Previous Page  3 / 9 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 3 / 9 Next Page
Page Background

Volume 09

Journal of Addiction Research & Therapy

Addiction Summit 2018

May 17-18, 2018

Page 14

Notes:

conference

series

.com

May 17-18, 2018 Singapore

8

th

International Conference on

Addictive Disorders and Alcoholism

Integrating scientific modalities in addiction discovery: Use your brain for a change

Statement of Problem:

Every day at least 115 Americans die from opioid use and the rates of substance use disorder related

deaths are continuously on the rise in the United States. Properly addressing this growing crisis starts with understanding the

nature of addiction, and the prevention, treatment and recovery opportunities available (National Council).

Methodology &Theoretical Orientation:

Science has shown that the brains of addicts are physiologically different; that they

work differently than normal brains. In neuro-scientific terms, pleasure, or the feeling of well-being, is a distinct neurological

function linked to a complex reward and reinforcement system. Creating new neural pathways; neurotransmitter rebalancing

and stress release and detoxing the body is the answer to achieving sustainable recovery. During a 12 month study, 178 clients

participated in the seven components of care for at least 30 days. Each entered the program with some degree of anxiety and

depression; a dependence on illicit drugs; alcohol and prescription medications. Upon entry each completed the Beck Anxiety

Inventory (BAI) and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI II). As the clients transitioned they completed their exit Inventory.

Participants received neuro-feedback (LENS); neurotransmitter rebalancing; spiritual-experiential therapies; evidence-based

therapies (CBT, DBT, Psychodrama, EMDR, Yoga) and a lifetime recovery plan.

Findings & Conclusion:

As 178 participants transitioned from the integrated therapeutic regime, only one reported a low level

of anxiety and no one reported depression. All had titrated from prescriptions and were functioning at an all-natural level.

Frequency distribution data related to the mid-prefrontal cortex EEG sites present an interesting analysis of how LENS training

can be related to the actual prefrontal cortex functioning. It is exciting to expect that LENS can be a great contributing factor

to expect that prescription medication therapy can actually be replaces with holistic and integrated therapy.

Biography

Judith Miller, PhD, CAC III, Registered Psychotherapist, LENSAdv. Certified, QMAP, EMDR CEO, Founder of Soaring Hope Recovery Center in Monument, Colorado.

She received her Doctorate in Human Developmental and Family Relations and has decades of experience in Family Therapy and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy,

with a focus on addictions. Her last ten years’ experience is in the area of neuroscience. She provides science-based addiction recovery opportunities to those

afflicted with the brain disease of addiction. This state-of-the-science recovery regime includes “Using the brain for a change”, i.e., neurotransmitter rebalancing, brain

imaging, and neurofeedback to treat addiction, depression, anxiety, sleep disorders, trauma, PTSD, PMS and other afflictions controlled by the brain.

redfeather7@earthlink.net

Judith Ann Miller

Soaring Hope Recovery, USA

Judith Ann Miller, J Addict Res Ther 2018, Volume 9

DOI: 10.4172/2155-6105-C1-035