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Help Substance Abusers Beat Addiction
Megan Malugani / Monster Contributing Writer
“Two steps forward, one step back” is an inescapable reality for substance-abuse social workers, in-demand counseling professionals who assist alcoholics and drug abusers on the road to recovery. These social workers recognize that chemical dependency is a chronic condition with a high rate of relapse, for which there is rarely a quick fix.
“I’ve worked with people who have been in detox 20 times,” says Diana DiNitto, PhD, ACSW, a social work professor at the University of Texas at Austin. “Why do they stay sober the 20th time? I don’t know. There are so many things we don’t know about this disease.”
While the stigma associated with chemical dependency has decreased in recent decades, some substance abusers still find themselves shunned. “The biggest reward in this job comes from reaching out to help people who others are not interested in working with,” DiNitto adds.
DiNitto worked in the drug and alcohol programs at a community mental health center before becoming an educator. Substance-abuse social workers also work at inpatient and outpatient drug-treatment centers, detoxification centers, halfway houses, methadone clinics and in private practice.
These social workers are finding more opportunities in the criminal-justice system as well, because more abusers are being sent to treatment programs rather than prison, says Mickey J.W. Smith, MSW, ACSW, a public health advisor for the Drug-Free Communities Support Program at the government’s Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
Crises and Breakthroughs
A substance-abuse social worker’s responsibilities vary by setting, but most perform client intakes and assessments, develop treatment plans, and counsel patients in individual or group sessions. They also help families cope with the effects of addiction and refer patients to other social service organizations. Often, substance-abuse social workers, who earn about $33,000 a year, serve on multidisciplinary teams that can include physicians, nurses, addiction specialists and other human-services workers. “It’s more than a 9-to-5 day,” DiNitto says. “There is a lot of routine stuff, but crises occur, too. A client could get arrested or end up in the emergency room.”
Mandated clients make up most of a substance-abuse social worker’s caseload. These patients are ordered into treatment by the child-welfare system, the courts or some other entity, says Peter Robbins, LCSW.
Robbins has worked in outpatient and inpatient treatment programs, as well as with the criminal-justice system, and describes his breakthroughs with resistant clients as “lightbulb moments.” One such client was a laid-off alcoholic referred by his former company’s Employee Assistance Program. Through counseling, the man came to realize how his drinking had affected his relationships with his wife, children and coworkers. “He was able to turn his life completely around,” Robbins says.

feyt
about 2 years ago
12 comments
I want to get in the field so that I can help others relize that they can over come thier addiction and live a productive life. I like being able to work wth others that have sasme common grounds that I once lived and I am working on keeping my life focused on living life on lifes terms today, and not picking up(using or drinking).
ChristineDStout
almost 3 years ago
2 comments
To mendel:
Social workers cannot prescribe medication - that responsibility belongs to MD's and DO's. Hospital admissions also require an MD or DO, to the best of my understanding. Home arrest is a court services issue, usually involving a probation officer, who may or may not have a degree in social work alongside the criminal justice credentials. In both of the situations you presented, the AODA social worker would work as part of an interdiscipinary team to provide the best treatment possible in the situation, considering medical necessity and any court requirements.
mendel
almost 3 years ago
10 comments
Do social workers have the right to implement in need some kind of more strongly orders such as treatment under hospital care or home arrest? Do they have to consult with other specialist before prescribing any medication?
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WalterLSmithSr_1953
about 4 years ago
2 comments
I want to get in the field so that I can help others relize that they can over come thier addiction and live a productive life. I like being able to work wth others that have sasme common grounds that I once lived and I am working on keeping my life focused on living life on lifes terms today, and not picking up(using or drinking).