Thursday 28 April 2016

‘Pathways to recovery from heroin addiction: An oral history account of problematic drug users in recovery on the KZN South Coast’



The aim of the thesis is to investigate pathways into addiction and subsequent recovery through the experience of  problematic  drug users engaging in a process of recovery. The stories of these individuals’ experience will be told through a series of oral histories. A secondary aim is to critically engage with the various debates about addiction and recovery in the existing literature, particularly relating to current treatment models, and to contribute to theoretical and evidential debates. This study will be guided by a qualitative research design. The primary research tool that will be used is oral histories, which will be analysed, through narrative analysis, to uncover common themes in the stories of the problematic drug users.

The focus of the study will be a group of  addicted heroin  users living in Umdoni on the Natal South Coast, mainly , but not exclusively from Umzinto. This is a poor community that has in recent years been particularly hard hit by problematic drug use, particularly heroin use. This group has been chosen purposively as it comprises of addicted drug users who are actively seeking, and involved in recovery through participation the twelve step program of Narcotics Anonymous. Some members of this selected group have been ‘clean’  (abstinent from all drugs and alcohol) for varying a mounts of time, while others are still using drugs , but engaging with the program and expressing  a desire  to get ‘clean’. The interviewees will come from a wide range of socio-economic backgrounds, many reduced to homelessness, others in more affluent conditions where they are dependent on family, or even self-supporting.  The oral history stories of 15 of these individuals will be conducted over a period of 12 months. Each participant will be interviewed twice, allowing them to tell their stories, as a continuum at two points in time. This is important because the process of recover from problematic drug use is precarious, and the aim of the study is to find out what pathways and interventions appear to be most successful in leading to longer and more sustainable recovery outcomes.

My motivation for doing this research stem from my own long-term experience as an  addicted drug user. It is also driven by a more academic interest in the literature on the recovery of  problematic  drug users and on the various academic and practical debates about ‘rehabilitation’ and how one understands the reasons for problematic drug use in the first place.

Worldwide there is growing criticism of the present approach to the international drug problem. This is best demonstrated by the recent Special UN Assembly which was called to look at alternative ways to address this problem. The traditional discourse on the subject focuses on two models; the  judicial and the medical. The first conceptualises the addicted  drug user as a criminal who needs to be punished or even removed from society. The second conceptualises the user as a patient in need of medical intervention.

A third way, the social model, as conceived by writers in the recovery movement, view addicts as vulnerable and alienated members of society in need of re-integration into the community. The proponents of this model  are split into two camps, labelled harm reduction and recovery,  often seen as hostile and mutually exclusive.  My  personal interest is in the  recovery movement  which locates the causes and resolution of problematic drug use firmly within a community context. I will also, however be exploring commonality between the harm reduction and recovery camps, which I believe is greater than the differences between them, and hope to identify and draw on the strengths of both approaches.  The recovery movement focuses on  involving recovering addicted drug users, and those affected by addiction (families and communities) in the healing process and the reintegration of problematic drug users back into their communities. William White and other writers in the recovery tradition have claimed that entire communities have  been victims of what they call “historical trauma”. Such communities, where disconnection and disadvantage is predominant, become particularly vulnerable to a wide spectrum of personal and social problems. Trauma erodes indigenous sources of cultural and personal resilience leaving communities, community institutions, neighbourhoods, families, and individuals particularly vulnerable to drug and alcohol related problems. Anne Wilson Schaeff puts it slightly differently when she argues that problematic drug use is rooted in a  society that suffers from a state of  dis-ease, rooted in alienation, in which the individual addicted drug user  is but  the symptom and carries the burden of suffering.

This movement has come to the fore in the USA where a strong network of Community Recovery organisations has emerged. These are embedded in communities through establishing recovery community Centres. The movement is also engaged in advocacy, education and research and a strong body of academic writing is emerging. It is however not widely  acknowledged in this country, where the predominant approaches are still located within the judicial and medical paradigms. In my view, the rationale of the recovery movement in terms of the underlying causes of problematic drug use (and how to deal with it) is of great relevance in the South African context where community trauma – both current and historical – is deeply embedded.  

Through my own experience, contact with other recovering drug users, and reviewing the literature I have tentatively identified the three main limitations of the current treatment approach that are most apparent. These are the inaccessibility of treatment to the vast majority of problematic drug users; the discord between the perception that problematic drug users can and should be cured by a single intervention and the reality of the chronic and recurring nature of the disease; and thirdly the focus on the individual which overlooks the community and social aspects of the problem.

The voices of problematic drug users in various stages of recovery are without doubt the most appropriate place to begin in making sense of best practice models for promoting recovery and the reduction of harms that problematic drug use creates to individuals, their families and the community.

Through the oral history stories told by drug users at various stages of recovery, as well as through a thorough investigation of the recovery movement and its relationship with other ‘treatment’ models, I hope to feed into policy debates and discussions around treatment of addiction, all of which are in a very transient stage in South Africa.

The purpose of the study is that the insight  gained may be used to identify and begin to address limitations within the present treatment models. The primary question  I will  be asking is : “What insight can we gain from the life  experience of addicted heroin users, as revealed through their oral histories, that might assist in identifying and addressing the limitations of present  treatment  models in South Africa and internationally?”  The secondary questions I will focus on include:      What is the connection between community vulnerability and what White calls historical trauma and individual addiction?  What role does time in formal treatment (rehab) play in recovery?   What role does spirituality (or connectedness ) play in recovery?   What role can recovering addicts (wounded healers)  play in recover?

Researching  problematic drug users is not always easy to do, particularly those who have been victimised by police and marginalised by their own families and communities. The possibilities for gaining access to, and the trust of  these participants, and to uncovering the stories that lie behind their drug use and their routes to recovery will, I believe, be greatly facilitated by my own personal history as a long term addicted drug user, as well as my ongoing  work  with homeless addicts. The shared experience of  problematic drug use, combined with a growing academic interest in recovery processes will, I believe, allow for research outcomes that have depth and validity.