Why Hollywood Is Forcing Lindsay Lohan to Hit Bottom

Why Hollywood Is Forcing Lindsay Lohan to Hit Bottom

Published: July 19, 2010 @ 6:13 pm
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By Marc Kern

As a local addiction specialist with an office in Beverly Hills, I'm afforded a ringside seat to the sideshow of Lindsay's ups and downs. Viewing at such close proximity, it enables me to observe the invisible forces at play that are contributing to Lindsay's unnecessary demise.

As one of my clients from Canada stated in last week's alcohol moderation group, “Here in Hollywood it is expected that if you are having a problem with alcohol, you must be an alcoholic and must abstain completely, attend AA groups and adopt the 12-step philosophy." He went on to say that if he runs into someone he met through AA, who says he no longer attends AA meetings, he assumes that person must be drinking heavily again and that his brain disease has won the battle over his recovery. His AA friend would never consider that he is doing better, has found an alternative solution and no longer needs traditional daily support.

In my own life, I can tell you that I once had to go for radiation treatment five times a week. Now I go about one or two times a year because I am doing better, not worse.

Lindsay Lohan courtThe drama of Lindsay's life and court case that has drawn us to the TV and the web is as much a made-up fantasy as any movie I have ever seen. As one addiction usually feeds another, Lindsay's addictive behavior is feeding the public's voracious, out-of-control hunger to see a young, gifted and obviously troubled woman self-destruct. Hollywood's addiction for this type of news is akin to a crowd of people urging a poor soul standing at the ledge of a building to jump.

Hardly the support that Lindsay needs to overcome her demons and get well.

What is Hollywood's and the court system's real agenda, and how is it playing out?

In Lindsay's case, and in the case of many addicts, there are assumptions and scientifically unsupported concepts that are being drawn upon as if they were truths. Unfortunately, the success stories in treating addiction are few and far between.

The modality that is supported by the court is to remand the addict into a 12-step program. That's it. No other treatment regime is ever considered, and because of that, many addicts are
already doomed to failure before the judge's gavel punctuates the court's decision.

As you'll read, this is tantamount to sentencing a cancer patient to Laetrile treatment.

There are many misconceptions on addiction treatment, and many of them stem from what we think we know about the cause of addiction, and lifestyle's impact on the disease.

Alcoholic's Anonymous has treated millions of people. However, according to "The Handbook of Alcoholism Treatment Approaches: Effective Alternatives (3rd ed.)," edited by R.K. Hester and W.R. Miller, AA ranks 38th in effectiveness.

Further, as shown by a study by R.G. Smart (AA does not release statistical results because of the anonymous nature of its work), the success rate is about 5%.

Tags: addiction, Lindsay Lohan, Movies
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Dr. Marc Kern is a nationally recognized expert in the field of addiction therapy. He has made more than 100 appearances on ABC's "20/20," "Larry King Live," CNN, The Learning Channel, CBS and other local and national programs. Dr. Kern is the author of "Take Control Now! A Do-It-Yourself Blueprint for Positive Lifestyle Success," and "Responsible Drinking, A Moderation Management Approach for Problem Drinkers." Dr. Kern has an office in Beverly Hills and is online at www.addictionalternatives.com.

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