| Summary of a Presentation Made to the American Academy of
Environmental Medicine
Presented by David R. Root, MD., 1989 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Dr. David Root is a physician specializing in occupational medicine with a private practice in Sacramento. California. He has treated numerous patients who had accumulated lipophilic chemicals through occupational exposure, using the method of detoxification developed by L. Ron Hubbard. In the course of his work, he has also treated approximately 75 drug abusers with this detoxification program. He recently reported the results of a follow-up study of these drug abuse patients at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Environmental Medicine. The long-term success rate for
drug and alcohol rehabilitation programs is not extremely high. Abstinence from
drugs for 2 years after undergoing rehabilitation treatment by 30% of the
patients is considered quite acceptable. This means that 70% of the patients
are not succeeding in staying off of drugs. Such a recidivism rate is cause for
deep concern. One hypothesis is that a hidden cause of recidivism amongst drug
abusers is the presence in their bodies of residual levels of drugs and their
metabolites. This led to the proposition that removing these compounds from the
body would assist in the recovery of the drug abuser.
POLYDRUG USE Another way of monitoring the effectiveness of the program is by the number of drugs used by individuals before and after treatment. The average number of drugs used by individuals dropped from 4.7 different drugs before treatment to 0.6 after treatment. Alcohol was still used by all of those reporting drug use after treatment while four individuals reported using additional drugs. 2. FAMILY RELATIONS At this follow-up interview, patients were asked about their current family relationships as well as their drug use. 23 reported that their family scene was much better, 14 said that it was better, 7 indicated that ii was about the same and I did not answer. None of the patients stated that their family scene had worsened since treatment. EMPLOYMENT PROFILES Work situations had also undergone change in some cases. 31 were already holding steady jobs prior to treatment. Following treatment, this number increased to 38. The number working inconsistently dropped from 6 to 3. The number who did nothing went from 5 to 1. The number of students remained the same. Of note, the one individual who supported himself through criminal activities prior to treatment now worked a steady job. PATIENTS OPINIONS These patients opinions of the program were quite encouraging. 29 rated the program as very positive with another 13 rating it positively. 3 were indifferent and none were negative. Of the 45 surveyed, 39 have recommended this program to others. SUMMARY In sum, over the last five years, patients with drug abuse problems have been treated with Hubbard's detoxification program, aimed at removing fat-stored xenobiotics. These patients have been assessed by personal follow-up interviews for ongoing drug abuse and social parameters. The reported rates of recovery from these patients are quite high, with 91% of those interviewed reporting no ongoing drug abuse. These data support the hypothesis that a hidden cause of recidivism amongst drug abusers is the presence in their bodies of residual levels of drugs and their metabolites. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
AAEM Presentation