RESEARCH
INFORMATION ON INDEPENDENT LIVING
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Volume 2, Issue 1
Substance
Abuse
Often people with this dual diagnosis (in which each
disorder complicates the other) spend disability checks to buy drugs or alcohol.
Known as "social iatrogenesis," this can cause the unintentional
aggravation of a disease by an economic policy intended to promote well-being.
When an individual’s occasional use of drugs or alcohol becomes
regular, intense, or "binging,” that person enters the second stage of
consumption: abuse.
Compulsive and addictive behavior constitutes "dependence," the
third stage. Both the second and third stages are classified as treatable
illness by diagnostic medical manuals.
Reports consistently show that substance abuse is a problem in the
disabled population. Some studies indicate that up to 30% of the disabled
population abuses alcohol.
According to a 1994
survey of 1,876 VR consumers marijuana was the No. 1 drug of choice for
individuals receiving vocational rehabilitation services. The consumers with
disabilities also used illicit drugs more than the general population,
especially marijuana and cocaine (twice the general rate). Findings also showed:
§
VR consumers used crack cocaine five times higher than the general
population.
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Men used more drugs than females.
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The highest drug rate was reported by consumers 25 to 34 years old.
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Respondents in supported, sheltered, or temporary employment reported
lower illicit
drug use than those working full- or part-time.
§
17.2% reported binge drinking.
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32% said they drank alcohol while taking prescription drugs.
Researchers
suspect that people with disabilities may be vulnerable to substance abuse
because of peer pressure and desire for acceptance. The addiction also may
provide relief, excitement, numbness to discrimination, and a release from
tensions not eliminated through physical means.
Disability-specific risk factors for substance abuse include
communication barriers, increased family stress, enabling behaviors of family
and friends, therapeutic medication use, and easy access to prescription drugs.
Reginald Alston, a professor at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, thinks abuse may be explained by social control theory, which
states that people get involved in delinquent behavior when their bond to
society is weakened.
A
societal bond has four elements: attachment (for instance, to friends or
church); commitment (how much time, energy, and resources go into an
attachment); involvement;
and belief in shared values and norms.
To get out of the downward spiral of substance abuse, studies suggest
increasing attachment with
drug-free family and friends. One way to surround oneself with supportive
friends is to join a mutual support group. Group feedback and structured
activities can also keep people from deviant behavior.
At the Center for Independent Living in Berkeley, consumers are screened
for substance abuse problems and linked with peer support, weekly support
groups, and individual counseling.
The American With Disabilities Act protects individuals with alcohol or
(past) drug problems in employment discrimination. Accommodations for recovering
employees vary depending on job requirements and recovery time length.
―
Cindy Higgins, The Research and Training Center on Independent Living,
The University of Kansas. This project funded by National Institute on
Disability Rehabilitation Research grant #H133A980048.
Information for this review came from the interactive Research
Information on Independent Living (RIIL) database at www.GetRiil.org,
which contains research summaries related to independent living with
disabilities. A special effort has been made to include information that
independent leaders in the field said they wanted, namely topics regarding
accessible, affordable housing, effective advocacy for rural areas, effective
transition from schools and nursing homes, accessible, affordable
transportation, reaching underserved populations, policies that impede
independent living, rural health care services, and Medicaid/Medicare
regulations for durable equipment.