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Alcohol Use Disorders

What is Alcohol use disorder?

A chronic disease characterized by uncontrolled drinking and preoccupation with

alcohol.

Alcoholism is the inability to control drinking due to both a physical and emotional

dependence on alcohol.

Symptoms include a strong need or urge to use alcohol. Those with alcohol use

disorder may have problems controlling their drinking, continue to use alcohol even

when it causes problems, or have withdrawal symptoms when they rapidly decrease or

stop drinking.

Treatment involves counseling, such as behavioral therapy, and medications that

reduce the desire to drink. Some people need medical detoxification to stop drinking

safely. Mutual support groups help people stop drinking, manage relapses and cope

with necessary lifestyle changes.


Why 90% of problem-drinkers never seek help?


 Required abstinence

 Stigma and shame

Forcing those looking for help to label themselves “alcoholics” for life

and abstain completely creates undue shame and stigma around

seeking help.

 Major lifestyle disruption

The current standard for AUD treatment in the United States is expensive inpatient rehab that requires you to leave your home, family, and life behind.

*1 in 4

51 million Americans over 26 are binge or heavy drinkers by NIH standards

*1 in 10

Traditional rehabs and 12-step programs have <10% success rates

*1 in 100

Only 1% of addiction treatment in the US uses medication

Three medications are approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to treat alcohol use disorder:

  • Acamprosate (Campral) Renal Labs required
  • Disulfiram (Antabuse) Renal labs required
  • Naltrexone (Vivitrol) Liver Function testing required