Treatment professionals have only recently recognized that substance-abuse treatment programs for adolescents cannot simply be scaled-down versions of adult programs. Adolescents are not simply “little adults.”
Unlike their adult counterparts, adolescents in treatment have more family difficulties, are more likely to have psychological problems, and are more likely to have attempted suicide. Their alcohol and drug-use patterns are also different. Teens tend to abuse multiple substances, while adults are more singular in their focus.
The path to hitting a “bottom” is also different. For adults, entry into treatment is usually heralded by loss of job are family, chronic medical problems, and/or encounters with the law. The “red flags” for adolescents are more subtle and revealed in school performance, peer relationships, and interactions within family of origin, as well as involvement with the judicial system.
For most teens, referral to treatment is involuntary and is usually mandated by family, school, or the judicial system. When asked in Intake what the problem is, the most common answers are “Don’t know” or “Somebody (family, teacher, policeman) just overreacted.” When pressed, most say they are doing nothing different from their peers who were not “caught.”
Once they finally get into treatment, youth seek out and respond to different treatment modalities (favoring group therapy over individual), need to have their family included in treatment, and must have a school-based component if in inpatient or residential treatment.
Finally, most adult treatment programs are not set up to deal with the oppositional or acting-out behaviors characteristic of adolescent substance abusers. Fortunately, most residential facilities do not mix teen and adult recovery programs.
While adults in treatment are free to make geographical and personal changes in their environment by relocating and choosing either solitude or different significant others to reside with, adolescents do not have this freedom.
Because of this, if there is family dysfunction – either addiction or mental health issues – it is much harder for a recovering teen to stay clean and sober from alcohol or drugs. Effective treatment requires that family members must also be helped to achieve health. If this does not happen, an alternative home environment must be found for the youth.
Successful adolescent treatment programs must not only address substance use but help an adolescent navigate the normal developmental tasks of identity formation that are often neglected while using chemicals. This means that:
The importance of a quality and accessible aftercare system cannot be overemphasized. Such a program must be within easy travel from home. If a teen is dependent upon a parent’s driving, or has a long mass-transit commute, the likelihood of treatment being continued is small.
Without such support through the creation of a new peer group, the return to substance-abusing friendships is inevitable.
Adolescents present a unique challenge to treatment professionals. Creative and effective strategies must be developed within the context of limited Insurance-based treatment and ever decreasing government support for treatment.
We have no choice but to rise to the challenge.