The Peter Attia Drive - #321 – Dopamine and addiction: navigating pleasure, pain, and the path to recovery | Anna Lembke, M.D.
Episode Date: October 14, 2024View the Show Notes Page for This Episode Become a Member to Receive Exclusive Content Sign Up to Receive Peter’s Weekly Newsletter Anna Lembke is the Chief of the Stanford Addiction Medicine Dua...l Diagnosis Clinic and author of Dopamine Nation: Finding Balance in the Age of Indulgence. In this episode, Anna dives deep into the biochemistry and neurobiology of addiction, exploring the critical role of dopamine and the prefrontal cortex. She shares her framework for diagnosing and treating addiction, providing real-world examples involving alcohol, gambling, cannabis, social media, and more. Anna outlines the risk factors for addiction, including inherited and nurture-based risks, explores the rise of addictions in younger generations, and discusses effective ways to address these issues with children. Additionally, she touches on healthy coping strategies, the evolution of the “marshmallow experiment,” and provides insights into GLP-1 agonists as a possible tool for addiction treatment. Finally, she reflects on the value of 12-step programs and how she navigates the emotional challenges of her work. We discuss: The role of dopamine and the prefrontal cortex in addiction [3:00]; The clinical definition of addiction and the behavioral criteria for diagnosing it [13:00]; Assessing alcohol use: patterns, risks, and addiction diagnosis [17:15]; Applying the addiction diagnosis framework using gambling as an example [21:45]; Exploring addiction variability: how nature, nurture, and access shape individual vulnerability and drug of choice [25:15]; How abstinence from addictive behaviors can help reset the brain’s reward system and improve mental health [41:15]; Safely abstaining from addiction substances, drugs needing medical supervision, and other key considerations [51:30]; Transitioning from abstinence to long-term recovery: tools and considerations [59:00]; Exploring behavioral addictions like sex addiction, and the gender differences in addiction patterns [1:08:30]; Factors contributing to the increasing levels of addiction across the world [1:13:45]; How online pornography can affect young boys' developing brains and lead to addictive behaviors, and strategies for parents to address this issue [1:23:30]; The link between social media use and declines in mental health, potential solutions, and protective measures [1:34:45]; How exercise affects brain chemistry, the role of dopamine and endorphins, and how exercise can become addictive [1:44:00]; Cold-water immersion for mood regulation, and other healthy coping strategies [1:47:15]; The “marshmallow experiment”: how broken promises affect behavior and trustworthy environments help children develop self-control [1:54:00]; Can GLP-1 agonists be useful in treating addiction? [1:58:30]; The benefits of 12-step programs [2:06:00]; Why understanding a patient’s story is essential for meaningful psychiatric care [2:11:45]; and More. Connect With Peter on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, welcome to the Drive Podcast. I'm your host, Peter Attia. This podcast,
my website, and my weekly newsletter all focus on the goal of translating the science of
longevity into something accessible for everyone. Our goal is to provide the best content in health and wellness, and we've established
a great team of analysts to make this happen.
It is extremely important to me to provide all of this content without relying on paid
ads.
To do this, our work is made entirely possible by our members, and in return, we offer exclusive
member-only content and benefits above and beyond what is available for free.
If you want to take your knowledge of this space to the next level,
it's our goal to ensure members get back much more than the price of a subscription.
If you want to learn more about the benefits of our premium membership,
head over to PeterAtiyaMD.com forward slash subscribe.
My guest this week is Dr. Anna Lemke.
Anna is the chief of the Stanford Addiction Medicine Dual Diagnostics Clinic, the medical
director of addiction medicine and professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the
Stanford University School of Medicine, where her clinical focus is addiction medicine.
In 2021, she published her book, Dopamine Nation, Finding the Balance in an
Age of Indulgence. And on October 1st of this year, she's releasing the official Dopamine Nation
workbook, a practical guide, which I actually can't wait to indulge in myself. In my conversation
with Anna, we begin by laying the foundation for understanding addiction and understanding the biochemistry and neurobiology of dopamine, explaining the various functions of, for example,
the prefrontal cortex in all of this. Anna explains the framework she uses to address
patients with addiction. We talk through some examples of addiction and how this framework
would be put into practice for, say, alcohol and gambling addictions. And we also speak about addictions
to cannabis, sex, social media, and exercise. Anna outlines the risk factors for addiction,
including inherited and nurture-based risks and why different individuals are more susceptible
to specific and different addictions. We then dive into the rise of addictions in the younger
generation, particularly the addiction to pornography and young men and how to have
conversations with your children about these subjects. From there,
we discuss healthy coping strategies,
the famous marshmallow experiment and how it has been revised.
We talk about cross addiction and also Anna's experience and knowledge around GLP
one agonists and whether or not they may be a tool for treating addictions.
Lastly,
we speak about 12 step programs and Anna's perspective on their benefits and impact
as well as how she personally copes with the intensity of her work.
So without further delay, please enjoy my conversation with Anna Lemka.
Anna, thank you so much for making time to sit down with me today.
I've been looking forward to this for quite a while, months actually.
So thank you for humoring me and talking about subject that you, I know, talk about a lot.
Well, thank you for inviting me.
I'm delighted to be here.
I actually hadn't realized that you were a fellow Stanford grad, so that was fun to learn.
I know.
I feel like we were passing each other briefly,
right, because I think you graduated two years
before I started, but then you were in your residency
while I was in med school, so the probability
that we ran into each other in the cafeteria
or going through the hall is probably pretty high.
Yes, it's perfectly possible that I scutted you out as a medical student and made you
go do things that I didn't want to do.
I always tell people I have the fondest memories of medical school,
but there are certain things that I still remember and I can't believe they
were the case.
And one of them is that for a school as fancy and prestigious that do you recall
we didn't have a bathroom in the library?
Ah, I didn't.
Remember that fact?
Yes. It could be.
I did not spend as much time in the library as I should have.
I do remember that we had our anatomy classes in trailers.
Yep.
I remember that.
Yes.
Well,
we ended up studying mostly in the business school library,
which was really fancy, had
bathrooms and didn't have business students in it because of reasons that are probably
obvious.
So anyway, great to sit down with you.
There's actually a lot I want to talk about with you.
Some of it is the substance of what you've written about in Dopamine Nation.
And I'd love to probably start there, but there's so much other material I'd love to
cover with you if our time permits.
But obviously one of the things that anyone who's familiar with you thinks
about is this role of dopamine and understanding addiction.
This clearly plays into a big part of your clinical practice as a
psychiatrist.
But I also realized that terms get thrown around quite loosely and sometimes it
can just be helpful for people to understand a little bit of what we describe
as the semantics.
So I'd like to actually start with an understanding maybe of some of the biochemistry and the
neurobiology of dopamine.
And then I want to actually talk about what an addiction really is.
But this word dopamine is something everyone has heard of.
But tell us a little bit about the molecule, how it works, and maybe even some of what
the supporting cast of other neurotransmitters look
like that factor into these pathways that obviously play an important role in our evolution and our
existence. Yeah, great place to start. Thank you for setting the stage. So dopamine is a
neurotransmitter. So it's a chemical that we make in our brains. Neurotransmitters are the chemicals
that allow for fine-tune modulation
of the neural circuits that make us who we are. You might think of the brain as a collection of
wires. Those wires are neurons, they send electrical impulses one to the other, but the neurons don't
actually touch. End to end, there's a little gap between them called the synapse and that gap is bridged by molecules
called neurotransmitters. There are many different neurotransmitters in the brain.
They have many different functions but dopamine has become kind of the common currency for
measuring pleasure, reward, and motivation. It's not the only neurotransmitter involved in that process, obviously,
but it is the final common pathway
for all reinforcing substances and behaviors.
So whether the substance is primarily modulating
our serotonergic system or norepinephrine
or the nicotinic system or the endogenous opioid system
or the endogenous cannabinoid system,
the final common pathway for all of
those chemical cascades is to release dopamine in a dedicated part of the brain called the
reward circuitry, which consists of the prefrontal cortex, that's that large gray matter area
right behind our foreheads, and then these deeper limbic or emotion brain structures
like the nucleus accumbens and the ventral tegmental area.
We're always releasing dopamine at a baseline tonic level, but when we do something that's pleasurable or reinforcing or that our brains consider salient or important for survival,
in some cases it might even be an aversive stimulus, then temporarily we will increase
dopamine firing above baseline. That generally feels good to us, which is how we tell our brains, oh, this is important.
I should approach, explore, and consider doing this again.
So broadly speaking, that's dopamine's function.
It's not its only function, by the way.
So dopamine is also really important for movement.
As you know, Parkinson's disease,
which is a movement disorder, is characterized by a decrease or a depletion of dopamine in
a different part of the brain called the substantia nigra. And one of the ways that we treat Parkinson's
is to actually give people L-Dopa, which is a dopamine precursor. Why do we give them
L-Dopa and not dopamine? Because dopamine itself actually can't cross the blood-brain
barrier. So, we give them a precursor that crosses the blood-brain barrier and then binds
to dopamine receptors in the substantia nigra allowing for more fluid movements in people
with Parkinson's. Unfortunately, L-Dopa transformed to dopamine also binds dopamine receptors
in the reward pathway, which is why about a quarter of folks with Parkinson's
who get treated with L-Dopa end up with addictive disorders
that are usually reversible when you stop the L-Dopa
and tend to be dose dependent.
So the more L-Dopa, the more likely the sex addiction,
shopping addiction, or whatever the compulsive behavior.
Okay, a lot there and many questions, but one of them is the role of the
prefrontal cortex. Now, again, I think people listening to us probably have heard about the
prefrontal cortex. It comes up a lot when we talk about dementia. It comes up a lot when we talk
about higher order cognitive function, judgment centers, but it is also something that I believe,
and I could be wrong on this, but I believe this is a part of the brain
that is more developed in our species than in others.
So I guess a question then would be around
the addictive potential of our species versus others.
Are we more susceptible to what we're about to talk about
as addiction with a larger prefrontal cortex,
or is it not as simple as just the anatomic size
of this part of the brain?
I guess to back up for a second,
the prefrontal cortex has many roles,
but when we think about its role in addiction
or other repetitive disorders,
it actually has a stop function.
So if you analogize to a car,
the prefrontal cortex acts like the brakes on the car.
It allows for delayed gratification.
This is where we have the control centers.
It allows for appreciating future consequences.
It lights up when we're engaged in autobiographical narrative.
And of course, narrative is part of the ways that we actually create metacognitive awareness
to inform future decisions.
So having a very robust prefrontal cortex is potentially protective against addiction.
People who have cognitive or attentional disorders, who are thought to have a disorder of the prefrontal cortex,
for example, attention deficit disorder, are at higher
risk to develop addictive disorders.
So essentially, again, if you think of this as like the car analogy, the prefrontal cortex
is the brakes, the nucleus accumbens is the accelerator, the nucleus accumbens is deep
in the brain, is rich in dopamine-releasing neurons, and that acts like the accelerator
on the car.
So addiction is a problem either with too little on the brakes, too much on the accelerator,
or some combination thereof.
In terms of whether or not humans are more likely to get addicted than animals, I would
say no.
What's remarkable about this reward circuitry is how incredibly conserved it is over millions
of years of evolution and across species.
So neuroscientists used to talk about the lizard brain or the triune brain.
They're not typically using that phraseology so much anymore.
But what they were getting at was that if you look at the nucleus accumbens ventral tegmental area, it's amazingly unchanged across species over millions of years of evolution.
It's really our reflexive approaching pleasure and avoiding pain is what has kept us alive
for so many, many generations on the planet.
And so it's a very basic primordial structure that all
living organisms, even primitive organisms have, even the most primitive nematode or
worm will release dopamine in response to food in its environment which then dopamine
allows it to locomote toward food. It's probably no coincidence that the same neurotransmitter
involved in movement is also involved in pleasure, reward, and motivation because prior to about 500 years ago, if you wanted to get a reward, you had
to work for it.
That's no longer true, which is one of the reasons our brains are so confused today.
So I would say, again, to just sort of try to answer your question, you could almost
make the opposite argument that because we have these large frontal lobes that
can sort of reason and appreciate future consequences, human beings might be even more
capable of getting out of the cycle of addiction than other organisms. I mean, it is miraculous
that even people deep in the most severe addiction can find somewhere within themselves the capacity
to stop using.
It's really, really remarkable.
It seems to me almost a miracle in my clinical work when I get people who have been in severe
addictions for decades who somehow find it within themselves either through some logical reasoning or some spiritual
surrender or some combination to actually get into recovery.
There's so much I want to talk about on that front, but I think I'll still try to
get some of the more basic stuff out of the way, just to make sure when we get
there, we have the foundation to understand some of the incredible stories you've
shared. So let's take a moment to now maybe technically define an addiction. I'm sure everybody once in a while has said,
man, I'm addicted to Netflix and I'm addicted to chocolate and I'm addicted to this. But
how does one truly define an addiction in a clinical setting?
So when I use the term addiction, I'm referring to a form of psychopathology,
not the more common colloquial casual use of I'm addicted to a form of psychopathology, not the more common colloquial
casual use of I'm addicted to Netflix.
Although you could argue that we actually are addicted to Netflix, we'll probably get
there.
So the diagnosis of addiction is based on what we call phenomenology.
These are patterns of behavior that repeat themselves across individuals with unique
temperaments, demographics, time periods, geographic locations.
There is no brain scan or blood test to diagnose addiction, although we know that addiction
is characterized by distinct brain changes.
We're just not at a state of the art where we can diagnose it based on that.
So it's still based on patterns of behavior.
That can broadly be summarized as the four Cs plus tolerance and withdrawal. So, the four Cs are out of control use, compulsive
use, cravings, and continued use despite consequences. Now, as you can imagine, that phenomenology
is going to be a judgment call.
And it's going to be based on both that individual's
subjective endorsement of having those kinds of issues,
plus the observation of other people around them.
Which is to say, if you went to 10 different psychiatrists,
you might get 10 different diagnoses.
And that is true for all mental health disorders.
We don't have any brain scans or blood tests to diagnose any mental health disorder.
The entire DSM or Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, which is our codification
of different buckets that we put people in for different forms of psychopathology is
completely based on phenomenology.
So you have the four Cs and then you have tolerance and withdrawal. So, those are very clear evidence of physiologic changes. Psychological changes are also physiologic changes. But
here we're talking about more obvious manifestations of it being say a physical, chemical body
reaction. Tolerance is the phenomenon of finding that the drug stops working over time and
that we need more and more to get the same effect or more potent forms.
And tolerance is overcome by using more, using more often or overcoming tolerance by changing
the delivery mechanism instead of orally ingesting, maybe smoking or injecting or overcoming tolerance
by changing slightly the chemical combination or moiety or combining drugs together
so that the brain sees something that's similar but slightly novel.
And then in addition to tolerance, there's a phenomenon of withdrawal, which is to say when I cut back or stop using,
my body reacts in a very predictable fashion, which is most often the opposite of whatever the intoxicant causes. So if I'm
taking a stimulant like cocaine or meth or nicotine or caffeine and I try to stop using,
my withdrawal phenomenon will feel like sedation, lethargy, inattention. If I'm using a sedative
like alcohol, then my withdrawal phenomenon will be restlessness, jitteriness, maybe even
seizures, maybe even life-threatening
seizures in the case of alcohol and benzodiazepines. And also keep in mind that the universal symptoms
of withdrawal from any addictive substance are anxiety, irritability, insomnia, dysphoria,
and craving. And I always like to mention that because I'll have cannabis users or alcohol users
come in and say, well, I don't have any withdrawal. So therefore I'm not addicted.
Well, did you feel anxious?
Did you feel restless?
Were you unable to sleep?
Were you in craving mind?
Because those are all the actions, so to speak, that our brain takes to get us to try to use
again.
So I want to use just two examples and walk viewers and listeners through them.
So let's start with a chemical one and let's just pick alcohol because of its ubiquity. I want to use just two examples and walk viewers and listeners through them.
Let's start with a chemical one and let's just pick alcohol because of its ubiquity.
Let's go through how a person might be evaluating the four Cs and tolerance withdrawal.
I come to you and I say, I'm here because people around me think I drink too much.
What are the questions we go through to probe that?
Yeah, great.
So we've developed a kind of framework
that relies on gathering data in a way that's not threatening
and sort of factually based, starting simply with data.
So we would ask people, what do you drink, how much
and how often?
When we try to quantify that specifically with alcohol,
we bring it down to what we
call the standard drink. A standard drink is one 12-ounce bottle of beer, a five-ounce
glass of wine or one to one and a half ounces of hard liquor. So that's one standard drink.
We use something called the timeline followback method because it tends to be more reliable
than a sort of general gestalt where we say, okay, how much did you drink yesterday?
How much did you drink the day before that and the day before that and the day before
that until we get seven days, we add it all up and then the person goes, oh, wow, I'm
drinking 21 standard drinks in a week.
That's very useful information for me as a healthcare provider but also for that individual
themselves because when we're chasing dopamine, we have a funny way of not being very good self-observers
and losing track.
So we simply gather the data, then we ask people to tell us why they drink, what is
the positive thing that they get out of it, as well as trying to hint a little bit at
tolerance, which is to say, is it still working for them the way that it used to?
I should also mention when we're gathering data, we're also looking for binge patterns. So,
some people can go a long time without drinking, but then they'll have, let's say for an adult male,
a binge is considered five or more standard drinks in a sitting. A sitting is a single day.
For an adult female, it's four or more standard drinks in a sitting. And when we find that pattern,
that's also very concerning. Let me just say that the really nice thing about alcohol is that these questions are
based on epidemiologic studies showing that for an adult male who drinks more than 14
standard drinks per week or more than four on any given day or an adult female who drinks
more than seven standard drinks per week or more than three on any given day, there's a much higher risk not only of having an alcohol addiction but also developing all-cause
morbidity and mortality.
So pancreatitis, heart disease, cancer, injury accident and death.
So it's very nice to have that data to back that up.
But we start there, then we probe and why do people drink? People drink for
all kinds of reasons, but broadly speaking, they drink to have fun or to solve a problem.
That problem can be anything from social anxiety to loneliness to boredom and everything in
between. So we really explore that with patients. And then next, we ask about problems. What
are the problems that you have noticed? Interpersonal problems, work problems, health problems,
the simple problem of tolerance that
it's not working for you the way that it used to. Are you having mental health problems, depression,
anxiety, insomnia, and attention? And we kind of go through those. And then based on that,
we begin to see a picture that nudges us toward thinking that, yes, this person has what we call an
alcohol use disorder. And again, you can see it's quite judgmental and contextual depending
upon the culture. But one of the things that often happens is people will normalize their
use by affiliating with other people who drink heavily. So they'll say, well, you know, you
may think that's a lot but my fraternity brother Joe drinks way more than I do. It's like, well, yes, but in the general population, you're in the one percentile in terms of even
just the amounts that you drink.
And we know that just based on amounts, you're at higher risk for all-cause morbidity and
mortality, even separate from our diagnosing an addictive disorder.
Okay.
So you also already addressed the withdrawal and of course, I'm sure many people are quite
familiar with the medical complexity of alcohol withdrawal and how things like DTs can become
an actual physiologic risk to mortality if a patient isn't withdrawn safely from alcohol
using things like benzodiazepines. And as discussed earlier, of course, tolerance is clear with
alcohol. What if we talk about something like gambling? How does the framework work
for something like that? In other words, for a person to have a gambling addiction,
is the sinquanon of that that they basically must be financially creating chaos in their lives?
must be financially creating chaos in their lives?
Or if a person loses a million dollars a year in gambling, but they make 10X that and it's not actually impacting
their life in other ways, how do you ferret out
whether or not this is pathologic?
Great question.
And I would say when you think about the four C's,
control, compulsion, craving and consequences,
plus tolerance and withdrawal, none of those is a sine qua non.
And in fact, you can have no tolerance and no withdrawal and still meet criteria for
an addiction.
Just a little footnote there, people can actually have physical withdrawal from behavioral addictions
like gambling where they have headache, nausea, vomiting, insomnia. But for gambling
disorder, theoretically, you could have somebody who was gambling a lot and had no control
issues, meaning that they could set a certain amount that they were gonna spend. And even
if that was a very large amount, they adhered to that amount. When they decided to cut back
or abstain for a period of time, they were able to do that.
They could have no craving, no reported cravings, although again, we're not the best judges
often of ourselves when it comes to this disease process.
They could have, as you highlight, no consequences because they're making money, although generally
with pathological gambling that almost never works out that way, the house wins.
So then you have to get into the more subtle factors of compulsive use.
So what does it mean, compulsive use?
It means a lot of mental real estate occupied with thinking about using, getting the drug,
maybe covering up drug use because other people don't approve, finding that other things are
less salient, so a kind of narrowing of our focus on that particular activity, a loss of joy in other things that we used to find pleasurable.
So this kind of – and a level of automaticity, right?
Like I'm just immersed in this.
And then I think a kind of a qualitative judgment about the attachment, which is to say feeling
like if I don't have this activity as an outlet, I
can't function even on just a mental level, even if objectively everything looks great
on paper in terms of my life.
Like I'm so deeply immersed in this kind of addiction vortex that I'm thinking about it
all the time.
I'm organizing my life around it.
I don't feel like there are other things that I can do or take joy in.
When I try to de-cathect or remove some attachment, I get anxious, I get irritable, I can't sleep.
The interesting thing for me about treating addiction is that it is a biopsychosocial
disease.
There's a biological component, psychological, and a deeply embedded social and cultural component
such that, for example, workaholism is really celebrated in our culture.
We have many, many workaholics and you and I might even be in that category.
And yet there are so many social rewards, monetary, social validation, you name it,
that this compulsive engagement in the work that we do, we may not ever identify as problematic unless we begin to look at more subtle
manifestations or harms like opportunity costs.
Like because I'm spending all this time working, I really don't know my children.
Or because I'm spending all this time working, I'm not cultivating friendships
or not investing in my partner or in my health or whatever
it may be.
A big part of what I wanted to chat about was actually this idea of why different individuals
become addicted to very different stimuli, even if the final common pathway is comparable.
Even if you could put all of us into whatever it is we use, FMRI or whatever type of scan
that we might use to pick up on the areas of the brain that undergo excitation, why
is it that for one individual, alcohol becomes the thing, whereas for another person, it
becomes an opioid?
And by the way, are there clusters where for certain people, chemicals really are the problem,
whether it be opioids,
alcohol, cocaine, and yet for others it's more behaviors. I'll share with you just as an example
of why this is a question that is on my mind so often. I've shared this story publicly before,
but when I was actually in medical school, I suffered a really, really debilitating back injury.
To make a very long story short, through some errors in the part of the medical system,
I ended up on a really, really, at the time, very high doses of oxycodone and oxycontin.
And predictably went through the escalation of those doses until at one point I was up to
300 milligrams a day of oxycontin. So I'm sure you can put that in the context of the patients that you see, and I'm sure you've
seen patients hire, but that's a pretty staggering dose.
It's a dose that if you or I split it right now, we would be dead, just for context to
people.
After several, oh, I don't know, probably six months of being on enough Oxy to kill
a horse, I just decided I wanted off.
It was a very strange wake up moment where I realized I wasn't even taking it
because I was in pain anymore.
I was taking it because I wanted to escape how depressed I was that I was
debilitated. I just decided to stop cold turkey.
And I had the time was dating an anesthesiology resident and she was like,
you are f effing crazy.
You're going to die.
We need to put you on nortriptyline and 10 other drugs to taper you off.
I said, no, I'm doing this cold turkey, which I did.
I proceeded to spend the next two weeks in hell.
This is the point of the story.
It's nothing that I said so far. The point of the story is I'm no more inclined
to struggle with an opioid than any other person for reasons I don't understand. In other words,
after that experience, I was quite afraid of opioids and I assumed I was addicted.
But maybe 10 years later when I had a really bad tooth condition and nothing was touching
the pain, I finally succumbed and took Percocet.
And then after two days when the tooth was addressed, I stopped taking the Percocet and
there was no issue.
I concluded from that experience that this was not a willpower thing that allowed me
to quit.
This was just a luck thing.
There's something physiologically about me that was
not becoming addicted to that substance and that's why I was able to stop cold turkey.
In other words, I wasn't morally superior to the opioid addict. I was lucky. My question
is why? What explains this difference? Because there are clearly areas like work where I'm not so lucky
where the addiction is indeed real and where the struggle is daily.
Okay, so a lot there to unpack.
Why don't we just start with your interpretation of your experience, which is, yes, I got physiologically
dependent on opioids in medical school, but ultimately,
I'm not a person who's going to be addicted to opioids.
Well, I thought I was, but it didn't appear to be the case based on subsequent use patterns.
Yes, yes.
You ultimately decided, oh, this is not an inevitable problem for me, but I recognize
that especially given what you went through that it could be an inevitable problem for
somebody else, right?
Right, yep.
So let's start with risk factors for addiction.
So risk factors for addiction can broadly be placed
into three separate buckets,
which I call nature, nurture, and neighborhood.
The inherited or inborn risk for addiction
based on family and twin studies is about 50 to 60%. So this is,
for example, based on studies showing that if you have a biological parent or grandparent addicted
to alcohol, you were at increased risk of getting addicted to alcohol than the general population,
even if raised outside of that alcohol using home. So these are really nicely carefully done studies.
So high heritability is determined
by twin concordance basically.
Yeah, and family studies.
Looking back in family trees, looking
at kids who were adopted into non-alcohol using homes,
who developed alcohol use disorder at higher rates
because they had a biological parent or grandparent.
Those are those studies.
And for a long time, people have talked about
the quote unquote addictive personality.
I have an addictive personality.
Whatever I do, I take it to the extreme,
I'm gonna get addicted.
That's a kind of colloquial use,
but it gets to the heart of this idea that yes,
people come into the world with different vulnerability
to this tendency to take to the extreme the
pursuit of certain types of highly reinforcing substance behaviors once discovered in the
environment.
It's also probably true that we each have different what are called drugs of choice.
So even with people who are polysubstance
users, which by the way is more common than not today, people use a lot of different substances
and behaviors, they'll still tell you, but my preference is opioids or the thing I really
want to do is smoke a cigarette or alcohol is my go-to.
Interestingly, there's very little science on the concept of drug of choice. I looked
pretty hard for that and I couldn't find very much.
But it is a really important one because what it means is that here we have the phenomenon
of access intersecting with drug of choice to increase the risk for certain individuals.
Let me explain what I mean.
Let me back up.
So we've got the nature, the inherited risk. By the way, that probably goes along with
co-occurring mental health disorders. People with mental health disorders are at increased
risk of developing addictive disorders. And addiction is probably a complex polygenic
phenomenon. Then we have risk factors based on nurture. So this is the way that we are
raised, early childhood development,
parents that model maladaptive addictive behaviors or that explicitly or implicitly condone substance
use or other addictive behaviors, those kids are more likely to develop addiction in adulthood,
especially if there's trauma, if there's negative attachment. Whereas kids who are raised in
a home where patients are modeling healthy,
adaptive coping strategies, where they have a good attachment to their kids, where there's not
sexual, physical or emotional abuse, those kids are protected or relatively protected. Nobody's
completely protected. You can have the perfect childhood and still end up addicted. And then
we have what I call neighborhood risk factors and these get to the key of access.
So one of the biggest risk factors for addiction is simple access to that drug. If you live
in a neighborhood where drugs are sold in the street corner, you're more likely to try
them and more likely to get addicted. If you go and get medical care at a place where people
liberally prescribe opioids, benzodiazepines, stimulants, your brain will be exposed to those drugs,
will change in response to those drugs,
and you are at increased risk
of getting addicted to those drugs.
Now in your case, the risk of access
was ultimately what got you initially hooked,
but probably other innate protective factors
that you have allowed you to not end up with a
serious addiction, probably in terms of genetic protective elements, maybe having to do with the
way that you were raised. I don't know you, so it's hard for me to judge. But essentially,
that's how we think about it. But what's interesting, and I guess this is the part
that's most curious to me is, I mean, if I'm being brutally honest and take an honest stock of my life, there are clearly things
where I behave in very addictive ways today. Let's just acknowledge that the neighborhood
for those things is high. Online shopping. My wife describes me as an e-shopaholic and she can tell my stress level by the
number of Amazon packages that come to the door.
So when I'm under low stress, we'll go a week without a package.
When I'm under high stress, three packages a day. To be clear,
it's not breaking the bank. I'm buying stupid, irrelevant trinkets,
but it's this dumb little escape
I have where oh my god, I need a keychain. I wonder what kind of keychains they have on Amazon. Oh look
I fully acknowledge that that is a true addiction now
I'm fortunate in that the consequences of that addiction are minimal, but I'd like to believe
I'm at least wise to the fact that there's just a general good luck that is
permitting Amazon to be my pusher as opposed to someone selling illicit drugs. I wonder why.
I wonder why because this to me speaks to we're all addicts potentially.
Why are some people unlucky in that the addiction turns out to either kill them or destroy the
quality of their life and their relationships?
Let me answer that in a couple of different ways.
First of all, thank you for sharing the online shopping addiction.
As you know, in my book, Dokmin Nation, I talk about how I got addicted to romance novels.
Now, granted, it was a minor addiction and I was able to, once I recognized it, change
those behaviors without having to get professional help, which again, brings us back to this
concept of drug of choice and how it intersects with access.
Because what's so challenging about the world today is that not only do we have more access
to more potent forms of traditional drugs, including alcohol, but all the other drugs
that have been around for millennia. But we also have brand new drugs that didn't exist before,
all of the online digital media, online shopping, pornography, the drugification of the romance novel,
et cetera, et cetera. You described this, Anna, sorry to interrupt,
in a way that I loved so much.
I wrote it down.
We are cacti living in a rain forest.
I mean, it's just such a beautiful way
to describe the bizarre existence of the human
in this condition relative to 10,000 years ago
and for millennia. Yes, and I'd love to take credit for that metaphor, but I can't. That's Dr. Finnegan
from Johns Hopkins. It's a fantastic metaphor. That's right. We weren't evolved for the world
that we live in now. Again, just to go back to my own example, I thought that I hadn't inherited
this so-called addiction gene because alcohol was never reinforcing for me,
caffeine doesn't wake me up.
These are the legal and easily accessible drugs
that people who do find those drugs reinforcing
are going to be vulnerable to
because they're legal and accessible.
Why do nicotine and alcohol kill more people every year
than any other drug? Because they're legal and they're
accessible. So I think that's a really important first thing to say. Now that we have drugs like
online shopping and romance novels, people like you and me who maybe thought, well, I didn't
inherit this addiction gene, maybe it's not true at all. Maybe we just hadn't yet met our drug of
choice. And now that we have new drugs proliferating, we are discovering we are just as vulnerable
as the next person, given the key
that fits into our neurobiological lock.
I am gonna get to the heart of your question in a second,
but I just wanna make one more point before I do.
When I think about this from an evolutionary perspective,
it makes a lot of sense that mother nature would
want there to be inter-individual variability in terms of drug of choice, right?
So if we're living together in a tribe, in a world of scarcity and ever-present danger,
which is the world that humans have existed in for most of the time that we've been around,
it's very good if we're not all going for the same exact berry bush It's very good
If you like the red berries and I like the blueberries and somebody else wants to hunt me and somebody else wants to look for
People that way we as a tribe can be pretty well guaranteed that
Together we're going to be able to get all of the scarce resources that we need to survive
So I think when you think about it from an evolutionary perspective, that's important. But I really think the heart of your question
is not so much why is it that some people get addicted and others don't because we've
just explored the fact that really we're all vulnerable, especially in the modern ecosystem.
But why is it that some people can self-correct that as we progress on this road of compulsive overconsumption,
why is it that some people can see it and make an adjustment?
Which by the way, I just want to make sure, I know you know this, but I want to make sure
the listener understands. When I tell that story about me with the opioids, I'm not claiming to
have self-corrected. I'm simply saying it was not the lock and key for me. It was actually quite
easy to stop and the only suffering I went through was the physiologic withdrawal, which is dramatic,
but it's a chemical reaction that after a few weeks was gone. Even as I sit here now, we have
a bottle of Percocet in our, it's in my bathroom, it's 10 feet from me and it's been there for 10 years and
I've never looked at it and it wouldn't occur to me to,
but if I was in significant pain,
I would go and take two of them and not think twice about it and it would be
fine. So just to be clear,
it wasn't through any self discipline that I stopped taking it.
That was quite easy once I just decided and made the observation that I
shouldn't be taking it. If I was truly one of willpower,
I would never step foot on Amazon again,
or if I did, it would only be for something that I needed.
So in that sense, I am a junkie,
and I don't seem to possess the tools,
or at least innately, to stop it.
Okay, so good clarification.
You really don't think that you have a vulnerability
to opioid addiction,
but you really do think you're addicted to online shopping. Is that fair?
That's fair.
Okay. So yeah, but I think you're too hopeless about your online shopping. I think that that is
an addiction that if you decided you wanted to, you could work on and make progress in that regard.
Clearly, there are not financial consequences for you to buy keychains.
Now, in my book, I do talk about a patient of mine who did get addicted to online shopping
on Amazon to the point where his house was full of partially opened boxes.
He was in credit card debt, approaching financial ruin.
He didn't even get pleasure from the things he ordered anymore.
It was just the anticipation and then it would come in.
As soon as he opened the box, he would have an immediate come down.
Which by the way, I can relate to that.
I can really, really relate to that.
And it's with great empathy that I read that story because I can imagine how
painful that is as the size of the purchases goes up and up.
And again, for whatever reason, and I attribute it solely to luck and good fortune,
maybe it's just a tolerance thing. I haven't had to get to the point of that patient.
Right. Right. Exactly.
But that would be awful if you're spending all of that energy on something and you open the package and you're like,
yeah, great. Okay. What's next? Yeah. And I think it's great for people to hear that you have some
degree of incontinence around this behavior. Aristotle talked about what he called wide-eyed
incontinence. Why is it that I do what I do not want to do? Because really that's at the heart
of addictive behaviors.
And I'm guessing that people look to you as a sort of paragon of self-discipline.
So it's very nice, I think, for people to recognize that even you have arenas in which
you are incontinent in this regard, which by the way, is really hard to admit in our
culture because we're all supposed to be, you know, have it together and have all this kind of self-control.
But really, almost all of us now have some space in our lives where we're over consuming
either a substance or behavior, even if it's only mildly problematic that we'd like to
change.
And I guess since I have seen people with very severe and life-threatening addictions be able to
get into recovery and maintain recovery for decades, I think that we can all look to those
individuals as guides for the rest of us and not be overly fatalistic about our own capacity
to change these behaviors.
I think we can change these behaviors.
And I would also suggest that
to do so is not just important for our own mental health, but it's also important for the planet. So our consumptive behaviors really do affect everything around us.
Some of the stories in your book, Dopamine Nation, as I'm reading them, I'm thinking to myself, well,
she included this person, there must be a happy ending. But as I'm reading
it, I'm thinking, there's no way this person is getting out of this alive. I mean, some of the
clinical stories that you write about, and I assume outside of changing names and maybe genders in a
few places, these are probably very accurate accounts of the individuals you worked with.
I mean, I really had a lot of empathy for these people.
Yeah, good. That's good.
Maybe because anybody reading it who themselves has an addiction, even a quote unquote benign one,
realizes that that's devastating. But there are a couple that I think are interesting and worth
talking about. So let's talk about the young woman whose parents sort of talk her into coming to see
you because she's basically smoking pot around the clock or not even smoking it.
She's consuming it in every form that THC is imaginable.
Now, of course, by her own reckoning, this is purely a logical coping tool for her anxiety.
There's nothing pathologic about it.
She's not suffering any ill consequences of it.
Maybe tell her story and a little bit of
the work you did with her. The reason I want to use that as one of the examples is you talked
about neighborhood a second ago. It's a very controversial topic right now, which is, for
example, the legalization of marijuana. Truly, it's something I find myself divided on.
Because on the one hand, I think the criminalization of marijuana has led to a lot of destruction
in people's lives.
But at the same time, it's hard to avoid the knowledge that you've shared, which is, look,
the more available and ubiquitous a substance is, the more likely it is to be abused.
Case in point, alcohol and tobacco.
So I'd like to kind of explore that a bit with you and also explore this idea of marijuana
as a gateway drug, that the so-called gateway drug to drugs that maybe people would argue
are quite harmful, even if they believe that THC consumed in any amount is not.
So maybe we'll start with the story of that young woman and kind of explore that a bit
more.
Yeah.
So this young woman, first of all, all of the patients that I talk about in the book are
patients who were very long time patients of mine, who I knew very well and who I asked for their
permission to share their stories using a pseudonym. This was a young woman, very typical for the types
of patients that we will see now who came in not looking for help with her cannabis use
But looking for help with her anxiety and her depression
20 years ago. The first thing I would have done for a patient like this was prescribe an antidepressant or an anxiolytic
Maybe even some Xanax or some clonopin and referred her for psychotherapy
My practice has changed very much in the last two decades
because of what I've learned from patients in recovery
and the ways in which repeated use
of highly reinforcing substances and behaviors
actually changes our hedonic or joy set point
and creates, exacerbates, and drives depression and anxiety
such that now the first intervention that I'll do with
a patient like this is to actually ask them to abstain from their drug of choice for four weeks
as a way to reset those reward pathways to see whether or not that alone will address the anxiety
and depression. And in the majority of my patients, if they are willing and able to do that,
they feel so much better after that abstinence trial
or dopamine fast that there's not even an indication
after that to prescribe an antidepressant or an angiolytic
or necessarily do psychotherapy.
I'm happy to talk about how that hedonics,
that point gets changed from the perspective
of neuroscience, if that would be helpful.
Yeah, I think that would be great.
Okay.
So to me, one of the most interesting findings in neuroscience in the past 75 years is that
pain and pleasure are co-located in the brain and work like opposite sides of a balance.
So if you imagine that deep in these limbic structures in nucleus accumbens, the area
that's rich in dopamine-releasing neurons,
there's something like a teeter-totter, a central beam on a fulcrum that in a very simplified
way represents how we process pleasure and pain.
When we experience pleasure, it tips one way, pain it tips the other.
There are certain rules governing this balance and the first and most important rule is that
the balance wants to remain level.
And that level balance is what neuroscientists call homeostasis, such that with any deviation
from that level position, which is the definition of biological stress, our brains will work
very hard to restore a level balance.
So for example, my patient uses cannabis through the endogenous opioid system that ultimately
leads to the release of dopamine in the reward pathway.
Her pleasure-pain balance tilts to the side of pleasure and then her brain says, oh, that
was good, let's do that again.
But remember, the balance wants to return to the level of position.
So it does that by adapting to that increased dopamine by down-regulating dopamine transmission
and production, not just at baseline levels but below baseline levels.
I like to imagine that as these neuroadaptation gremlins hopping on the pain side of the balance
to bring it level again but the gremlins like it on the balance so they stay on until the
balance is tilted an equal and opposite amount to the side of pain.
That's the hangover, the come down, the blue Monday or just that state of craving.
Now if after that initial use, my patient doesn't smoke again, those neuro adaptation
gremlins get the message that their work is complete, they hop off the balance and
homeostasis is restored, craving goes away and she goes on with her day.
But if she continues to use that substance, in her case, cannabis, repeatedly over time,
ultimately what happens is those gremlins on the pain side of the balance start to accumulate.
They get bigger, they get stronger, now they're camped out there.
And now essentially we're entering addicted brain.
Now when she uses cannabis, that initial deviation to the side of pleasure is weaker and shorter
in duration, but that after response to pain gets stronger and longer.
And ultimately, she ends up in a kind of chronic dopamine
deficit state below her natural dopamine baseline,
where she is experiencing the universal symptoms
of withdrawal from any addictive substance,
which are again, anxiety, irritability, insomnia,
dysphoria, and craving.
When she uses cannabis, that temporarily counteracts those gremlins on the pain side of the balance
and she feels better.
So she thinks to herself, I'm self-medicating my anxiety with my medical marijuana.
But in truth, all she's really doing is just adding more gremlins to the pain side of the balance.
So the intervention is to have her abstain from her cannabis long enough so that those
neuroadaptation gremlins get the message, they need to hop off the pain side of balance
so that healthy levels of dopamine firing can be restored.
This is obviously a vast oversimplification of a very complex process, but it gets to the heart of homeostasis, a level balance, and
allostasis, which is our brains
attempt to adapt to these highly reinforcing stimuli for which it was not evolved.
The definition of an intoxicant is that it releases a lot of dopamine all at once in the brain's reward pathway.
Our brains were evolved for us to have to work very hard to find a tiny little jolt
of dopamine and then essentially do that again and again to stay alive.
So the intervention for her is to ask her to abstain and to let her know that she's
going to feel worse before she feels better, more depressed, more anxious.
Maybe she'll have other signs of physiologic
withdrawal, which indeed in her case she did. She had vomiting, which really shocked her
because she thought that was a sign for her, a physical sign that she had become dependent on
or addicted to the cannabis. But as I say to patients, if you can just get through about
the first 10 to 14 days of feeling worse after you give up your drug of choice.
By the time you make it to about week three or four, you will feel better, less craving,
less anxious, less depressed, better able to sleep. And that's so often a revelation for people
because they have become convinced that their drug of choice is quote unquote,
self-medicating their depression or whatever it is. So that was the intervention with her.
That's our general early intervention that we do.
Just a couple of questions there, Anna, before we go on.
Which drugs or chemicals, I suppose, can you not safely just do that with?
So for example, in the case of cannabis, the pain that she experienced was not life-threatening and therefore she didn't need anything to cope with withdrawal. We've already discussed how
that would not be the case with ethanol. If somebody came into your office and they're
having six drinks a day and they go through the steps to acknowledge, hey, this is problematic,
and they agree to want to stop, you wouldn't be able to just say, hey, leave your office,
don't drink and I'll see you in four weeks. There's a very good chance they would be dead due to the cardiovascular side effects.
There you would have to put them on other drugs. What are the other dependencies for
which you wouldn't just have the liberty of stopping cold turkey?
Let me just say that that's a very good point to qualify this intervention,
but it's not necessarily true that for somebody
with an alcohol addiction, you couldn't do this intervention.
It would depend on how severely physiologically dependent they were and whether or not they
were at risk for life-threatening withdrawal or delirium tremens or seizures.
Most people who are addicted to alcohol actually won't have life-threatening withdrawal and could do this.
How do you determine that, by the way? We used to be very blunt about this in residency because I was a surgical resident.
When we operated on people who appeared to drink a lot based on our intake assessment, which is subjective,
we would just usually run an ethanol drip in them for safety.
I don't think there was any real
insight into whether that was really necessary or not. So how would you evaluate that with a patient?
The biggest predictor of how someone is going to withdraw from alcohol is past withdrawal.
So we will ask them, when was the last time you stopped drinking, for how long,
and what was your symptomatology? It's not fail safe. Of course, as people age, they
lose neuroplasticity, their risk of having some kind of more difficult or even potentially
life-threatening withdrawal increases. It also increases over the drinking career, especially
as their liver is compromised or pancreas is compromised. But really you look at past withdrawal, how long ago was that?
It is really interesting and we don't understand
why this is that some people who drink enormous quantities
for decades can stop and have minimal withdrawal.
And other people who have had much shorter drinking careers
will go into delirium tremens
or have life-threatening seizures.
So we're not at all cavalier about it.
And for any patient that we remotely suspect
might have a serious withdrawal,
we would recommend medical monitoring
or possibly inpatient monitoring.
So we take it very seriously,
and we don't just recommend this early intervention
for somebody who was at risk.
But I can tell you most people who are addicted to alcohol will not have life-threatening
withdrawal from alcohol.
The other major category is basically benzodiazepines, which is alcohol in pill form.
They work on the same or similar GABA receptors.
And so people can have life-threatening withdrawal from benzodiazepines, which is why for many individuals,
we will recommend a medically monitored slow taper
or a more rapid inpatient detox.
We used to think that opioid withdrawal,
although extremely painful, was not life-threatening.
But in the last 20 years, as we've been helping people
decrease the very large doses of prescription opioids
they've been given by their doctors.
We have noticed that especially in older people and people with serious medical comorbidities,
cardiac comorbidities, for example, the stress is just too much and that those individuals,
again, need to be slowly tapered down.
But the general ones that we worry about and have to screen for is alcohol, benzodiazepines, and now concern for opioids.
I would say the other category of individual in which we would not recommend this dopamine fast
or abstinence trial is individuals who have repeatedly tried to stop on their own and been
unable to. That would just be a lesson in frustration. Those are individuals that we
would recommend to a higher level of care like a day treatment program or a residential treatment program.
Also especially with opioid use disorder, opioid addiction, we are finding that some
people even with long periods of abstinence never get out of that state of craving and
really can't move on with their lives, which is why we will prescribe opioids to treat
opioid addiction in some
cases.
And for example, medications like buprenorphine or methadone maintenance are evidence-based
interventions for opioid addiction.
Seems counterintuitive to give a patient with an opioid addiction an opioid, but they're
very unique opioids.
They have a long half-life, which means it gets people out of this repeated cycle of
intoxication, withdrawal, drug seeking, et cetera,
gets them out of that state of craving.
And if you think back to this pleasure pain balance,
we're not getting folks with opioid use disorder high
by giving them opioids,
we're just allowing them to level
their pleasure pain balance,
go back to baseline homeostasis,
which then frees up their energy and creativity
to engage in other aspects of their recovery.
If someone's listening to us now
and by the end of this podcast,
they've become convinced that maybe they're drinking too much
and they'd like to try this dopamine fast.
Do you recommend that they speak
with their doctor before doing it?
Is this something that a person can safely try
if they're aware of what side effects
might prompt medical attention.
We certainly don't want to discourage people from reducing their alcohol intake if that is indeed
problematic, but at the same time, we want to be responsible in how we do that. So,
what advice would you have for somebody listening who's saying, hey, you know what? These three or
four drinks I'm having every single day, I'd be better off without.
I think if the individual has any concern about a serious medically dangerous withdrawal
from alcohol or from benzodiazepines or from opioids,
they should consult a medical specialist.
But the majority of people who use these substances
have taken periods on the order of days
or maybe even weeks when they have stopped.
So they have a pretty good sense of number one, whether they can do it and number two, what kind of
reaction their body will have. So I do think that this is an experiment that most people
can try without medical supervision, especially if they're in a position to either not be
able to afford it or have access to somebody who's trained in addiction medicine.
We have far fewer addiction medicine providers in this country than we have the need to address
the problem.
So I think as an early intervention, it can be a nice experiment even just to see if they
can do it.
Sometimes we think we have some degree of control and then it turns out we don't have
the degree of control that then it turns out we don't have the degree of control
that we thought we had. It's also just a very interesting experiment for those who are not
addictive to get a sense of deep understanding and empathy for the problem of addiction.
Because even just giving up something like online shopping or romance novels or video games or what have you.
And to observe ourselves going through withdrawal can be enlightening. And as you experience with the opioid withdrawal in that medical setting, give you a great deal of empathy and healthy
respect for the phenomenon of addiction. Yeah. Going back to that, the point about
neighborhood again is really, really clear, which is it's
very difficult to kick a habit if you go right back into the environment in which that habit
was rife.
So in the case of this patient, for example, she comes back after four weeks.
It's been a transformative experience in that she's gone through very painful withdrawal.
You prepared her for it by telling her it was going to hurt a lot and that she needed
to sit in the pain effectively.
When she comes back, the anxiety is gone.
One, how do you now help her with this next phase of recovery and how difficult a set
of choices does that person need to make if indeed their social
circle basically fed into that addiction?
I mean, to me, as hard as that four week abstinence program is, it might be what follows that's
actually harder.
Yeah, you're absolutely right.
So if the patient is able to abstain for four weeks, they come back, we ask them how it
went and we kind of make a pros and cons list, we ask them how it went, and we kind
of make a pros and cons list, what was good about not using, what was bad about not using
in those four weeks.
When the patient feels better, and again, about 80% of folks feel better, 20% don't,
and that's also really useful information because it tells us that something else is
driving this and then we explore that.
For this case, the feeling better, we... On the pros side, people
will talk about, I was more productive, I had more time, I was able to be more present,
I felt physically better, I was less anxious, less depressed, slept better, etc., etc. So,
there's really a nice long list of things that they gained from stopping using. And
what I think is so powerful about this intervention
is that the person has their own experience.
I'm no longer in the role of having to persuade them
that not using or using less will make them feel better.
They have experienced it for themselves.
On the cons list, like what was bad about not using,
you already anticipated pretty much the top one,
which is I couldn't hang out with my friends because all my friends use.
And I would really like my friends.
I want to go back to hanging out with them.
So that poses a serious dilemma.
The other major con that people endorse is just simple boredom.
All of a sudden, people are left with lots of time and wondering what to do with it.
But I like to talk a lot with patients about boredom
being kind of the midwife of creativity.
And then we essentially talk about next steps.
And the first time around,
most patients want to go back to using their drug of choice,
but they wanna use differently,
they wanna use in moderation.
So I support them in that goal,
even if I'm thinking to myself, this is a really bad idea, I don't think they're gonna be successful. Why do I support them in that goal, even if I'm thinking to myself, this is a really bad idea. I don't think they're going to be successful. Why do I support them in
that goal? Because again, this is experiential learning. I can talk to the cows come home
until they experience it for themselves. It's not really going to take. But also, I've discovered
that I'm a very bad predictor of who's going to be successful and who isn't. I've had patients
who definitely meet criteria
for alcohol use disorder, serious alcohol addictions, who have been able to go back
to using alcohol in moderation after an extended period of absence.
What fraction do you think fits that description? Again, we'll talk about it through the lens
of chemicals maybe as opposed to just behaviors, but is that a minority of people who are able- Oh, absolutely. It's a small minority. It's a small minority. It's definitely less than
10%, maybe even hovering closer to 1%. So these people are clearly anomalies,
but just out of the curiosity of exploring the end user, what is it about an individual that
allows them on the one hand to have met complete criteria for a
true addiction, whether it be to alcohol or another substance, to go through a period of
detoxification and emerge from that and say, you know what, it's true. I used to drink six drinks
a day and I would black out drink and binge drink and it was ruining my life. DUIs all day long,
like all of the above,
but now I'm gonna become a social drinker.
I'm gonna have a glass of wine with dinner every night.
That's it.
If there's the one in a hundred who can do it,
how are they doing that?
They're doing it with a lot of hard work.
It doesn't come just like that.
It's not like you stay in for a while,
you reset your reward
pathways, you're good to go. In fact, quite the contrary, once we've created those kinds
of addiction circuits, even though we can get them to quiet down, they're very easily
reignited not just by exposure to our drug of choice itself but to reminders of the drug
of choice. So, what I talk a lot with patients about
is the specificity of the plan for how they will consume.
The more specific, the better.
And this is all in the spirit of self-binding strategies.
Self-binding strategies are very, very important
in a world where we're constantly being titillated
and invited to consume and told that that's the good life.
What do I mean by self-binding strategies?
Those are both literal and metacognitive barriers
that we put between ourselves and our drug of choice
so that we can press the pause button
between desire and consumption.
So for a patient with a drinking problem,
that might look like not having any alcohol in the house,
right, a very simple and obvious self-binding strategy.
That might look like pledging to never drink alone,
but only with friends on special occasions,
making sure that I don't now fill my schedule up
with many different special occasions, which happens.
That can look like making sure that I am very cognizant
of how much I'm drinking and keep it to no
more than two standard drinks on any given occasion and track it carefully and write
it down so that I don't get into that state of blurry denial where I can tell myself it
was only one drink when it was really five.
That might even look like taking medications.
So we have medications like naltrexone, which is an opioid receptor
blocker. Alcohol works in part through our endogenous opioid system. And by blocking
the opioid receptor, we essentially make alcohol less reinforcing. So people who will take
naltrexone will say, when I'm taking naltrexone, at least the ones for whom it works, I can
look at a six-pack of beer and I just want to drink two. I don't want to drink the whole
six-pack. I can look at a six pack of beer and I just want to drink two. I don't want to drink the whole six pack.
And that's really a revelation for these people because before, you know, just like, I really
want to drink the whole six pack.
Self-binding strategies can be again, at the literal physical barrier level, it can be
at the chemical barrier level, it can be at a kind of interpersonal accountability level. It can be at a spiritual level, so wanting to live in accordance with one's values or
a greater good and seeing their use or their excessive use as contrary to living according
to those values.
So really getting at it from all different angles.
And people with the most severe addictions ultimately
really need to get a totally different orientation on their lives in the sense that they really
need to inculcate a philosophy about life that allows them to maintain their recovery. And by that I mean like living recovery principles
in all aspects of their lives.
So that's things like telling the truth in all situations.
A lot of people in recovery have taught me
that if they start to lie even about little things
like why they were late for a meeting,
that is a potential for them to tip over and relapse.
So it's a very interesting, it's like a recovery mindset
slash lifestyle slash philosophy.
It has to become bigger than just the substance itself.
One of the things that strikes me as noteworthy
as you describe the effort that would have to go
into dipping your toe back in the water is at least maybe
having the patient consider the cost of that in terms of look, if you really want to go
back to having a couple of drinks here and there, then the systems you have to put in
place to do that as opposed to the systems you might have to put in place to just adhere
to complete abstinence.
Think of the opportunity cost of doing that.
That's a lot of energy that could go into living a fuller life in other ways.
Is it really worth having a couple of drinks a week or whatever it is that you've agreed
to?
Do you ever have that discussion or do you think that that's just up to them to figure
out?
Oh, no, no.
That's a very common discussion. So basically, the typical outcomes
that we see after the dopamine fast or the abstinence trial
is first the abstinence violation effect,
where people say, I'm going to go back
to using moderation.
And immediately, they're plunged into a binge episode,
even worse than what was there before.
And then there's the discussion of, gee, maybe moderation
is really not possible.
Or people who are able to achieve moderation, And then, you know, then there's the discussion of, gee, maybe moderation is really not possible.
Or people who are able to achieve moderation but who ultimately decide it's so effortful
and so much work that it's essentially not worth it.
There's this famous AA lingo, one drink is too many and two is never enough, which kind
of captures that very well.
This idea that stopping at two doesn't actually get me what I'm looking for, but does in fact,
reignite those addiction circuits such that
it's very difficult to stop it too
and I wanna keep drinking.
And those people will often ultimately decide
that abstinence is not only better for them,
but also easier.
Yeah.
Let's talk a little bit about some of these
behavioral addictions as well.
I think of all the stories in your book,
the one that I'm not sure what it is about the character,
but he certainly invites enormous sympathy.
I think his name is Jacob.
Yeah.
Everybody's heard of sex addiction
and sort of has an understanding of what it is,
but it's not necessarily what you describe in Jacob.
His sex addiction is not the one that you
would think of when you're watching a TV show that features someone who's a sex addict.
Maybe tell briefly the story about Jacob and describe the pathology there and what is the
addiction giving him that maybe a gambling addiction wouldn't give a gambler or an alcohol addiction
doesn't give the alcoholic. What was the pleasure he was seeking relative to maybe what I would normally think of as a sex addict
is seeking many partners for example. Ah, interesting. Okay. So there are many
different ways that sex addiction can manifest. Sometimes when people get addicted to sex,
they compulsively seek out partners. But many people addicted to sex now get addicted to sex, they compulsively seek out partners.
But many people addicted to sex now are addicted to pornography and compulsive masturbation.
It's very hard to get numbers on any of this.
But I would say the majority of cases that we see are not in fact people who are having
sex with other people.
They're people who are spending enormous amounts of time looking at pornography, masturbating,
and of course, that's so easy to do now
given the advent of the internet and online pornography.
In the case of my patient, Jacob,
he started out with pornography and compulsive masturbation,
but he is an engineer and ultimately
built a masturbation machine that escalated over time
as his addiction progressed, as addictions will progress,
such that he was ultimately hooking himself up to the internet,
letting strangers in chat rooms manipulate this machine
in a way that was really very dangerous and potentially life-threatening,
which he was fully aware of and yet struggled to stop the behavior. Ultimately,
you know, when the behavior was discovered by his wife, she left him and he considered ending his
life. When people say, oh, you can't really get addicted to sex the way you can with drugs and
alcohol, I would just invite them to be a fly on the wall in the work that we do, we are seeing more and more men of all ilk coming
in with really devastating, what we broadly classify as sex addictions, this is compulsive
masturbation or the pursuit of orgasm in many different ways.
You mentioned this is primarily a male problem. Why do you think that is? Well, I think there's enough evidence to show
that men in aggregate have a higher sex drive than women.
Any teenage boy, the joke about how much of a teenage boy's
brain is occupied with thinking about sex, it's 99%.
I mean, you know, I'm sort of loathe to kind of speculate
too much about that, but it's just the truth.
I mean, that's what we're seeing.
We're not seeing women coming in with sex addictions the way we are as with men.
Occasionally, we'll see that, but it's quite rare.
Although there are data emerging showing that more and more women are consuming pornography.
So what's been interesting to see in the modern era,
the ways in which certain demographic groups that were previously relatively immune to
certain types of addictions, that's no longer the case. So for example, with alcohol use
disorder for generations, the ratio of men to women with an alcohol addiction was five
to one. Thirty years ago, it was two to one. Today among millennials, it's one to one.
We are now seeing young women presenting
with alcohol use disorders pretty much as often
as we see men.
So who knows?
With enough time, it could well be
that this is not necessarily a biological phenomenon
and really just a sociocultural one.
Certainly in part, it's probably sociocultural.
Are men in general more prone to addiction?
Because obviously you've stated now
that men effectively make up all of the,
or most of the patients who suffer
from various forms of sex addiction.
I'm just gonna guess, knowing nothing about it,
that the same is probably true with gambling.
What are the addictions, maybe stated the other way,
where women disproportionately
make up the patients?
The only one that I have seen data for where women outstrip men is for benzodiazepines.
So sedatives like Xanax, Valium, Clonopin.
Okay. So if we take all addictions together, men have a greater problem with addiction
than women, I would guess, just based on the simple fact that in most cases, men outstrip women.
The one sort of new wrinkle there is just social media addiction where we're
seeing more women and girls.
Okay.
So do you think that that fits more into nature, nurture or neighborhood as the
driver?
We have three things.
So I guess it's a combination of all three things, I think.
Very interesting.
So let's go back to maybe some of the things that,
some of the itches that are being scratched
with these different addictions.
So you talk about, I think it's called lost dysphoria.
Is that what you referred to?
Oh, no, no, I'm sorry, lost chasing.
Oh yeah. Is that what the gambler
is looking for? Now, that was a very, I had never thought of that before. Can you explain what that
is and does that phenomenon expand beyond the gambling addiction? Is there an analog to that
in other forms of addiction? So, lost chasing is a phenomenon that's been observed in pathological
gamblers where they will report that when
they are deep in an episode of gambling, they actually want to lose.
And the reason they want to lose is because the losing allows them to justify staying
in the game longer, which is, I think, very revealing because it shows that on some level,
a gambling addiction
isn't really about being addicted to money. It's about being addicted to the pursuit of
money or the game itself or the trance-like state that people can get into when they're
deep in their addictive behaviors, which I would argue applies to every single addiction
under the sun. So, for example, sex addiction is not really about sex. It's
about self-soothing, it's about escape, it's about numbing, it's about relieving tension.
And I would say that that's true for all addictive behaviors. Interestingly, there's been some
work using brain imaging, looking at dopamine levels in pathological gambler's brains compared to healthy control subjects who are gambling.
And what the researchers found is that when pathological gamblers are winning, there will
be an increase in dopamine transmission in the reward pathway and the same will be true
for healthy control subjects.
But the difference comes when they're losing.
When healthy control subjects lose, there's comes when they're losing. When healthy control
subjects lose, there's no increase in dopamine transmission. But pathological gamblers will
actually have an increase in dopamine transmission when they're losing, which maps very nicely
on to this subjective experience of loss chasing. And it looks like the dopamine in a pathological
gambler dopamine is released at the highest level
when the chances of winning and losing are equal. It's that place of uncertainty in the gambling
state that is on some level the most appealing state for the pathological gambler.
Is there just from a population prevalence standpoint, you've already alluded to the
fact that addictions to social media are probably really, really on the rise for the obvious reason
that didn't exist 20 years ago. We certainly know from an availability, i.e., neighborhood access
phenomenon that opioid addiction is clearly on the rise. I would assume that marijuana is also on the
rise for the same reason.
Is that a fair assumption?
I haven't looked at the latest data.
So certainly overall in the last 20 years,
Americans are using a lot more cannabis
than they were previously,
and they're using more potent forms of cannabis.
And what we're seeing in particular
is that there's a subset of individuals who use cannabis who are using very, very large quantities. So
a generation ago, 20, 30 years ago, people who used cannabis were still mostly using
it recreationally on the weekends with friends. Now what we're seeing is a very hardcore group
of individuals who use cannabis every day, all day, dabbing, highly
potent forms, vaping, getting very high levels in their brain.
So these are the kinds of trends.
In other words, the increased access is going to harm a subset of the most vulnerable individuals
who will be most likely to use it in very potent forms
in very large amounts.
Which really raises kind of a challenging societal question,
which is, do you punish all of the people
for whom the increased access
has potentially made life better,
both in terms of the actual use of the drug,
and certainly the decriminalization of it,
which has probably made many lives better,
but it's clearly made some lives worse.
And I'm glad I'm not the person responsible
for making those decisions
because those are very difficult decisions.
I don't know how one makes a decision
if you're trying to put the good of society
at the top of the priority list
when there are these conflicting outcomes.
What about other things like, well, I guess you've alluded to the fact that it sounds
like sex addiction is also on the rise.
Very hard to get numbers on sex addiction, but I can tell you based on 25 years of clinical
practice, it's on the rise, at least in terms of help seeking individuals.
My sense is that since the advent of the internet, especially
with the smartphone, which makes online pornography and chat rooms, et cetera, so easy to access
dating apps, I would put in the category of sex addiction. I think that we are dealing
with an enormous problem in ever younger age groups. And that what we see is really just the tip of an iceberg
of kind of a rampant compulsive consumption
of pornography among men and boys.
I wanna come right back to that,
but just to close the loop on this,
what about gambling, benzos, cocaine,
things of that nature?
Where is the trajectory and trend line on those things?
So with gambling- I assume online gambling is just another thing that's-
Right. The online sports betting, as you know, has now become legal in many different states.
And in the states where it has become legal, we've seen a 300 to 500% increase in calls to
pathological gambling hotlines, which is just one metric.
Again, these are difficult to get numbers on these, but it does suggest that the old
bugaboo of increased access leading to increased harms in the subset of the populations raising,
as you point out, very difficult policy questions. Do we as a society have a responsibility to
protect those vulnerable individuals? And how do we do that? And do we as a society have a responsibility to protect those vulnerable individuals and
how do we do that?
And do we do it at the expense of individuals who maybe can use those substances and behaviors
recreationally without too much harm?
So online sports betting is on the rise and just the portability of these devices, the
ability to place a bet without a mediator anywhere, anytime has really
created very difficult situation for individuals who are vulnerable to pathological gambling.
In terms of cocaine and meth...
Methamphetamine, yeah, benzos.
Yeah.
We're seeing a rise in recent years in addictive use and harmful use of cocaine and methamphetamine.
And it's hard to know exactly why that is or where it's coming from.
Again, accessibility may be partially related to decreased access in recent years to prescription
opioids, people switching the stimulants or finding that when they combine a stimulant
with an opioid, they can overcome tolerance and get more of a high.
So these are all the trends.
Overall, if you look at like all drugs of abuse, what we're seeing is a gradual, I'm
not even gradual in some cases, what almost appears an exponential rise in drug overdose
deaths. And I would attribute that again to sort of ubiquitous access. There's probably
no corner of the world anymore that you can go to where you
can't get drugs. I mean, this is a little bit depressing, Anna, because I didn't hear you say
that anything is going down. In other words, you can't even argue that the increase in some
of these addictions is due to the substitution effect of some things are going down. Well,
we're just – there's so much less alcohol abuse today and that's why some of it is
shifting over to this. I'm just hearing that on mass everything is – in aggregate at least,
it's just going up. In other words, in 1980, the percentage of the population that had an addiction
was X and today it's 3X. I'm making that up, but you get the point. Is that assessment shared by
both the data and your clinical experience?
The data show that for example cigarette use has gone down in the last 20 to 30 years
And that you do get a kind of a whack-a-mole effect, you know as prescription opioids became less available
illicit fentanyl came in to replace it
So it's not that everything is going up
We are seeing some trends, but on the
other hand, as cigarette use went down. Yes, e-cigs go up. Yeah.
Right. The point I try to make in dopamine nation is that I do think that we are living in
a drugified world where we all have more access to highly reinforcing substances and behaviors, and that even so-called healthy
behaviors like exercise and playing chess and reading novels have been made addictive
through the advent of the internet and social media and all the comparisons and what have
you.
We've really fine-tuned our understanding of how to get people hooked on just about anything,
which you could argue is a natural byproduct of a successful capitalist system.
In the most successful capitalist system, we would all be addicts.
Addicts are the ultimate consumers.
I'm not arguing for a system other than capitalism, but I am suggesting that this is problematic
and that we've reached some kind of tipping point where
if we don't put some guardrails and measures in place to guard against this extreme version
of consumption, we are all of us liable to suffer the harms of addictive behaviors.
Okay. I want to go back to what you talked about with respect to porn and young kids,
young boys in particular. Anybody listening to this who has young boys
is probably aware of and concerned about this.
I always think Bill Maher does the best job
talking about this.
He says, look, for people of our generation,
pornography was like finding a raggedy old
Playboy magazine in the woods.
And there's no question that you were obsessed
with looking at that, but it didn't warp your
sense of sex. It didn't pervert you to the point of potential pathology. And yet today,
anything on your smartphone can basically do just that. Is there an argument to be made that the
impact of that is differentially worse in a prepubescent slash impuberty brain than it is in an adult?
Is there a difference in the impact? What are the data on that? Then ultimately, what I'm really
asking is what can parents do to educate their kids? Because I think it has to come down on
some level to education. If you think about this through the lens of alcohol,
what a parent says and does probably matters more
in terms of modeling, I would hope,
than just a draconian rule set.
So tackle those questions in any order you see fit.
Basically, what is a parent to do in this day and age
to try to raise boys in particular
to be sexually healthy people when they get older.
Okay, great.
So let me start at the beginning
of your series of questions.
So first of all, one of the things
that's been very interesting to me
in treating patients with sex addiction
is to see how tolerance manifests.
Many of these individuals start out with kind of run of
the mill legal types of engagement with pornography or what have you.
But over time, as their brain adapts to those rewards, they develop tolerance, they need
more potent forms to get the same effect.
And they find themselves a year, two years, five, 10 years later, then engaging in highly deviant or violent or pedophilic
pornography or engaging with sex workers, illegal activities. And so, I think that is
important because when we're trying to distinguish like a paraphilia from a sex addiction, I
think many psychiatrists are not recognizing that the way that that person presents at
sort of their end-stage sex addiction might really be 100% due to tolerance.
And if you can get them out of that addiction cycle, their preference for this illegal activity
really might not be there.
In terms of the developing brain, we do believe that children and adolescents are more vulnerable to these highly reinforcing
stimuli and that the earlier that folks are exposed, the more likely they are to develop
an addictive process. We base that on analogy with substances because we know that the earlier
that kids start using substances, the more likely they are to develop a substance use disorder in their lives.
We speculate that that is because adolescents still are developing the connectivity between
the frontal lobe and those deep limbic structures, the emotion part of the brain, and that adolescence
is characterized by a period of pruning where the brain essentially cuts back on those neuronal
circuits and dendrites and axons that are being used least often and myelinates those
circuits that are used most often. Myelination is what makes the conductivity faster and
more efficient such that by the time we're about age 25, we've essentially created the
neurological scaffolding
that will serve us for our adult lives.
So that means if young people are engaging in maladaptive coping strategies and strengthening
those circuits, it's not impossible, but it's harder to change once they reach 25 or early
adulthood.
So the key for parents to realize is that while they still have some
modicum of control over how their children and adolescents are engaging with the internet,
I recommend that they exercise that control to limit access as well as educating and having
open discussions about the potential harm there. What is the potential harm? Again, these images are highly reinforcing.
We were wired to find mates and partner
and that's what allows us to propagate the species,
which is how we've been able to survive.
But what pornography essentially does
is it hijacks these reward pathways
with very potent images that are made
all the more reinforcing by the fact that the individual can control them in the moment. So with very little work that is required
in real relationships, they can now just go right to the money, so to speak, or the reinforcing
aspect plus orgasm is the release of bunch of neurotransmitters all at once, which feels
really good for many people.
I want to highlight that not every boy or man
is actually drawn to pornography or sex.
Again, we have this inter-individual variability,
but for boys and men for whom that is a potent reinforcer,
it is the medium itself of the internet,
the easy access, the potency, even dating apps.
The idea of dating apps is that we're gonna be matched
with a partner, but what can happen is people get
just addicted to the match, the confetti of the match,
and then they wanna have the pursuit and the match again,
and it's not even necessarily leading
to any kind of intimacy beyond that,
or if it is, it's just leading to hookups,
which are about the sex.
So for parents out there, really recommend that a child under 13
not have unsupervised access to the internet.
If they must have some kind of phone device,
have it be a light phone or a flip phone.
And then once they get to the point
where they do have data and access to the internet,
have a lot of open discussions about pornography.
And they can be really, really awkward discussions.
I'm a mother to two boys and both of my sons.
We have tried to have open,
quite awkward discussions about pornography.
Tell me about that because it's been really easy
to have discussions with our daughter
about illicit drug use
because it's a biochemistry discussion and the risk is really obvious.
In other words, I had a guy by the name of Anthony Hippolito on the podcast who's a local
sheriff here in the Austin area whose work focuses entirely around fentanyl toxicity
and fentanyl-laced drugs.
There are kids all over here that are dropping dead from laced Ambien, laced Xanax, cocaine,
whatever the drug is that seems to be spiked with fentanyl. Having the discussion with our
daughter about that is really quite easy. What are your coaching points for, and I'm asking this
honestly for myself just as much as the listeners, right? My boys are pretty young,
seven and 10. That's going to be a discussion to have soon. Well, how are you making the case to a 13-year-old
or 14-year-old that, hey, you're gonna be over
at your friend's house one day,
and you're gonna be playing sports,
and all of a sudden, he's gonna say,
hey, come and look at this,
because maybe in their household,
it's not gonna be as policed as it is in our household.
What's the case you're making?
So this is where I really encourage parents to try as much as possible to just be curious.
One metaphor I heard once, which I thought was really good is pretend like you're a journalist
and you're just trying to get the story.
Just ask them, you know, what did you think about that?
It's very easy as a parent to get dysregulated in even speaking about these things or imagining
our child engaging with these images, but it is the reality.
So we have to go there.
What did you think about that?
Is that something that you have started using yourself to masturbate or get as an escape
or release?
How is that working for you?
How do you feel afterward? I think really
zeroing in on how do you feel afterward can be very instructive because usually there's
a pretty hard come down as well as a feeling of like, wow, that didn't actually do for
me what I was hoping that it did and I kind of am feeling bad about that experience. So
again, this gets into the whole quagmire
of sexual liberation and this argument,
nothing's wrong with pornography,
nothing's wrong with masturbation, you know.
So people are gonna come to this
with different value systems and I respect that.
But all I can tell you is that.
What do the data say?
I think we can put our feelings aside for a moment.
I think the real question here is, are there data to tell us that one approach is healthier than the other? Then
obviously, what are the clinical anecdotes that probably are more valuable than just
our built-in beliefs?
The data that we have is that men and boys, and actually women now too, are spending a
lot more time consuming pornography.
And young people in particular are much less likely to go out and actually have sex with
other people and be in relationship.
Now whether or not those things are causative or correlative, we don't know.
But we could certainly make an argument that all the time that men and boys are spending
engaging in pornography is actually becoming a
substitution for real-life engagement, either with their spouses or partners or other people
that they might meet. And in clinical care, what we see with behavioral addictions, including sex
addiction, is that the phenomenology is identical to drug and alcohol addiction. People start out
for fun or to solve a problem if it works for them, they repeat that behavior, they go back
again and again. Over time, it tends to work less well. They need more potent forms or
larger quantities to get the same effect. And then at some point in severe cases, they're
marshaling all their available resources in order to do that activity or consume that drug.
So this is a very new problem.
We don't have a lot of good data.
People are not rushing forward saying, I have a sex addiction, let me tell you all about
it.
In fact, it's very common in clinical care that we'll have a man come in and say in the
first one to two to three visits that he's here for some reason
that's not really the reason that he brought him in.
He's really here for a sex addiction,
but it's so difficult for him to talk about that.
So, you know, this is like highly stigmatized
because at the same time that we have this incredible access
to pornography, we also have a culture and a climate
in which men and boys are really
seen as sexual predators. So it's a very potentially uncertain and dangerous environment for them
to be trying to cultivate in real life relationships, right? It's a risky environment.
And so all of that, I think, is contributing to this kind of retreat from engagement and instead a kind of a self soothing through this medium.
Let's talk about sort of a very near cousin of that which you've already alluded to, which is social media.
Now this is the forefront of everybody's attention right now.
There's a book out about this by Jonathan Haidt that talks a lot about this.
I had dinner with Jonathan several months ago
before the book came out and it was wonderful
to sit down with him and have this discussion
about everything and I posed a question to him
that I don't wanna speak for him,
but I think it's safe to say he didn't really
have a great answer for, but I think it is
the jugular question and it's interesting
that since the book has come out,
there have been folks in the medical establishment that have come out and argued the opposite side of his.
The question I posed to Jonathan was, Jonathan, it's very clear here that the correlation
between social media and declining mental health amongst young people in particular
is overwhelming.
But I said, how compelling are the data and what would need to be done to
demonstrate causality? Because if you have causality, it becomes much easier to have a
discussion about policy and action. So once causality could be unambiguously established
for tobacco use and cancer, which really occurred in the late 60s. By the way,
it didn't occur through RCTs, right? It occurred through a very careful application of the Bradford
Hill criteria coupled with some mechanistic and animal research. Obviously, no one could do the
RCT to demonstrate the harm of tobacco with respect to cancer. Nevertheless, once causality was established, the die was
cast for the monotonic decrease in tobacco consumption that has occurred over the last
50 years. When causality is missing, it becomes very difficult to make the case for it.
I've read all these arguments and again, these are the minority arguments to be clear. I think the majority of people believe that if they're even thinking of it
that way, they believe there is causality. But the minority argument is, look, there
are a lot of reasons that young people are too anxious today. Social media might be one
of them, but it's far from the only one. These people would argue that we've catastrophized
everything in the world. We've got every young person thinks that by 2030,
the climate is going to have eroded to the point where the world will be
uninhabitable, even though of course that's not true. But nevertheless,
that there are enough people who have catastrophized so many things in terms of
the future of this planet, that maybe that's part of the reason. And anyway,
they just go on and on and on.
So I guess my question for you as a person who I know thinks about this deeply is, do you think
we have causal evidence that will pin what seems intuitive to many of us, which is social media
probably is a net negative, it has some benefits, but it's got a lot of negatives,
at least for a vulnerable population.
Or do we think that we just haven't got that causal bullet and that really we're looking
at two things that have gone up over the same period of time that are correlated, but getting
rid of social media is not going to fix the mental health of young people?
So sorry for the long question, but how do you think about that?
Well, I'll start at the end. I don't think anybody who thinks there's a causal harm from
social media thinks that we should get rid of social media. That anyway is an impossibility.
I think what we're talking about is guardrails.
I should just be clear there. And Jonathan doesn't think that either. I think Jonathan's
argument is maybe people should not be using social media while they're young. But anyway, yes, I just wanted to make sure I wasn't putting words in anybody's mouth on that
front. Great. Yeah. So, I mean, let's look at the different types of evidence. One of the most
important types of evidence in medicine is empirical evidence. This is observation and subjective experience. And we have plenty of empirical evidence to show that young people, I'm gonna focus on
young people because when you think about a policy intervention, I really think we're
thinking about how to direct that to young people.
That young people endorse that they feel addicted to social media, not all, but many,
and that they use it more than they would like
and that it's adversely affecting their mental health.
That is a powerful piece of evidence.
Now you could say there's cultural stimulation
or stimulated reporting, sure,
but we have loads of young people now who are endorsing that.
We also have a lot of observational evidence
that is showing many of the Bradford Hill criteria, starting with a dose-dependent response.
We know that the more time that people spend on social media, the more likely they are
to experience anxiety, depression, insomnia, inattention, et cetera. Now you could argue, well, chicken in the egg.
Maybe those were individuals who were vulnerable or already had depression, anxiety, which
made them want to self-medicate by using more social media.
But I think the strongest evidence against that is the evidence that we have on another
Bradford-Herald criteria, which is experimentation.
When we intervene in these cases of depressed and anxious
individuals and take social media away for a period of time or even limit use,
people are feeling less depressed and anxious. And that is a very powerful piece of evidence to me,
but not even the only one. Other Bradford Hill criteria, you have biological plausibility.
Does it even make biological
sense that engaging with social media can change the brain in ways that are potentially
harmful and beneficial? Sure. That's the organ that we're using to consume social media.
So it's completely biologically plausible. We also know that when people are doing activities
that engage in, for example, social validation that releases
dopamine in the brain's reward pathway.
And what is social media if not a slot machine for validation?
You have strength of association.
So yes, these are correlative phenomenon, but study after study after studies showing
similar findings.
Yes, there are exceptions, but in general, powerful studies that we have are showing
the strength of association.
And then you have temporality.
Now, temporality is hard to get, meaning that which one comes first?
Are people using social media a lot and then get depressed and anxious, depressed and anxious,
and then using social media?
And of course, our natural retrospective scope will want to rationalize and explain certain
irrational behaviors.
But I mean, we can often get pretty good reports of temporality subjectively in an individual
clinical case, but also epidemiologically.
And this is Jonathan Haidt's work.
He's saying, look, if you look at when, for example, social media became widely available
on college campuses, it didn't happen uniformly.
Some college campuses got social media up and running much earlier than others.
And you see on those campuses where it was widely available and used, worse mental health
outcomes.
To me, the weight of the evidence makes it more likely than not that social media is
causing mental health harms, especially in youth.
And so earlier you asked me, what can parents do? Because to me, pornography, that begins to fit into social media as well.
What can parents do? I don't think it should be solely up to parents. Parents need help.
Schools need to get smartphones out of the schools so that adolescents can actually have
the liberty and freedom to concentrate on learning because these devices,
the way that they hijack the reward system, make it almost impossible for children to
learn and almost impossible for teachers to teach.
You analogize to alcohol.
We have lots of laws that limit a child's access to alcohol.
We have federal funding for highways that are tied to drinking age limits in those
states. The age of 21 is universal in every state now. Why? Because people wanted those
dollars to build their highways. We should be doing that. We should be offering federal
and state funding to schools that actually make sure that from the top down, kids are
not looking at their smartphones
and that they have some tech-free spaces and some opportunities for both socializing and
learning that don't rely on the internet and rely on technology.
What are we hearing from schools, mostly private schools that are eliminating smartphones,
that the schools are noisy again because kids are actually interacting with each other. So lots and lots of empirical evidence that that's also, yes, consistent with our intuition that, gee
whiz, there's a problem here, we need to do something about it, which isn't the same thing
as saying social media is bad and nobody should be on social media and it's all evil and it's
the devil and that's what people said about TV and that's what they said about radio.
This is on a very different scale.
The way that the algorithms learn what we've done before, making these media so potently
addictive.
We only have to walk through an airport to see the ways in which we've all stopped engaging
with our surroundings.
I want to talk about something we haven't talked about yet, but that gets often lumped
in the category of addiction, which is exercise.
So maybe let's start with the brain chemistry of exercise.
I think people have heard the term endorphins, but what exactly is an endorphin?
Is that an irrelevant topic here?
And is this really boiled down to dopamine again?
I would say yes and yes.
So endorphin is an endogenous opioid. We make our own opioids.
Thank God we do. Otherwise we wouldn't be able to cope with physical pain. Exercise is actually
immediately toxic to cells. Strange. Why would something that is toxic to cells be ultimately
healthy for us? And the evidence is overwhelming that exercise in moderation, depending upon that person's
fitness level, is healthy.
Essentially what's happening is that as the body senses injury, we upregulate production
of our own feel-good neurotransmitters like dopamine, but also serotonin, norepinephrine,
endogenous opioids.
That's the runner's high.
If you look back at this metaphor of the pleasure-pain balance, we saw that when we press on the
pleasure side, the gremlins of a neuro adaptation hop on the pain side as a way to bring us
in balance ultimately again.
The same thing happens with painful stimuli.
When we do things intentionally that are physically or mentally challenging for us, our body senses
injury upregulates feel-good neurotransmitters, and those gremlins
actually go over and hop on the pleasure side.
So we get our dopamine indirectly by paying for it upfront.
And you see this, for example, with studies that have looked at ice-cold water immersion,
noting that dopamine levels rise gradually over the latter half of the immersive ice-cold
water bath.
And then interestingly, those dopamine levels and serotonin and norepinephrine stay elevated
for hours afterwards before going back down to the baseline levels of dopamine firing,
which is amazing because what that says is we never go into that dopamine deficit state.
We get our dopamine indirectly by paying for it upfront.
And that process is relatively more immune
to the problem of addiction
because we had to work first to get it.
Whereas intoxicants cause that sudden upward spike
of dopamine, followed by dopamine freefall,
that dopamine deficit state,
that state of craving before going back
to the level position.
Now, are there certain personalities
that can get addicted to exercise?
Absolutely.
We do see this in clinical care and I think we also see it again just in our culture.
We've also drugified exercise, made it more potent, made it possible to do it in more
extreme conditions.
We've social-mediified it so that now people are comparing themselves not just to their
immediate neighbor but to people all over the world.
We've quantified it down to the nth degree.
We're constantly measuring ourselves, our heartbeats, our breathing, our sleep.
Many people actually get kind of addicted to those numbers or quantifications.
Now they're pursuing a certain numerical outcome.
Dopamine is probably ultimately quite sensitive to numerification.
When we intervene for an exercise addiction, we intervene similar to the way that we intervene
for other addictions. We ask people to abstain from that particular exercise for a period of time,
try to reset reward pathways. And then when they go back to using, using in a way that's not
harmful or self or other destructive.
This idea, by the way, that both exercise and cold are for the most part healthy ways
to experience pleasure because the pain comes first and you have to do the work to get the
pain to experience the pleasure.
I think it's safe to say that that's probably how the majority of people would experience
that. You do write about a fellow in your book who
maybe took the cold plunge thing a little too extreme,
but I would argue in his context
it might have been the lesser of two evils because ultimately this became I think a more well adapted
coping mechanism to an otherwise maladaptive addiction. Would you say that's fair?
coping mechanism to an otherwise maladaptive addiction. Would you say that's fair?
I do, I agree with you.
So this was an individual addicted to alcohol and cocaine
who got into recovery, experienced a lot of dysphoria,
and discovered that taking an ice cold shower
in the morning that was recommended to him
by a trainer or a coach actually made him high.
It gave him the kind of response that he often got from drugs.
So he began doing daily ice cold showers and then over time got himself a cooler and would
submersed himself in ever colder temperatures and then got a motor to circulate the water.
So he was breaking the ice off in the morning. At some point kind of realized, oh, wait a
minute, I think my tendency to take things to extreme may be operating here.
But yes, absolutely, I agree with you.
Ultimately, this was a healthy coping strategy, which really speaks to what is a healthy coping
strategy.
It's something that we also do with other people.
So we started doing it with his family, with social groups.
People would come over for ice cold water bath parties, you know, much better than having
people over to snort some lines or whatever the case may be.
So yes, and we have lots of patients who, when they get into recovery from drugs and
alcohol will often discover sports and endurance athletes in order so that they can still have
that striving and that goal and the endorphins.
We just have to make sure they don't continue to do it to the
point of personal injury. I discovered something several years ago, which was if I took an ice
cold shower when I was very upset, angry, the mood would reverse quite quickly and I attributed that
to stimulation of the vagus nerve. My head had to be immersed in cold water.
It could have even presumably been dipping my head in a cold water, sort of stimulating
the dive reflex.
But like others who enjoy cold plunging, which I do very, very much, I would completely share
that experience.
It is a absolutely mood lifting experience.
When people ask me, which I get asked as you can imagine all the time, is cold plunging kind of an elixir of longevity? Having
looked at the data very carefully, I can say that the answer appears unlikely. I
see no evidence that cold immersion alters any of the hallmarks of aging,
with the one possible exception being a reduction in inflammation.
But that's never translated to a clinical benefit vis a vis disease in the way that I do think that there is benefit to sauna.
So I do think if you look at the sauna literature and run that same Bradford
Hill criteria, along with the experimental data, which are included,
there really is probably causality between the benefits of sauna and disease
prevention. So again,
I don't see that with cold, but my use of it personally just stems from the mood elevation.
Believing that it has no benefit on my ability to reduce the risk of cancer,
heart disease or dementia, just the mood elevation alone for me seems to be reason enough. So,
I enjoyed the story of that gentleman. Yeah, that's interesting. I didn't know that about the data with sauna or even longevity
relationship with ice cold water plunges. But in terms of a mood modulator and a replacement
behavior, because I do think that ultimately we are strivers. We want to experience intense emotions and it's not that we can just
sort of not have goals and not have emotions. We want that kind of intensity
and certainly many of my patients have reported similar types of positive
responses to ice-cold water plunges. Which by the way I don't notice with
sauna. So with extreme heat, which I also
enjoy greatly, it's a different sensation. I'm curious, do you think that there's something
about cold that produces more pain? I mean, I guess it does feel much more painful.
Is it simply come down to the pain? I don't think we know. I do think that the immediate response
is going to be some kind of hormetic response, hormesis being this
Greek term that means to set in motion, setting into motion our own regulatory healing response
in response to injury.
And the branch of science called hormesis is looking at the ways in which toxic or noxious
stimuli actually makes us more resilient over the long run.
So yes, I think that it's an immediate or immediate response.
And let me just say, we see this being beneficial, not just in people struggling with addiction
or looking for alternative sources of dopamine, but also when people get immediately dysregulated.
So you noted that when you get angry, it's helpful.
So when we have patients who are very dysregulated, overwhelmed by their emotions, can't re-regulate,
we say stick your face in a nice cold water bath, plunge your hands in a nice cold water bath.
And it really, really works for some people.
There's also interesting work looking at cold more broadly and what it does to neurons.
And it turns out that cold is one of the most potent stimuli for neurogenesis.
So very interesting looking at like mice brains
after exposing the mouse to extreme cold
or the effect of hibernation in extreme cold
and finding that cold initially causes a sort of
not neuronal death, but if you look at the brain slices,
it looks almost like these dendritic,
tree-like neuronal structures sort of die out, you know, in response to cold. But then
very quickly afterwards, you get a spring-like regrowth, an amazing neurogenesis. So who
knows? Maybe the repetitive use of cold on some level is causing or facilitating human
neurogenesis as well. I don't know.
I would love though to see more broadly
in the field of neuroscience, people look at this concept of drug of choice because it's so
interesting. Cold, for example, does absolutely nothing for me. I don't enjoy the experience,
but I also don't get benefit afterward. I sure wish I did because it's a nice, easily accessible
kind of a tool.
But for many people, including you, it's very potent and that's great.
You write about a very famous experiment that I'm sure everyone listening to this has heard,
which is the marshmallow experiment.
And most of us who are parents did the marshmallow experiment on our kids with the real hope
that they would be able to refrain from eating the marshmallow because of how we believe it might predict better success later in
life. But you also write about a revised version of that experiment which I think
is actually a little more interesting. Do you mind just explaining both the
original for those who might not be familiar with it and also of course the
revised version and above all else what it is that that tells us about being parents.
The original marshmallow experiment
was conducted at Stanford,
and it looked at kids between about the age of two and five.
The child was placed in a room
with nothing in the room except for a table, a chair,
a little plate, and on that plate, a single marshmallow.
And the researcher said to the child,
I'm going to leave the room and I'll be back in 15 minutes.
If you can go the whole 15 minutes
without eating this marshmallow, when I come back,
I will give you a second marshmallow so you'll get two.
And the whole point of it was to really measure
delayed gratification and a child's ability
to delay gratification.
The most significant
finding was very simply that older children were better able to delay gratification than
younger children. So that this is a skill or a capacity that children will develop with
age. But even within a single age cohort, there were differences. Some children were
better able than others
to wait the full 15 minutes or just wait longer before eating that first marshmallow. And
what they then did, and this part of the study is a little bit controversial, but what they
then did was followed those kids prospectively, some cases all the way through college and
later and sort of looked at their life outcomes. And the claim was that the kids who within their age cohort were able to wait longer
for the marshmallow, i.e. delayed gratification, were also more likely to graduate high school,
graduate college, and go on to have successful lives, so to speak.
So the variance on the marshmallow experiment that I learned about in my researching for
this book was that they decided to do
another version in which they divided the groups of kids into two groups.
And in addition to the plate and the marshmallow, there was also a bell that they could ring.
And they told one group, if at any point in these 15 minutes you'd like me to return for
any reason, just ring this bell and I'll come back."
So they told that to both of those groups. But in one group, when the child rang the bell,
the researcher came back. And in the other group, when the child rang the bell, the researcher didn't
come back until the full 15 minutes were over. So in other words, one group of children was told
the truth and another group of children was lied to. What they discovered was that the children who were lied to were much more likely to eat that marshmallow before the
full 15 minutes were up. To me, it's such a powerful paradigm for the importance of
truth-telling, not only to teach our kids the importance of telling the truth, but to
model that for our kids and actually be truthful and show up when we said we were going to show up. Because it looks like what happens when we're living in an environment
where people cannot rely on other people around them, especially adult caregivers, to do what
they said they were gonna do that we essentially go into a kind of survival mode where we just
feel like nobody's gonna take care of me, I gotta take care of myself,
I better eat this marshmallow now because if they're not gonna come back in the room,
maybe they're also not gonna bring me a second marshmallow if I wait the full 15 minutes.
And that can really breed within a family dynamic, a very toxic interpersonal family
system that I think does increase the risk of addictive behaviors later on
because what we'll often see in patients with severe addiction is not only that they had a
parent or caregiver who was addicted but that they lived in a house where lying was rampant,
where people almost never showed up. When they said they were gonna show up, never did what they
said they were going to do. So it's very interesting to me how something like telling the truth can be such a powerful
shaper of repetitive control. Speaking of repetitive control, you note how individuals
who have had gastric bypass while quite successful in curbing appetite and ultimately food consumption and therefore being a great tool for managing
obesity and type 2 diabetes are
Prone to higher rates of alcoholism. Can you say a little bit more about that?
And ultimately what I want to really talk about is this new class of drugs that have been introduced
GLP-1 agonist, but let's just set the stage on the gastric bypasses
GLP-1 agonist, but let's just set the stage on the gastric bypasses. So about a quarter of individuals undergoing gastric bypass for obesity, which you might
conceptualize as food addiction in certain vulnerable individuals will go on to develop
an alcohol use disorder after their gastric bypass. And that's probably operating on multiple levels.
One level on which it's operating is that alcohol becomes
immediately a much more potent drug for them because through the gastric bypass, they essentially
have a kind of a dumping syndrome where they get the equivalent of many more drinks because
it immediately goes into the duodenum and is absorbed. So they get where they can have
one drink and immediately feel their effects.
And part of potency is not just how much dopamine it's released, but how quickly it's released,
which is why, for example, injecting is so potentially addictive because it's basically
right to the brain.
So, alcohol becomes a very potent drug for them, but also because of the problem of cross-addiction
where when people give up one addictive
substance or behavior, they are vulnerable to switch that addictive tendency over to another
substance or behavior. And so unless we're directly addressing the problem of the behavioral
addiction itself at the same time that we're addressing the obesity and doing the bypass
surgery, folks are going to be vulnerable to that. What has been your experience clinically with the significant increase we've seen in the use of
GLP-1 agonists and the expansion in use from type 2 diabetes to obesity to overweight to
basically anybody? On the one hand, there have been a lot of reports that
GLP-1 agonist not only curb appetite, which is the desired outcome, but may in fact also curb desire
and maybe even pleasure. That would actually suggest that unlike a gastric bypass, an individual
who uses a GLP-1 agonist to achieve their weight loss goals might also have another
benefit in that it might curb other maladaptive behaviors such as alcohol consumption.
So curious as to what you've seen is the field is still quite nascent in our understanding,
but obviously you're probably the canary in the coal mine for some of these things.
Yeah.
So I mean, these are really fascinating drugs.
And what we are seeing clinically is individuals with food addiction and individuals with alcohol
addiction, alcohol use disorder, which by the way is closely linked to food addiction
because alcohol is caloric.
So we've got both mediated through the carbohydrate system. Individuals, at least in the cases where we have
experimented off-label with semaglutide, the GLP-1 drugs, these individuals have tried almost
everything to get their addiction under control. And I would say more, we have more experience with
treatment refractory alcohol use disorder, including trying medications,
medications like Baclofen, medications like Naltrexone.
I didn't know about Baclofen.
So tell me Baclofen, the muscle relaxant is used to treat alcohol disorder?
Yeah.
So there are more placebo controlled trials in Europe than here in the US.
It's not FDA approved for that indication.
It's not first line for us, but we will sometimes use Baclofen.
Sometimes we'll use Gabapentin.
What doses of Baclofen and Gabapentin
are necessary to produce that effect?
Well, Gabapentin, we usually,
I will say I'm using less Gabapentin than I used to
because we've been seeing people
actually get physically dependent,
in some cases addicted to Gabapentin. But typically, we'll use the 600 milligrams three times a day to help
people withdraw from alcohol and in some cases, maintenance, although less of that.
I don't use baclofen often enough to tell you what the dose is. I have to look it up.
I would say more often, we're using naltrexone, the opioid receptor blocker,
which can be very nice because many people's goal is moderation, not just abstinence. And naltrexone, the opioid receptor blocker, which can be very nice because many people's goal
is moderation, not just abstinence,
and naltrexone's been shown to help not just
with abstinence but also reducing drinks on drinking days.
So that's very nice.
We use that almost as first line.
We use Antibus, disulfiram,
which is the one that's a deterrent.
If you drink on it, you'll get sick.
People don't usually like to go to that first line,
but it works when people take it.
It should be pointed out that if patients do use that
and drink through it, they are actually increasing
the toxicity of alcohol gram for gram
because they're experiencing more acetaldehyde,
which is the, obviously the toxic mediator.
Yes, exactly.
So you really have to be careful who you prescribe it to
and it has to be somebody who can really be committed to not drinking once they've taken that medication. We also
use topiramate, which is a seizure medication, which was first discovered off label to be
helpful for binge eating disorder and later was shown to be helpful for alcohol use disorder.
But the bottom line is when we have a case of a patient who has tried these various medications,
who's been involved in alcohol exonomists, who's tried psychotherapy, who's gone to rehab,
who's done it all, in that rare instance, because it is off-label and because it's so
new and so we're conservative with medications, we have occasionally recommended semaglutide
or the GLP-1 drugs.
And in one case in particular,
it was very striking the extent to which this individual
with treatment refractory alcohol use disorder
endorsed the complete cessation of alcohol craving
with semaglutide.
And it's very moving to see that in an individual who has struggled so long and so hard
to battle their addiction. And then there's this drug that seems to just suddenly turn off all the
noise for them. Was that patient at all overweight? Yes. And so that's how we could justify it.
We were giving it to him for being overweight, for not having type 2 diabetes, but being
at risk for type 2 diabetes.
But our real agenda was the alcohol, and it worked very well for that.
Do you think that we'll ever be able to explore in a rigorous scientific way the question
of whether or not independent
of weight, GLP-1 agonists might be tools to help people with addictions more broadly,
beginning with alcohol even, before we talk about other substances?
Oh yeah.
Those small trials are already underway and showing some effect.
I would not be at all surprised if in five to 10 years,
semaglutide is FDA approved for alcohol use disorder.
It might not happen because the company doesn't need it.
I mean, it's expensive to get those FDA approvals
and there's no shortage of demand for semaglutide.
So they may never pursue that FDA indication,
but I think that it will be used more and more often
for alcohol use disorder in particular
and binge eating disorder.
And I think you do the best job I've ever encountered
of describing 12 step programs,
which I think people tend to have very polarizing views of.
So you've got people who view these things
as the best things in the world.
Everybody should be in a 12-step program, even if they've got just the mildest inclination
towards addiction.
Then you've got another group of people who say, it's a cult, it should never be a part
of addiction recovery.
You very eloquently, I think, describe both sides of this and I think land in a very reasonable position,
which is actually quite favorable for a given individual and maybe not for all individuals.
Do you mind just saying a little bit about that because I know that there are many 12-step
programs out there. I've been to many meetings myself and have actually always found them to
be remarkable, even when the topic at hand is not something that I particularly
share the addiction for, but where I've always found it amazing is in the sharing and in
the something that you described as the pro-social shame.
Maybe say a little bit about your view on 12-step programs in the help of those who
are struggling with addiction and what pro-social shame means and why it's an important part
of recovery.
I always like to say there are many ways to the top of the mountain and everybody is going
to take their own path, but we have clear evidence for things that work.
And at the same time, there's, again, enormous inter-individual variability.
So what works for one person may not work for another, but it would be good if all persons
had access to all the different options so that they could explore what works for one person may not work for another, but it would be good if all persons had access to all the different options so that they could explore what works for them.
Twelve-step groups are not a treatment per se.
They're not professionally led.
These are peer recovery groups where people are helping other people struggling with the
same problem.
And they intentionally issue affiliation with any kind of political agenda.
There's no fee structure.
They don't involve themselves in money.
All of that incredibly wise, recognizing that we humans are so vulnerable to mismanaging
and asserting our own agendas in these kinds of endeavors.
And so to keep it free and accessible and everywhere
makes the bar for admission much, much lower,
which increases access.
So even if you're talking about an effect size
that may not be as large
as some kind of professional mediated treatment,
the simple fact that it's free
and it's in every church or synagogue basement in the world
or community center equivalent makes
it already a very potent intervention.
I think it's also important to acknowledge that for people with more extreme forms of
addiction that the 12-step groups may work even better than individual or group psychotherapy
that's professionally led.
And I refer folks to the Cochran Review by John Kelly and Keith Humphries and co-authors
that really reviews the evidence and clearly shows that 12-step are an evidence-based treatment or
effective intervention for people who actively participate. For reasons that I don't entirely
understand, the press and the media and sort of the culture has been very 12-step bashing of late.
I don't know quite where that comes from. I do think that it's important not to force people
to go to 12-step or to say that's the only way to do it. But you don't want to also then malign or
get rid of something that's clearly very effective. Why does 12-step work when it does work? I think one of the main
sources of efficacy is, again, easy access, low bar for participation. And it may be one
of the few places left in modern society where people can show up and be their fully flawed
and broken selves and be entirely accepted for that. Not just accepted, but where our brokenness becomes
a positive social good. This may not even be true anymore in faith-based organizations where people
are sometimes get so caught up in proving the bounties of believing that they are then
loathe or reluctant or even discouraged from disclosing the ways in which their life is not working out.
I have a very good friend who's a theologian and a devout Christian who of late has stopped
going to his church and instead is going to 12-step meetings.
He does not in fact have an addiction, but he gets so much nourishment from this coming
together of people who can talk freely about their mess-ups and
their greed and their mistakes that they've made and their shameful, guilt-
ridden types of behaviors and come out the other side feeling better for it,
less ashamed, more motivated to change those behaviors. And plus the whole
sponsorship program is so powerful where you get a sponsor, you work
the steps.
I mean, people can call their sponsors any time of the day, any day of the week.
You can't do that with me.
Like if you call me at midnight on a Saturday, I'm not gonna get that message till Monday.
And depending upon the clinical acuity, I might not return that call till Tuesday.
That's not true for a sponsor.
You can call a sponsor in the middle of the night
and that sponsorship bond,
that person might even come over to your house.
So to me, it's just a very remarkable social movement.
Definitely not for everybody,
but incredibly potent and powerful,
especially in a world that is in general
conspiring against our mental health.
You write about something so eloquently
and it really reminds me of a close friend, Paul Conti.
And I don't know if you and Paul ever overlapped
when he was doing his residency at Stanford,
but Paul always talks about the patient's story,
the patient's story.
And so I was really touched by,
you really wrote about the same thing, right?
Which is we've pathologized mental health so much down to history of present
illness, review of systems.
And you've talked about your own journey as a psychiatrist and your own
evolution away from the traditional training where at the end of the day,
you've got to come up with the DSM-4 or DSM-5 code.
You have to be able to come up with a label.
You're interacting with a person and you're in the mode of what's the label?
What access is this person?
What's the diagnosis?
You talk about now how you teach residents to just put that aside and listen to the story
of the person.
What is it in your journey that led you there
and how difficult or how easy is it to be training
other psychiatrists in that school of thinking?
Yeah, I mean, what comes to the mind immediately
about what in my journey led me to do that
is gonna sound super selfish,
but it was the realization that I was not engaged
or interested in this person.
I could not capture my own empathy for them
unless I knew the story.
Sort of as I say, the mini autobiography of their lives,
what had transpired in their early life,
what were the major milestones,
how did they end up where they are today,
who was in their life? What
were the major influences? Narrative is so powerful. As you know, our brains are wired
for story. Our prefrontal cortex is activated when we listen to narrative. We learn through
narrative. I mean, narrative is such a powerful mechanism for so much of what we do. I think Foucault said something like,
narrative is the only way we can measure lived time, which I think is really powerful. And
it's also one of the primary ways to get at causality. Of course, we can tell ourselves
stories that aren't true and come up with causal relationships that aren't based in
fact. But when we're telling true stories, it is the way that we understand what led to what
led to what.
And it's also just much more interesting and more fun.
I see that as a psychiatrist's job.
That's the data.
That's our bread and butter.
The cardiologist gets the EKG, the surgeon's cutting and selling, and we deal in story
and we must deal in story.
And when we have new fellows, we have addiction medicine fellows, they come from many different
specialties.
We have family medicine doctors, emergency medicine doctors, pediatricians, psychiatrists,
and it's so hard for them to let go of that kind of structured categorization, chief complaint,
history of present illness,
past medical history.
But I just say, trust me on this.
Trust me.
Start with their story.
Say, tell me the story of your life, where you were born, who raised you, what you were
like as a kid, major milestones, memories that you remember that were impactful and
important.
All the way up into the present day. Who do you live with?
Who are the important people in your life?
What do you care about?
What are your goals and dreams?
If we don't do that, we end up with a kind of a laundry list
of symptoms that is not actually a person.
Anna, when you think back over your career,
you've written about what are undoubtedly
a lot of the amazing success stories.
People who seemed on the brink of death in some cases,
and if not death, outright destruction
of their lives and relationships.
But I have to imagine that there's a graveyard too
of people that you haven't been able to help.
How have you coped with that?
It's a great question and it's very timely
because I just had clinic yesterday
and I had an interaction with a patient
that was really not good
and the patient was very angry at me.
The key, I think, for me is to just stay curious, to just continue to wonder about this person,
what shaped them, what their motives might be, and how all of that might inform how we
can help them.
So to stay in this empathic professional stance,
to look at myself, if a patient criticizes me
or the treatment, what is potentially correct about that?
How have I messed up?
How can I make amends?
So really trying to walk a path of humility.
The longer I've practiced psychiatry,
believe it or not, in some ways,
the less I think
I actually understand about the brain and how people change.
I mean, at some really core level, it is a great mystery.
So just trying to stay humble and curious and empathic, and then also go home and forget
about it for a while and make sure I take care of myself and my family.
Yeah, the further you get from shore, the deeper the water gets.
For sure. When you lose a patient, which I'm sure you do, right? I'm sure there are many patients where it's not just that they're angry at you in clinic, it's that they succumb to their addictions,
physically succumb, literally die. Is that something where you've accepted the fact
that that's going to happen, but being attached
to that patient and suffering the pain of their loss
is the price you pay to be a better doctor,
or is there a way to create a boundary
and never let yourself hurt in that situation?
One of my early mentors and supervisors
said something to me that I'll never forget.
He said, Ana, the reason that the work that we do One of my early mentors and supervisors said something to me that I'll never forget.
He said, Anna, the reason that the work that we do works when it does work is because we
actually love our patients and the emotions are real.
We have to come to the therapeutic encounter with our own physical, mental, sexual needs
met so that we are there 100%
for the patient's needs.
But the emotions are real, the relationship is real.
We have to care about these folks.
So I think that is a deep truism.
And when a patient dies, it is devastating.
It's absolutely devastating.
And the guilt is enormous.
The kind of what ifs, if only I had done that,
if only we had been more present or more proactive
or whatever it is, you can't get away from that.
This has been a fantastic discussion.
I really appreciate the work you're doing.
Your writing is exceptional and I certainly appreciate it.
And obviously just appreciate your time today.
Thank you very much. Thank you. It was a lovely interview. I enjoyed meeting with you. Thank you for your
important work. Yeah, it was a pleasure to talk with you. Thank you for listening to this week's
episode of The Drive. It's extremely important to me to provide all of this content without relying
on paid ads. To do this, our work is made entirely possible by our members, and in return, we
offer exclusive member-only content and benefits above and beyond what is available for free.
So, if you want to take your knowledge of this space to the next level, it's our goal
to ensure members get back much more than the price of the subscription.
Premium membership includes several benefits. First, comprehensive podcast show notes that detail every topic,
paper, person, and thing that we discuss in each episode. And the word on the street is
nobody's show notes rival ours. Second, monthly Ask Me Anything or AMA episodes. These episodes
are comprised of detailed responses to subscriber questions, typically focused on a single topic
and are designed to offer a great deal of clarity and detail on topics of special interest to our members.
You'll also get access to the show notes for these episodes, of course.
Third, delivery of our premium newsletter, which is put together by our dedicated team
of research analysts.
This newsletter covers a wide range of topics related to longevity and provides much more
detail than our free weekly newsletter. newsletter covers a wide range of topics related to longevity and provides much more detail
than our free weekly newsletter. Fourth, access to our private podcast feed that provides
you with access to every episode including AMAs, Sans the Spiel you're listening to
now and in your regular podcast feed. Fifth, the Qualis, an additional member-only
podcast we put together that serves as a highlight reel
featuring the best excerpts from previous episodes of The Drive. This is a great way to catch up on
previous episodes without having to go back and listen to each one of them. And finally,
other benefits that are added along the way. If you want to learn more and access these
member-only benefits, you can head over to PeterAtiaMD.com forward slash
subscribe. You can also find me on YouTube, Instagram and Twitter, all with the handle
PeterAtiaMD. You can also leave us a review on Apple podcasts or whatever podcast player
you use. This podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the
practice of medicine, nursing or other professional healthcare services, including the giving of medical advice. No doctor-patient relationship
is formed.
The use of this information and the materials linked to this podcast is at the user's own
risk. The content on this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical
advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice from any medical
condition they have. And they should seek the assistance of
their health care professionals for any such conditions. Finally,
I take all conflicts of interest very seriously. For all of my
disclosures and the companies I invest in or advise, please
visit Peteratiamd.com forward slash about where I keep an up-to-date
and active list of all disclosures. Thanks for watching!