶心了

但是如果我们

当地的医院

没有取消对行为健康计划的资助,但我们会允许这种情况发生,

但他们了解治疗心理健康和治疗成瘾

的强有力的

行为健康计划将对公共卫生

产生

的公共卫生影响,但我们看到的

只是 相反的情况会

发生如果我们倾向于人们的

创伤并且理解贫困

理解虐待理解

不稳定的家庭

是创伤并且我们建立系统来帮助

人们管理这些

就像desmond tutu所说的那样让我们

停止在下游接人并

弄清楚他们为什么 '

如果我们采用减少伤害的

策略来建立系统来减少

人们的伤害

或 ev 更好的是,我们构建的系统一

开始就不会造成

伤害 阻止

吸毒者

投票 如果像我这样的组织

有权进行早期干预

并在治疗后做些什么,这样我们

就可以让人们远离

我的系统,而不是激励

他们接受我的系统并回到

我的系统,我们等待 让你

回来 如果我们教育公众关于

我所说的事情 什么是成瘾

,不是成瘾

它会改变我们的整个叙述,

因为我们对一件事的

信念 我们对一件事的信念是

我们如何开始 对其进行监管,

以及我们如何围绕它建立干预措施,

以便必须改变信仰

体系 种族歧视 尚无计划,

但我们明白,

我们

在我们的领域所做的事情是行动号召,这是

千载难逢的机会,因为世界

颠倒

了,我们可以介入并做出 积极的

差异

,这不是轻描淡写,我

坚信

我们有机会产生前所未有的

公共卫生影响

,我并不是想给你一个

详尽的清单,

这些只是例子和 这些都是

我们正在学习的已经发生的事情的例子,

所以如果你不相信成瘾的

交叉点

我们世界现在正在发生的事情,那么它们是真实的让我们回到

乔治·弗洛伊德的谋杀案和什么

另一名

官员在那段时间对围观的人群说,

不要吸毒孩子们,这是

我们

重新定义医疗保健

看起来像什么成瘾护理在我们的领域看起来像的时刻,

并且是第一次 我相信

我们可以说这对有色人种的不成比例的

影响

是一件好事,

所以我希望我们能抓住这一刻谢谢