Effects of environmental enrichment on recovery from addiction: no disease, no chronic and no relapse

This paper critically analyses the axioms on which the brain disease model of addiction rests:
i) it is a disease, ii) it is genetically determined, iii) it is irretrievably developed by drugs, iv) it
is explained by the value placed on reward, and v) it is maintained by abstinence avoidance. It
is argued that, in the light of scientific findings and under the prism of common sense, each of
its axioms is falsifiable. The commonly held idea that self-administering drugs, eating an excess
of palatable foods or persistently playing video games produces an incurable disease in people
because their brains undergo irreversible changes after repeated performance of the habit is
discussed. Subsequently, the classical definition of addiction as a chronic and relapsing disease
is deconstructed by analysing the epidemiological data on the supposed chronicity and relapse,
providing evidence of recovery as, in fact, the most probable spontaneous course. Finally, and
as a common thread throughout the paper, environmental enrichment is proposed as a therapeutic
approach and a precursor of the paradigm shift. It concludes with ideas on the need to
build a better biopsychosocial model that substantially optimises the care response offered to
people who have developed an addiction.

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!_autor

  • José María Ruiz Sánchez de León - Experimental Psychology Department. Complutense University of Madrid

Keywords:

Addiction, Brain disease, Chronic disease, Relapsing disease, Addictive behavior, Recovery, Environmental enrichment, Evidence based practice.

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