Getting Mommy Off Drugs - Los Angeles Times

Sheila never imagined her
stress-related migraines would end up making her a pill-popping junkie.
The Ventura County mother of three started getting headaches and having
trouble sleeping due to the unending juggle of going to college for a
teaching degree and raising newborn twins. For her symptoms, her doctor
prescribed Lortab, a widely distributed pill that contains a powerful
opiate ingredient called oxycodone.
Gaining a nasty reputation
for its junkie-creating potential, oxycodone has recently been billed
in national magazines as the “white-trash heroin,” but it has also
found fans in upper-class neighborhoods by being more acceptable than
heroin. Sheila had heard of Lortab’s more notorious cousin Vicodin
(which also contains oxycodone), but was unaware that the pills she was
taking to help her sleep and feel better would, months later, make her
more dependent on drugs than on food.
When Sheila got up to 10
pills a day, she was crediting their soothing effects for her
straight-A report cards. “I was taking them just to function,” she
said. “I’d take them, feel better, and vacuum the house.” By that time,
Sheila was keeping pills in her pocket and hiding her usage from her
family and friends. Only when her pharmacist told her that the strength
and amount she was taking was equivalent to what was prescribed for
pain-riddled patients with advanced cancer did Sheila realize the
enormity of her problem. At the same time, her Oxnard-based doctor was
arrested and charged with over-prescribing painkillers to a variety of
patients. After trying to kick her habit solo, which led to horrible
flu-like withdrawal symptoms, Sheila decided it was time for help.
Like
a dedicated college student, Sheila researched detox centers, but found
mostly 28-day rehab clinics or 12-step programs. She didn’t have the
time for such extensive treatment, and though her physical addiction
was strong, she didn’t feel she was emotionally or psychologically
hooked, which is what 12-step programs often address. Then she stumbled
upon the Waismann Institute’s program in Beverly Hills, discovering a
groundbreaking drug rehabilitation method that’s become her salvation.
Based
on the technique developed by Dr. Andre Waismann of Israel—who’s
treated some 8,000 patients to date—the program takes but one day of
medical treatment, preceded by a testing day and followed by a night of
monitoring. Essentially, the addict’s opiate-dependent body is flushed
in a system-cleansing process that takes mere hours. During an
anesthesia-induced unconsciousness, the patient goes through the
symptoms of withdrawal at an accelerated rate.
The usually
weeks-long nausea and insomnia is unknowingly endured by the addict in
an afternoon. The patient is then given an alternative drug to take
daily that provides no “high” and acts as an antidote to opiates,
blocking any inebriation if the cured addict starts using again. The
treatment is quick and easy and, compared to the traditional detox
remedies that average a less-than-20-percent success rate, the Waismann
method is effective, with a 95-percent success rate after one month and
a 65-percent success rate after one year.
According to Dr. Cliff
Bernstein, the institute’s medical director, what used to be a program
for mainly heroin addicts has become dominated by pill-poppers, which
now account for 70 percent of the patients. “The Waismann method,” said
Bernstein, who trained under the method’s creator in Israel and has
personally shepherded at least 1,700 patients through the program, “is
really the only medical treatment for the disease of opiate dependency.”
Traditional
programs, he explained, treat drug dependency as “psycho-social” and
“preach” the 12 steps to people who oftentimes are merely battling
addiction as a physical problem. “Things can get out of control, but
that doesn’t mean you need to go to drug rehab and be told that you’re
a drug addict for life who just happens to be in remission,” said
Bernstein, noting that his treatment is strictly for opiate users and
admitting that “some people will need more psychological support than
others.”
He also questions whether having support groups where
ex-addicts talk about drugs is the best way to avoid a relapse.
Understandably, the Waismann Institute is at odds with many 12-step
programs and 28-day detox centers. Also, the program isn’t cheap,
costing upward of $10,000 per treatment. Despite its high price,
Bernstein assured that there’s not much money being made because the
overhead is so high.
As for Sheila, it’s been two months since
her treatment and she’s doing fine. The pills have been flushed down
the toilet, she earned a teacher’s degree and graduated at the top of
her class, and she’s caring for her three kids and vacuuming the house
again without the help of Lortab.