Microsoft word - information for prescribing naltrexone july 27.doc

Information for Prescribing Naltrexone
The patient carrying this letter to you would like your support in a highly effective treatment for alcoholism: it is called TSM and has a 78% cure rate. It requires a prescription for naltrexone. The FDA approved naltrexone in 1995 for use in the treatment of alcohol dependence. Important new evidence has been obtained since then about how to use naltrexone much more effectively. First, a dual double-blind clinical trial1 showed that the usual protocol of having patients take naltrexone while abstinent is not effective. To be effective, naltrexone and alcohol must be in the system concurrently. Therefore, naltrexone must always be taken one hour before consuming alcohol. The resulting mechanism of extinction then gradually reduces craving and drinking over several months, and produces a natural detoxification - thus avoiding the distress and complications of rapid withdrawal. The result has been replicated and is consistent with findings from nearly all of the 82 clinical trials conducted to date.2 Second, it is now clear that naltrexone can be prescribed by doctors without an accompanying program of intensive counselling. Naltrexone was originally approved by the FDA as an adjunct within comprehensive programs of alcoholism treatment. The results of Project Combine (JAMA.
2006), the largest clinical trial in the alcohol field, showed, however, that naltrexone was effective
without the need for intensive counselling where patients are treated in general medical settings.3 The bottom line is that TSM has proven to be far more successful than any other treatment for alcoholism on the market to date, and your patient is keen to try this method. Detailed information can be found in Dr. Roy Eskapa’s book, The Cure for Alcoholism 4 containing
instructions to physicians, can be downloaded on the internet at: www.TheCureForAlcoholism.com - Click on ‘About the Book’ Chapter 17 – ‘For Medical Professionals’ Additional documentation may be requested by emailing: TSMtreatment@gmail.com National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL) Head of the National Anxiety Association Information for Prescribing Naltrexone
1 Heinälä, P., Alho, H., Kiianmaa, K., Lönnqvist, J., Kuoppasalmi, K., and Sinclair, J.D. (2001). Targeted use of Naltrexone without prior detoxification in the treatment of alcohol dependence: A
factorial double-blind placebo-controlled trial. Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology, 21(3):
287-292.

2 Sinclair, J. D. (2001) Evidence about the use of Naltrexone and for different ways of using it in the treatment of alcoholism. Alcohol and Alcoholism 36: 2-10; Sinclair, D. and F.Fantozzi (2004)
Relapse prevention with extinction . In: Relapse prevention in the treatment of alcohol dependence.
Personalit Dipendenze 10 (fasc.II): 219-243.

3 Anton RF, O’Malley, SS Ciraulo DC, Cisler RA. Couper D, Donovan DM, Gastfriend DR, Hosking
JD, Johnson BA, LoCastro JS, Longabaugh R, Mason BJ, Mattson ME, Miller WR, Pettinati HM,
Randall CL, Swift R, Weiss RD, Williams LD, Zweben AZ, for the COMBINE Study Research
Group (2006) Combined pharmacotherapies and behavioral interventions for alcohol dependence:
The COMBINE Study: A Randomized Controlled Trial JAMA. 2006;295:2003-2017

4 Eskapa, R (2008) The Cure for Alcoholism. Dallas: Ben Bella Books, 320 pages – Several chapters
may be downloaded at www.TheCureForAlcoholism.com - click on ‘About the Book’

Source: http://www.the-alcoholism-guide.org/support-files/info_prescribing_naltrexone_tsm_sinclair_cox_letter.pdf

C:\documents and settings\allan\desktop\temp\devoh7.wpd

SOC 3290 Deviance Overheads Lecture 7: The Pathological Perspective 2: * Today: social control policies/assessment of the pathological perspective * “Treatment” = the cure for nonconformity* Associated with rise of the “Therapeutic state”* Problems: - assumes deviants have no choices in behavior - hiding of social/moral judgements in name of science - Phrenology once offici

Microsoft word - 722-gale-humaine.doc

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