Relapse
Timothy Conley, Ph.D.
One question often asked by people who have participated in an in-patient
treatment facility for chemical dependency is "How many of us will
relapse?" The newly recovering addict is looking for some sense
of the odds they have of staying sober. Moreover, it is often wondered
if having one drink or drug on one day as an isolated incident counts
as a relapse. What is the difference between a relapse and what recovering
people call a 'slip' ?
The term 'relapse' usually refers to drinking or using drugs again after
a period of abstinence, or trying to quit drinking/using and not being
able to. Sometimes it is used interchangeably with the terms 'slip'
or the older 'falling off the wagon.' Many alcohol/drug abuse clinicians
differentiate between a slip and a relapse by defining a slip as a one
time isolated mistake followed by a renewed commitment to and effort
at treatment and abstinence. A slip may be seen by the recovering person
as a wake up call regarding how much more effort will be required to
achieve a lasting continuous abstinence.
Relapse may be defined as a complete or near complete return to pre-treatment
levels of use and an addictive lifestyle: the individual has quit at
recovery efforts and returned to unmitigated substance use. This is
a much more serious event. I can recall phone consults and supervision
with other clinicians where they would report to me "my client
used this week" and I would ask "Have they relapsed or was
it just a slip" ? "Are they off the wagon altogether and questioning
their whole need for treatment or did they just make a mistake and are
back at treatment" ? Sometimes the recovering person was in-between
- unsure of what they were doing. They had used and were not at all
sure what it meant.
How an individual personally defines the event of using again plays
a large role in how they will react. For example, an alcoholic who believes
that even one errant sip will lead to massive loss of control binge
drinking will do just that, whereas another person may believe that
a slip is just a slip and that by getting honest with themselves and
another person they can get right back on the wagon - so they do. The
newly recovering person will often be looking to others to help them
define what it is that is happening and will be happening now that they
have used. It is the proper role of the counselor to help the recovering
addict try to minimize the loss of control, maximize the learning potential
of the event and assist in further healing.
The fact is that research evidence indicates approximately 90 percent
of help seeking alcoholics are likely to experience at least one episode
of use (slip or period of relapse) over the 4-year time frame following
treatment. But by far, most do not abandon the quest for continuous
sobriety. Despite much good work by addiction researchers, no controlled
studies have shown any single or combined treatment/intervention that
prevents relapse in a consistent or reliable manner. (This does not
mean that individuals can do nothing to lower their risk, they can and
this is discussed below). Similar relapse rates for alcohol, nicotine,
opiate and cocaine addiction indicate that whatever it is that's driving
the slip/relapse process for many addictive disorders it may share common
biochemical, behavioral, or mental/emotional components. Thus, integrating
relapse data for different addictive disorders may provide new perspectives
for relapse prevention. It certainly is a central issue of addiction
centered research which warrants further study.
So does this mean most addicts are doomed to relapse? Not really. Over
many years of practice I still have not learned how to call it with
regards to who is at higher risk and who is not. My colleagues in the
addiction treatment profession and myself can predict correctly sometimes
but over the years so many people that I thought sure were destined
to hit bottom and roll around on it for a while completely surprised
me and made a complete and total recovery of continuous abstinence,
and others who were star clients with a great prognosis fell repeatedly
before getting to the real underlying causes of their drinking and achieving
abstinence. Of course many more never make it at all and either continue
to use despite repeated, often desperate, attempts to stop or succumb
to the risks of the addictive disease and die. This includes many smokers.
Trying to determine who will make it right away and who will not is
all very un-scientific and defies even prediction based on clinical
wisdom. One useful question though is 'what leads to relapse'? Craving
is one problem that often drives relapse. Chemical craving, be it for
alcohol, nicotine, opiates, cocaine, cannabis, etc. is an appetitive
urge, similar to hunger, that varies in intensity and is characterized
by withdrawal-like symptoms. This psychological phenomenon is subjective
and very difficult to measure from person to person. The outward symptom
of chemical seeking behavior is driven by internal and external cues
that evoke memory of the euphoric effects of the drug and of the discomfort
of withdrawal or not getting it. This is reported to me by persons attempting
recovery in statements such as "I just knew I had to have it -
had to, period." "I felt sick and the only thing I knew would
make it go away was the substance;" "I was obsessing, something
was missing and it just seemed normal to go and have some so I was all
there again." The powerful sense of being incomplete or un-well
was consistently reported to me by addicts in treatment. A.A. refers
to craving as 'the desire to drink' and indicates that it will be removed
by following the suggested program of 12 steps to recovery. These include
in part not fighting the craving but surrendering to a benevolent higher
power which will relieve it. It is noted that many hundreds of thousands
of people achieve abstinence release from craving this way.
Relapse prevention is desirable. Knowing that most relapses are associated
with three high-risk situations helps: 1) frustration and anger, 2)
social pressure, and 3) interpersonal temptation. Learning to cope in
an effective and healthy way with frustration and anger may help prevent
relapse; this usually means developing interpersonal skills to cope
with not just these but other unpleasant feelings; group therapy and
individual counseling are usually helpful with this. Social pressure
is particularly challenging for recovering persons who have spent a
great deal of social time involved with others who were also using.
Developing alternative social activities is a painstaking process and
minimizing the temptation to run with the old crowd takes tremendous
effort. Moreover, learning to respond in an emotionally comfortable
and effective manner when tempted to drink by another person requires
developing new skills: many many recovering people literally never ever
said no to an offer to drink or get high before (see the on-line article
by this author "Recovering alcoholic, stressful winter holiday"
for specific ways to gracefully say 'no thanks').
Following a series of client relapses in my practice I wrote the following
song/poem concerning relapse:
Relapse
by Tim conley
It's easy to get lazy, when the pain goes away
Memories growing hazy, of the price we have to pay
Like children who will wander, from the safety of a home
A never ending nightmare, waking up and all alone.....
It's crazy to go easy, on the things that keep us sane
To look and find a reason, to turn and walk away
Feeling like we're better, like our wounded mind has healed itself somehow
And even though we hate it, turning back beneath that cloud
People who would love us lose - leaving in the guilt regrets and shame
Lost somewhere so far between, believing lies and feeling all the pain
Relapse to the bottle, to the wickedness and hollow place inside
Wandering in madness, from the spirits poured within you can not hide...
It's easy to get lazy, when the pain goes away
Memories growing hazy, of the price we have to pay
Like children who will wander, from the safety of a home
A never ending nightmare, waking up and all alone.....
Relapse in recovery is a cold and lonely nightmare for the addict. It
is a survivable experience and may be used to drive home the seriousness
of their addictive disease. The prescription following relapse always
includes a recommendation to increase the amount of daily/weekly time
spent on recovery related activities: meetings, counseling, self help
book reading, exercise etc. It is always possible to relapse to a condition
of recovery as well.
(1) Some factual material for this article came from the NIAAA publication:
Relapse and Craving: Alcohol Alert: 6 PH 277
Relapse and Craving - A Commentary by NIAAA Director Enoch Gordis, M.D.
The primary goal of alcoholism treatment, as in other areas of medicine,
is to help the patient to achieve and maintain long-term remission of
disease. For alcohol dependent persons, remission means the continuous
maintenance of sobriety. There is continuing and growing concern among
clinicians about the high rate of relapse among their patients, and
the increasingly adverse consequences of continuing disease. For this
reason, preventing relapse is, perhaps, the fundamental issue in alcoholism
treatment today. Alcohol Alert: 6 PH 277
Dr. Timothy Conley holds the degree of Masters in Social
Work (MSW) and is Certified as an Addiction Specialist (CAS) with
the American Academy of Healthcare Providers in the Addictive
Disorders. For the past 15 years, Dr. Conley has been a Licensed
Independent Clinical Social Worker (LICSW) and a practicing social
work clinician.
In 2001, Dr. Conley received his Ph.D. (Philosophy Doctorate)
from Boston College in social work.


Mount Regis Center is fully licensed by the state of Virginia as a primary
substance abuse treatment center and is accredited by 