Description
Book SynopsisA leading physician scientist explains why, despite major advances in our understanding of addiction, treatment continues to be ineffective--even harmful--and how we can achieve better outcomes.
Trade ReviewHeilig makes the science of addiction accessible to both lay and professional audiences alike with an engaging conversational tone laced with humor and illustrative vignettes. He draws the reader in and effectively consolidates complex concepts. I applaud his efforts to bring the plight of the addicted to the attention of others and for his calling upon the field to do its very best to help. -- Valerie J. Slaymaker, Hazelden Graduate School of Addiction Studies
It was a great pleasure to read this book. Without being openly critical of the usual talk therapy, Heilig outlines the newest treatments that should be offered to every patient suffering from addiction. He shows that treatments today can be based on recent scientific knowledge about what is happening in the brains of alcoholics and describes new treatments based on current knowledge about the disease. Heilig, a world-class expert, has done a tremendous service for patients and their families by writing this book. -- Charles P. O'Brien, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania
Markus Heilig sums up what he has learned during his twenty years as a physician and researcher in the treatment of alcohol and other addictive disorders.... An informative and compassionate chronicle. * Kirkus Reviews *
Poignantly written and personal, yet presents the current science of addiction in a clear and engaging way. Markus Heilig's exploration of addiction science is beautifully written and is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand why addictive behaviors and bad habits are difficult to give up, and how to do it. Heilig has masterfully laid out his own clinical experiences and concisely presented the science of addiction. His book brings to life the countless devastating effects of addiction that affect individuals across all strata of society while attacking the stigma of addiction and shows the importance of neuroscience in understanding and treating it. -- Rajita Sinha, chief, psychology section, Yale Medical School
Heilig is one of the wisest, smartest, most insightful people I know. And what Heilig is, so is this book. A fantastic journey across one of the most complex and misunderstood problems of our time. -- Pier Vincenzo Piazza, director, Neurocentre Magendie
Recommended for anyone who suffers from addiction or who knows someone who does; undergraduate and graduate students, scholars, and researchers studying medicine, particularly addiction and neurology, and psychology; and anyone who has an interest in learning more about the subject. * Library Journal *
What makes this book especially compelling is the author's ability to smoothly transition between dealing with addictions at the human clinical level and at the more abstract level of scientific research. Heilig admirably tries to extract the most meaningful takeaway points from sometimes-dense scientific findings.... Highly recommended. * Choice *
Markus Heilig has succeeded in making the airy dismissals of biological evidence-based approaches to addiction, such as those he heard in medical school, no longer tenable. -- Séamus Sweeney * Times Literary Supplement *
[
The Thirteenth Step] offers a brilliant and, perhaps more important, highly legible review of current addiction science.... Heilig's synthesis invites us all to critically consider the addiction concept along with its implications for people, policy, and the practice of medicine. -- Kyle Bridge * H-Sci-Med-Tech *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
1. Us and Them
2. A Grocery Store That Closed
3. An Entity in Its Own Right
4. A Chronic, Relapsing Disorder
5. Man or Machine?
6. Histories, Brains, and Behaviors
7. The Pursuit of Happiness
8. The Dark Side of Addiction
9. Rash Actions
10. Turning On a Bright Light
11. Getting the Cue
12. A Strained Mind
13. Fathers and Sons
14. Molecular Culprits
15. Trick or Treatment
16. Please Behave
17. Pills for Addiction Ills
18. Pray If You Wish, but Please Take Your Meds First
19. The Journey Ahead
Notes
Index