Why xanax is addictive




















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Looking for a place to start? The common denominator in most mental health and substance use issues is often times trauma. Brittany values getting to the core of the issue by helping clients address their trauma through one of the gold standard treatments for trauma: Prolonged Exposure Trauma Therapy. Brittany has a passion for instilling confidence and promoting self-compassion to aid in empowering clients to take control over their own recovery.

In her spare time, Brittany enjoys spending time with her family and friends and is active in her local CrossFit gym. Joanne Talbot-Miller, M. Joanne Talbot Miller is a licensed marriage and family therapist with a background in crisis intervention.

Joanne began her career as an MFT working in an emergency shelter program for survivors of domestic violence and human trafficking with substance abuse and severe mental health issues. Joanne has provided individual and group therapy within residential and outpatient transitional housing programs. She has facilitated groups on domestic violence education, safety planning, anger management, communication, substance abuse, prevention, and independent living.

She has worked on a crisis hotline for students providing suicide assessments, suicide prevention and support to transitional age youth. Joanne provided crisis counseling and helped students connect with services such as drug and alcohol treatment, emergency housing, and mental health treatment. Working with the whole family Joanne taught strategies to improve behavior, family functioning, and alleviate daily stress in the home. Joanne brings an integrative approach to therapy that brings together the affective, behavioral, cognitive, and physiological levels of functioning.

This approach helps individuals gain insight into themselves, and reduces unhealthy, dysfunctional defense mechanisms and patterns of behavior. Weintraub has more than seven years of experience in providing client care in outpatient and inpatient settings. These venues include crisis intervention centers, psychiatric hospitals, and community agencies.

Her expertise includes both short-term and long-term therapy with clients coping with: bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, generalized anxiety disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Weintraub is also proficient in administering, interpreting, and writing psychological assessments. Most recently she has worked with the LGBT community to address sexuality and gender identity issues and addiction.

Weintraub is passionate about helping her clients gain the emotional tools to better understand what drives their behavior and that of their surrounding circumstances. Kathleen is a licensed social worker with an year background in acute psychiatric care and crisis intervention. Her highly respected private practice in psychotherapy, for individual clients and in group settings, gives her the depth and range of direct experience to assess, identify and treat multiple psychiatric issues.

Among her professional strengths are her problem solving and decision making skills, intervention capabilities, treatment plan development, and effective communication with family members of her clients. She also has an extensive background in discharge planning and community resources. She served ten years at Brooke Glen Behavioral Hospital as a social case worker.

One of her passions is advocating for women victimized by domestic violence, with many years of front-line service as a domestic violence advocate. Kathleen has received numerous awards for service excellence.

Christina Lam, N. Nurse Practitioner. Christina Lam is dedicated Nurse Practitioner with years of nursing experience. Her background is in psychiatry, emergency, and critical care. She is a skilled communicator who is professional, personal, and very adaptable. She is self-motivated with energy, initiative, and focus. She has a keen insight into the needs and views of others. She is able to listen and identify issues or problem areas and form innovative solutions.

Christina Lam graduated from University of San Diego. She is board certified as a nurse practitioner. She specializes in Children, Adult, Family, and Geriatric psychiatry.

John P. John was born and raised in San Diego. He is a certified addictions treatment counselor and clinical supervisor. He specializes in facilitating process groups, motivational interviewing, crisis intervention, mindfulness-based cognitive therapy and community building. JP has extensive experience working with the criminal justice, Native American and Female populations. Having gone through treatment himself, JP pursued a career in the field of addiction. David was born in Los Angeles California and raised in Indiana.

Eventually residing roots in North County San Diego. David enjoyed a long successful, yet unfulfilling, career in communications as a fiber optic technician. Through personal recovery, he discovered a true passion for helping others and while on his journey had the pleasure of encountering Director Team Members of Crownview Co-Occurring Institute.

The team requested that David come in to interview and the rest is history. David has held many positions at CCI with a humble beginning as support staff, quickly being promoted to house manager. David has dedicated his personal and professional life to helping others. He believes this is the essence of recovery.

Amy Thompson Director of Human Resources. Amy studied business management, finance and accounting at Owens Collage in Toledo Ohio. Xanax is a benzodiazepine medication that works very quickly and effectively to reduce anxiety and help with sleep. Physicians often prescribe these medications to help patients feel better when they are very distressed, and generally patients find them helpful in the short term.

Xanax can calm people quickly and effectively and can help promote relaxation and sleep when taken as prescribed. For those who only take the dose given by their doctor, and who only take the drug for a brief period until things settle down, these medications can be part of a coping strategy which includes emotional and practical support, as needed. However, benzodiazepines do carry some risk of addiction.

Although most who take them never develop issues with addiction or abuse , many people who take them at high enough doses over a long enough period of time do, at the very least, experience a rebound effect when they stop taking them.

A rebound effect is a more pronounced version of the symptoms you were taking the medication for, so in your case, you are likely to feel an increase in anxiety and sleeplessness. Some people develop more severe problems with benzodiazepines, especially if they take a higher dose than was originally prescribed.

If you ask your physician for a higher dose, they may feel it is supportive to prescribe it, even though the risk that you will become addicted increases. Under the circumstances, your physician may believe the most important thing right now is to help you get through a difficult time.

Not everyone who takes benzodiazepines develops addiction problems. Although many clinicians believe that addiction is unpredictable, research has shown psychological, genetic, and situational factors can affect it. Some research has shown that there is a personality profile associated with the tendency to become addicted to benzodiazepines. Those who don't become addicted often cope in task-based ways instead.

Those who become addicted tend to withdraw more from social situations, and they tend to have had more adverse life events. For more mental health resources, see our National Helpline Database.

If you decide to take prescribed benzodiazepines for your anxiety or sleep problems, it is very important not to take more of the medication than prescribed. As a result, if you are not around the person at this time, you may not see any Xanax abuse symptoms. Some of the physical symptoms of Xanax abuse are also similar to those of other drugs. For this reason, it can sometimes be hard to distinguish which drug your loved one is abusing.

When someone becomes dependent on Xanax and regularly abuses it, psychological and behavioral symptoms will be more prominent. People will be unable to control their impulse to take more Xanax and may become increasingly preoccupied with this drug. As a result, the person may lie, steal, lash out, or go about shady ways to get more Xanax. Because everyone is different, these Xanax addiction symptoms can vary and are often not unique to Xanax abuse.



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