Tewksbury Patch / Cliffside Malibu Tewksbury Resident Appears on ‘Katie’ to Discuss Dangers of Addiction in Suburbs June 13, 2013

Tewksbury Resident Appears on ‘Katie’ to Discuss Dangers of Addiction in Suburbs

 

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Zack Johnson and his mother Gina Borazzo, both Tewksbury residents, appeared on “Katie” with Katie Couric on Monday discuss Zack’s struggles with heroin addiction and the dangers of prescription drug addiction in the suburbs. 

In an interview with Tewksbury Patch last week, Borazzo said she and Johnson chose to appear on the show in order to bring attention to the epidemic of drug addiction in the suburbs.

The two left the taping of “Katie” with much more than they anticipated.

At the end of the segment, Johnson was offered an all expense paid stay at the Cliffside Malibu treatment center in Malibu, California. 

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Katie Couric / Cliffside Malibu Questions to Ask Your Doctor Before Taking Prescription Drugs June 13, 2013
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Monsters & Critics / Cliffside Malibu Cliffside Malibu – Concern for Paris Jackson escalates as trial continues June 11, 2013

Cliffside Malibu – Concern for Paris Jackson escalates as trial continues

 

 

Paris Jackson – many are concerned for the pop star’s princess © David Gabber / PR Photos

 

Paris Jackson’s attempted suicide is rife with speculation.

Some sources are claiming the pressures of the AEG trial and her upcoming testimony are at the root of the problem, and others saying the teenage was upset she was denied Marilyn Manson tickets for an upcoming Los Angeles concert.

The New York Daily News reports that their source claimed the pressure of testifying in Kathryn Jackson’s trial against AEG drove her to attempt suicide by cutting her wrists.

According to TMZ, Paris will take the stand by the end of the month in the wrongful-death lawsuit pitting the Jackson family against the promoter, AEG.

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Fox News Special / Cliffside Malibu Drugs and the Media March 26, 2013

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Fox News Special / Cliffside Malibu FOX 11 30-Minute Special: Drugs, Kids and the Media March 26, 2013

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FOX 11 30-Minute Special: Drugs, Kids and the Media

You see it in some of TV’s highest rated sitcoms. Jokes about casual drug use. It’s happening on shows that are popular with many teenagers, like “Family Guy” and “Two Broke Girls.” Now some experts on drug addiction are speaking out.

FOX-11_Drugs_in_the_MediaOur Fox 11 Special “Drugs and the Media” takes a look at the impact these shows may be having on our kids.

Phil Shuman takes a look at some of the overt drug references in highly-rated TV shows. We’ll also look at the very public behavior of some of the most popular TV and music stars, like Justin Bieber and Miley Cyrus. Phil talks to addiction specialist Dr. Damon Raskin – who was himself a former child star – and Richard Taite of the Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center about how the media may be affecting America’s children.

Phil Shuman examines some of the statistics on drug abuse among 12 to 17 year old kids. We’ll hear from Dr. Damon Raskin and Richard Taite, co-author of the Amazon best-selling book, “Ending Addiction for Good.”

Lindsay Lohan was ordered by a judge to attend a “lock down” drug and alcohol treatment center for 90 days – a much longer stretch than has been mandated in the past. But will it be enough?

We’ll examine some of the root causes of drug addiction and what parents can do to help navigate their kids away from drugs and alcohol.

 

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu FOX reporter takes entertainment industry on with trivialized TV drug use March 25, 2013

FOX reporter takes entertainment industry on with trivialized TV drug use

When you live and work in Hollywood, a town that depends on film and TV production for its mainstay bread and butter, it’s a head turner when you hold a big, fat mirror up to the 800 pound gorilla sitting in the sound stage.

CliffsideMalibu1Mar2513That’s exactly what local Los Angeles FOX 11 reporter Phil Shuman did when he dared to pose questions about sliding standards to a large viewing audience on March 22, 2013. At what point does network television draw the line when it comes to trivializing pot, pills and alcohol use on prime time TV when children are most likely to be watching?

Last night, Shuman hosted Dr. Damon Raskin, an internist and addiction specialist and Richard Taite (CEO of Cliffside Malibu, and author of “Ending Addiction for Good” www.cliffsidemalibu.com), both of Cliffside Malibu residential rehabilitation, a prestigious center where the average stay for patients in recovery is closer to six to nine months than the common 28 days.

What did Shuman, Raskin and Taite have in common?

 

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FOX News / Cliffside Malibu Fox News Anchor Phil Shuman, Dr. Damon Raskin and CEO & Founder of Cliffside Malibu Richard Taite March 21, 2013

Fox News Anchor Phil Shuman, Dr. Damon Raskin and CEO & Founder of Cliffside Malibu Richard Taite

 

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Lindsay Lohan’s ‘do or die’ time, addiction experts hope starlet wakes up March 20, 2013

Lindsay Lohan’s ‘do or die’ time, addiction experts hope starlet wakes up

 

Lindsay Lohan’s Monday (March 18) was a stress fest of hurry and wait, as the actress arrived 45 minutes late to court navigating Los Angeles rush hour traffic and diverted flights.

Lohan agreed to a plea deal to avoid 6 months in jail, instead opting for a locked down rehab facility for 90 days, and to undergo psychotherapy and do 180 hours of community service.

LindseyLohanCliffsideMalibuDr. Damon Raskin, who works as a consultant in Personalized Detox/Internal and Addiction Medicine with Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center, commented on what Linsday Lohan has in store for the next three months:

In the case of Lindsay Lohan, she has gone through the residential rehab more than once, so the difference here is that she has a mandatory stay order for three months (90 days) which will be a more daunting achievement considering the time. What she can expect is a schedule of intensive psychotherapy, individual therapy and group activities that support healing and reinforce her therapies combined. She may need a detox, but of this I am not certain, not knowing her medical records. She will be drug tested regularly.

By the way, a locked down facility doesn’t necessarily mean jailed in dark and dingy treatment center with bars on the windows, she can still have all the amenities that are available at any five star facility, however, she will not be allowed to leave for the mandated 90 days.

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Mark Isler Radio Show / Cliffside Malibu Addictainment March 20, 2013

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu “Drunk Indians” Is Not Funny; Addiction Experts Speak Up March 7, 2013

March 7, 2013

“Drunk Indians” Is Not Funny; Addiction Experts Speak Up

“‘A furnace full of drunk Indians’ – that’s how a character on the CBS sitcom Mike & Molly characterized Arizona and the first inhabitants of our land,” says Richard Taite.

 

Celebrity doctors with television deals and cavalier Hollywood writers for sitcoms have done serious damage with their remarks about addiction and treating addicts in public view for ratings and money, according to Richard Taite, a recognized leader in the recovery community, the author of a new book on addiction (“Ending Addiction for Good: The Groundbreaking, Holistic, Evidence-Based Way to Transform Your Life”) and the co-founder and CEO of Cliffside Malibu, a leading treatment center in Los Angeles.

The premise of “Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew” is a prime example of questionable medicine according to Taite, who has come out strongly against Dr. Drew Pinsky’s attempts to help addicted stars achieve sobriety.

Mr. Taite refutes Dr. Drew’s claim made yesterday on Dr. Oz’s television show that treating addicts (celebrity or otherwise) on a TV show does not impact in anyway the outcome or quality of their treatment.  Mr. Taite believes Dr. Oz’s viewing public deserves an educated second opinion to what appears to be Dr. Drew’s contention that flies in the face of all medically accepted practices in the treatment of substance abuse.

“Please keep in mind that this honest difference of opinion is not in any way directed to Dr. Drew personally, but rather at his brand of reality-show-cum-addiction treatment,” says Mr. Taite.

In question, here, is whether the pursuit of profit has superseded the genuine interest of the patient.  Mr. Taite has labeled this kind of TV as “addictainment.”

Adding further fuel to this fire is the sitcom “Mike & Molly” on CBS.

“‘A furnace full of drunk Indians’ – that’s how a character on the CBS sitcom Mike & Molly characterized Arizona and the first inhabitants of our land,” says Richard Taite.

“Not only is such a characterization insensitive and blatantly racist, but it also stigmatizes a whole group of individuals and helps keep them out of treatment. Such offhanded remarks are more than hurtful; they identify all Native Americans as poor, addicted and on the fringes of society. For someone who wants help overcoming addiction and may have little access to the best recovery methods, these kinds of statements can further demoralize them, keeping those in need from help.”

Mr. Taite adds, “There are twenty-one federally recognized Native American tribes in Arizona alone. Native Americans suffer higher rates of poverty, suicide and addiction than the average population, yet too many do not have adequate access to top-notch care.”

“This leaves the entire population vulnerable,” says Constance Scharff, PhD, Addiction Researcher for Cliffside Malibu. “The devastation of addiction on individual lives is compounded by abuse and neglect often suffered by children at the hands of those who are addicted. It is both insensitive and reprehensible to ridicule a group suffering these kinds of social problems.”

Taite continues, “It seems there is a culture in our media that seeks to ridicule or exploit addicts. In a time when reality shows like Celebrity Rehab are plagued by horrific death rates among former cast members and shows like Mike & Molly ridicule those in need of help – we must suggest a reckoning with regard to how addicts are portrayed on television. With accidental overdoses of prescription drugs alone reaching epidemic levels, these ‘jokes’ simply are not funny.”

 

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The Inquisitr / Cliffside Malibu Former Child Star, Treatment Center Attack Dr. Drew Pinsky Approach February 25, 2013

February 25, 2013

Former Child Star, Treatment Center Attack Dr. Drew Pinsky Approach

 

A former child star has taken aim at the tactics used by Dr. Drew Pinsky from VH1?s Celebrity Rehab and the philosophy of the show itself.

Commenting through a publicist to The Inquisitr, Dr. Damon Raskin, medical director of addiction at Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center and former child star, called it “disheartening” that treatment “would be compromised for entertainment purposes.”

“The most important part of treatment is the trust that develops between doctor and patient, and this cannot happen in front of the public on television,” Raskin said, adding that it was “appalling that we as a society can encourage this voyeurism in the name of helping people.”

Raskin continued: “Real rehab is done in private, getting to the real root of addiction with medical and psychological help, and not to treat addicted celebrities as ‘special’ by putting it all out there for the world to see.”

Richard Taite, president of Cliffside and author of Ending Addiction for Good, agreed with his medical director’s assessment.

“It’s truly repugnant that the general public isn’t afforded the opportunity to understand exactly why this type of exploitation is so harmful,” Taite told The Inquisitr. “A few years ago … I saw an episode of Celebrity Rehab and was so bothered by it that I sent out a press release inviting anyone currently on the show to come in to Cliffside Malibu free of charge for real treatment. I knew just from watching one episode that that show was  going to end up really harming people.”

Tate and Raskin, a former child star on Eight Is Enough, have pointed to the five deaths that have occurred in the last two years involving former cast members of Celebrity Rehab as proof, and even former pop star Richard Marx has taken aim at Pinsky, comparing his work to that of “Kervorkian.”

Pinsky has steered clear of taking responsibility for the show’s questionable track record, keeping his comments centered on the McCready tragedy.

In an interview with People, Pinsky said McCready “was fearful of stigma and ridicule” and added that “she agreed with me that she needed to make her health and safety a priority.”

“Unfortunately it seems that Mindy did not sustain her treatment,” Pinsky added.

The McCready funeral is set for Tuesday, February 25, in McCready’s hometown of Fort Myers, Florida, The Associated Press noted.

Do you believe Dr. Drew Pinsky is using troubled child stars for TV exploitation, or are his efforts well-meaning?

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Celebzter / Cliffside Malibu As Mindy McCready marks the FIFTH ‘Celebrity Rehab’ cast member to die, an expert calls the show a ‘farce as a foundation for treatment’ February 20, 2013

February 20, 2013

As Mindy McCready marks the FIFTH ‘Celebrity Rehab’ cast member to die, an expert calls the show a ‘farce as a foundation for treatment’

 

Since Mindy McCready’s death from apparent suicide on Sunday night, attention has turned to  Dr. Drew Pinsky’s VH1 reality show “Celebrity Rehab”, after it emerged that she was the fifth member to die after supposedly being treated on the show.

“I think “Dr” Drew Pinsky should change his name to Kevorkian. Same results.” singer Richard Marx wrote on his Twitter page.
After receiving some backlash, Marx amended his claim: “I went too far with the Kevorkian crack. It is, however, my opinion that what Dr. D does is exploitation and his TV track record is not good.”

Sar far, Rodney King died in 2012 after drowning in his swimming pool. King’s autopsy revealed he had a mixture of cocaine, alcohol and marijuana in his system at the time, which contributed to his death. And Grease actor Jeff Conaway, who was a participant in season one and two, died in 2011 of health complications he apparently contracted from years of substance abuse.

On the season in which McCready appeared, two other people succumbed to their addictions. Mike Starr, bassist of the band Alice in Chains, died in 2011 after a drug overdose, and former “Real World” cast member Joey Kovar died in 2012 from opiate intoxication, believed to be in the form of a prescription painkiller he was taking.

With the total number of five people, who were part of the television show, ending up dead as a result of their addictions in the last two years, the backlash is understandable.

It seems that Dr. Pinsky’s rehab treatment on his TV show, which many professionals deem damaging and more for entertainment purposes than actual treatment only benefits the doctor, the production and the network.

Richard Taite, CEO of Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center is at pains to point out that rehab treatment for entertainment purposes is wrong,  as it does damage to already damaged people.

“Mindy McCready’s death is certainly a tragedy and one that was perhaps preventable if she had gotten real treatment,” says Richard Taite, co-author of the best selling book, Ending Addiction For Good. “Celebrity Rehab is a farce as a foundation for treatment. It is at best info-tainment – a television show that exploits the fragility of individuals who are in desperate need of help. Recovery does not happen in twenty-one days for individuals suffering profoundly from multiple disorders, such as Mindy McCready, and it does not occur under the view of millions of television viewers. One of the main needs any addict has is to develop a sincere, trusting relationship with a therapist and privately uncover the root causes of their addiction. This does not happen in a television show where addicts are part of a ‘cast’ and followed by television cameras 24 hours a day everywhere but in the bathroom! Those who suffer from depression, suicidal ideation, and addiction need long-term, private support in a safe environment. It is tragic that Ms. McCready did not receive that level of care.”

Dr. Drew, for his part, said he contacted McCready last month after her boyfriend’s death.

“When I heard she was struggling, I did reach out to her and urged her to go to take care of herself, get in a facility if she felt she needed,” he said. “Her biggest fear was the stigma of doing so and what people would think if she, God forbid, took care of herself. And this to me is the most distressing part of this story. She is a lovely woman, we have lost her, and it didn’t have to go down like this.”

What do you think? Should the show be pulled given people’s health and life are at stake?

 

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Addictainment under fire: ‘Celebrity Rehab’ a disaster for many, addiction experts blast show February 20, 2013

February 20, 2013

Addictainment under fire: ‘Celebrity Rehab’ a disaster for many, addiction experts blast show

 

The entire premise of “Celebrity Rehab” is under fire with the recent suicide of country artist Mindy McCready, the fifth cast member death of Dr. Pinsky’s questionable treatment reality series on TV which many professionals deem damaging and more for entertainment purposes than actual treatment.

Mindy McCready, 37, is the fifth person who has appeared on “Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew” to die in the past two years.

The former country star apparently took her own life and killed her dog too on Sunday at her home in Heber Springs, Ark. Authorities say McCready died of a suspected self-inflicted gunshot to the head and an autopsy is planned. She left behind two young sons.

McCready had attempted suicide at least three times since 2005, as she struggled to cope amid a series of tumultuous public events that marked much of her adult life.

Speaking to The Associated Press in 2010, McCready said: “It is a giant whirlwind of chaos all the time…I call my life a beautiful mess and organized chaos. It’s just always been like that. My entire life things have been attracted to me and vice versa that turn into chaotic nightmares or I create the chaos myself. I think that’s really the life of a celebrity, of a big, huge, giant personality.”

Other “Celebrity Rehab” deaths include Joey Kovar, a member of MTV’s “Real World: Hollywood” died last August at the age of 29 of “opiate intoxication.” Kovar was on the series with McCready on the show’s third season in 2010.

Also dead: “Celebrity Rehab” Season 2 cast member Rodney King, dead at 47, his demise an accidental drowning, with alcohol, cocaine, marijuana and PCP found in his system.

Another “Celebrity Rehab” second season star was “Taxi” actor Jeff Conway, who died at age 60 in May 2011 with opiates and other drugs in his system.

Another third season “Rehab” cast member was Alice In Chains bassist Mike Starr, who died at the age of 44 in March 2011, addicted to heroin and other drugs and died of a drug overdose.

As the death toll among former “Celebrity Rehab” cast members grows, the question of whether the show does more harm than good, and if these addicts are truly getting the treatment they need is at the forefront of addiction specialists’ minds.

Dr. Drew, who treated the deceased cast members, released a statement after McCready’s death to People magazine:

“I am deeply saddened by this awful news. My heart goes out to Mindy’s family and children. She is a lovely woman who will be missed by many. Although I have not treated her for a few years, I had reached out to her recently upon hearing about the apparent suicide of her boyfriend and father of her younger children. She was devastated.”

Richard Taite, CEO of Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center, has a strong opinion about this pattern of failure celebrated on the smallscreen for entertainment.  He also co-authored the best-selling book, “Ending Addiction For Good.”

“Mindy McCready’s death is certainly a tragedy and one that was perhaps preventable if she had gotten real treatment,” says Mr. Taite, founder and CEO of the elite Cliffside Malibu addiction residential treatment center.

“Celebrity Rehab is a farce as a foundation for or example of treatment. It is at best info-tainment – a television show that exploits the fragility of individuals who are in desperate need of help. Recovery does not happen in twenty-one days for individuals suffering profoundly from multiple disorders, such as Mindy McCready, and it does not occur under the view of millions of television viewers. One of the main needs any addict has is to develop a sincere, trusting relationship with a therapist and privately uncover the root causes of their addiction. This does not happen in a television show where addicts are part of a ‘cast’ and followed by television cameras 24 hours a day! Those receiving real treatment do not have to seek refuge in a bathroom to get a few minutes to process their feelings alone! Those who suffer from depression, suicidal ideation, and addiction need long-term, private support in a safe, secure environment. It is tragic that Ms. McCready and the four other addicts who have died after being on Celebrity Rehab did not receive that level of care.”

 

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KTLA / Cliffside Malibu Prescription Abuse is a Growing Problem in SoCal Even Among the Youngest February 4, 2013

February 4, 2013

Prescription Abuse is a Growing Problem in SoCal Even Among the Youngest

The prescription drug epidemic is not only destroying lives all over the country but doctors say right here in southern california.

Now, continuing in our health smart series, Cher Calvin is here with an in-depth look at the ‘tiniest of addicts’.

According to the American Medical Association, there has been a sharp and dramatic increase of prescription drug abuse in pregnant women making newborns the new generation of drug addicts.

Last night we introduced you to a pregnant mother trapped in the throws of opiate addiction … Now, what doctors expect for her unborn baby.

“I never would have thought I would have picked up a drug while I was pregnant,” says Shaina Kenny.

But with two kids at home and another one on the way – Kenny did … her prescription drug of choice – roxycodone, also called ‘Roxies’.

“It wasn’t like I was going out on the streets buying heroin or cocaine. I thought is was OK because I’m getting them prescribed. This is medicine.”

For years, the 24-year old was unable to break free from the stranglehold of opiates – until the small voice of her three year old daughter inspired the pregnant mother to seek help.

“We were leaving to go run an errand one night which is what we called it,” Kenny says, “and she looked at me and started crying and said I don’t want you to run errands no more and I turned the car around and went home.”

After checking in to Forterus rehab, Kenny’s under gone extensive doctor visits and ultra-sounds – so far, all test results reveal a healthy baby.

“For anyone out there suffering from dependency there is help out there you don’t have to be like this, says Kenny.

Doctors at Cliffside Malibu rehabilitation also warn mothers can not only pass their opiate dependence on while pregnant, but also after giving birth.

“The opiates can be passed through breast milk and there are dangers of opiate dependence in the child,” Damon Raskin, MD from Cliffside Malibu Rehab.

And addiction experts insist just because it may be prescribed by your doctor – doesn’t make it safe.

“Opiates are more dangerous than heroin or cocaine combined. More people die from opiate addiction than from both those combined,” Richard Taite, Cliffside Malibu

The experts at Cliffside Malibu also told us its imperative to treat these mothers psychologically not just physically.

We will also keep you updated on the health of Kenny’s baby.

– Cher Calvin, KTLA News

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Criminal Lawyer / Cliffside Malibu Living In Sobriety: Dealing With Clients Who are Addicted January 8, 2013

January 8, 2013

Living In Sobriety: Dealing With Clients Who are Addicted

You have a client who has been charged with a drug-related offense. Is your client a full-blown addict, someone with a substance abuse problem, or an average person who made a minor mistake in judgment that could have some major consequences? It’s hard for a lawyer to know. There is no “test” for addiction like there is for the flu or high-blood pressure or diabetes. Yet, there is an evidence-base that provides information about substance abuse and addiction that could be useful to you and your clients – from what substance abuse and addiction are to the kinds of successful treatments that are available.

What is substance abuse and addiction?

Substance abuse can be described as a behavioral disorder. Persons with addictions (and those on their way to becoming addicts) abuse substances because they are in pain. A painful period or traumatic event has occurred that the addict does not have the resources to deal with.  S/he uses a substance and finds temporary relief from that pain.  When the effects of the substance wear off, the pain returns.  The individual uses again and again until substance use is habituated.  The combination of impacts on mind, body, and spirit has become so profound that the individual cannot break his/her habit.  This is the nature of addiction.

How do I know whether or not my client has an addiction?

The diagnosis of addiction is given based on a variety of behaviors and occurrences that an individual must in most cases self-report. Those who have worked with addicts know that usually only those who are on the brink of death are willing to accept that they have a problem.

However, there are two simple questions that you can ask to determine whether or not substance abuse or addiction is an issue for your client. 1) Have you ever missed an activity because you were too hung-over to attend? and 2) Has anyone in your life (spouse, parent, boss, child, friend, physician, etc.) ever suggested that you might drink/use drugs to excess?

Once I have determined that addiction or substance abuse is a problem for my client, what can I do to help him/her?

It is unlikely that your client will be able to recover on his/her own.  S/he will need treatment.  Hearing this will undoubtedly not go down well with your client. However, treatment can be the best gift your client can receive both for his/her health and the case s/he is facing.

The key to long-term addiction recovery is highly individualized, holistic treatment that is underpinned by intensive individual psychotherapy and addressing issues based on a person’s readiness to change.  To help them understand not only the nature of their problem, but that there is hope for recovery, they must be met at their individual level of readiness to change. Cliffside Malibu uses the “Stages of Change” model to help someone struggling with addiction know that s/he has a problem and believe that there is hope of recovery.  Once that is accomplished, intensive one-on-one psychotherapy combined with holistic (mind-body-spirit) interventions are used together to help addicts face the root cause of their pain and give them tools for moving through that pain.

What is the Stages of Change model?  Why is an integrated approach to treatment so effective?

It suggests that life-change occurs in predictable stages.  By understanding a client’s readiness and willingness to change, we can employ specific interventions to help the addict find the fortitude to face the problems of his past. By doing this in a safe, supportive environment with a dedicated therapist, the addict can work through his issues and learn the skills s/he needs to meet life’s challenges sober.  This is a complete life transformation in which using drugs or alcohol simply becomes unnecessary.

It is estimated that 83% of those who leave treatment are using again within a year. This failure is because most treatment programs do not provide a holistic, integrated approach to treatment. People with addiction illness have deficiencies and problems on the levels of mind, body, and spirit.  They must be given the physical support (nutrition, rest, exercise, yoga, orthomolecular medicine, acupuncture, massage, etc.) to get their bodies to a state of good health, the psychological support (intensive one-on-one therapy with a loving therapist, small group work, family therapy, etc.) and spiritual support (life coaching, meditation training, access to clergy) to change the path on which s/he is traveling.  It is only with this kind of intensive support using a team of professionals in a safe, secure environment that addicts transcend their addictions with ease.

Does Cliffside Malibu work with attorneys or the courts?

Yes. Our policy is to work hand-in-hand with criminal attorneys to get the best possible outcomes for our clientele with respect to sentencing, etc.  If an attorney asks or requests, we have our clinical director give testimony on behalf of clients.

Richard Taite, CEO and Constance Scharff, PhD, of the Cliffside Malibu treatment center in Malibu, California, have written a new book that describes what addiction is and how it can be overcome for good.  The book is titled “Ending Addiction for Good” and can be purchased at Amazon.com or any major book retailer in both paperback and electronic versions.

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NYDailynews / Cliffside Malibu ‘What can you do if an addict isn’t ready to give up using drugs and alcohol?’ January 4, 2013

January 4, 2013

‘What can you do if an addict isn’t ready to give up using drugs and alcohol?’

BILL: Dave, did you see that Scott Sterling, son of L.A. Clippers owner, Donald Sterling was found dead alone in his apartment right after New Years Eve?

DR. DAVE: I understand he had a history involving drugs. At any rate, the coroner’s office believes he died of an “apparent drug overdose.”

BILL: It wasn’t the first time I’ve read of someone OD-ing on Christmas, a birthday or like Scott Sterling, on New Years Eve. “Significant dates can indeed very difficult for addicts,” says Dr. Damon Raskin, Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center. “The addict will often use the day as an artificial marker to stop using. This is just a set up for failure and relapse since they haven’t done the necessary psychological work that is required to really quit for good.” Dave, how would you describe that “getting ready to quit” process?

DR. DAVE: In the early days of addiction treatment, the steps in the recovery process were “admitting you had a problem, Accepting the full therapy for recovery, and then Surrendering to the fact that it was a life long process; or the stages of Admission, Acceptance and Surrender.”

BILL: So, unless the addict admitted he had a problem, there was really no starting point for treatment?

DR. DAVE: Exactly the problem Bill. But, the addiction treatment process of the last 10 years has found another stage we can address to get the addict to admission–it is called the Contemplation Stage. If we can get the addict talking and thinking about his use, then we have a bridge to admission.

BILL: It seems to a non-professional like me that this whole “contemplation” process might be saying to my fellow addicts who are still using that “It’s not that bad, you can take your time deciding on whether to stop.” If you believe Amy Winehouse’s father, she was mixing Librium with her booze and died of an OD mixture of both while “contemplating” away.

DR. DAVE: If you are making the point that half-hearted efforts to quit can add to the fatal nature of the disease of addiction, you won’t get any argument with me. In fact, many credible relapse researchers believe there is something called the Abstinence Violation Effect–or A.V.E. for short. If an addict just lets her craving build and build, without reducing the emotional toxicity behind it, when the relapse occurs, the combination of guilt and craving can send the addict off into a binge of even more excessive use than before.

BILL: Another important idea, says Dr. Raskin is that “if an addict stops using for a week or two, and then goes back to using the same dose of drugs they were using before they stopped, they may have lost tolerance to the drug which makes it much easier to overdose.”

DR. DAVE: With all three of us having made the point that anything that delays the addict’s quitting will bring them closer to that fatal overdose, still, we desperately need additional research on how to turn the “contemplation stage” into a bridge to recovery….

BILL: ..including reminding our readers, along with Don Sterling and NFL coach Andy Reid who lost his son to overdose addiction in 2012, that one proven strategy to “cross the bridge” is to enlist a professional from this national list of Intervention Specialists. But Doc, I can’t help but be concerned about the many therapists and counselors who are not specialists but are trying to get their addicted patients who are in the Contemplation stage into addiction treatment.

DR. DAVE: I assume you mean the ones that have ethically confronted the addict, with compassion, and explained they need help and standard addiction treatment has been rejected? I have real ethical concerns about the health practitioners dispensing drugs that might hasten an OD, or the therapist who goes along with the addict’s pretense that addiction is simply a byproduct of depression or anxiety that should be treated INSTEAD of the drug use.

BILL: Of course! I know there has been a whole language game of therapy to avoid the elephant of addiction in the room…my personal favorite is someone tossing out the phrase they are doing “harm reduction” by addressing virtually any other problem than the addiction!

DR. DAVE: The one proven strategy, outside of Intervention, that has been shown to be effective in the Contemplation Stage is what is called Motivational Interviewing.

BILL: That’s what you were teaching the health personnel in the Scripps Emergency Rooms of San Diego County and the physicians dealing with drug using teens in Juneau Alaska?

DR. DAVE: Exactly, it’s a way of talking to addicts that move them farther out of denial and towards an internal motivation for admitting they need treatment. The National Institute of Health has actually taken the research and turned it into very readable strategies and methods that both family members and therapists have found useful. So many parents and spouses have found it helped them that I would recommend it to anyone working with or living with an untreated addict

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Cliffside Malibu

Dr. Damon Raskin

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ABC / Cliffside Malibu Eight Hospital Employees Fired For Refusing Flu Vaccines January 3, 2013

January 3, 2013

Eight Hospital Employees Fired For Refusing Flu Vaccines

An Indiana hospital has fired eight employees, including at least three veteran nurses, after they refused mandatory flu shots, stirring up controversy over which should come first: employee rights or patient safety. The hospital imposed mandatory vaccines, responding to rising concerns about the spread of influenza.

Ethel Hoover wore all black on her last day of work as a nurse in the critical care unit at Indiana University Health Goshen Hospital. She said she was in “mourning” because she would have been at the hospital 22 years in February, and she’s only called out of work four or five times in her whole career , she said.

“This is my body. I have a right to refuse the flu vaccine,” Hoover, 61, told ABCNews.com. “For 21 years, I have religiously not taken the flu vaccine, and now you’re telling me that I believe in it.”

More than 15,100 flu cases have been reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention since Sept. 30, including 16 pediatric deaths. Indiana’s flu activity level is considered high, according to the CDC, which last month announced that the flu season came a month earlier than usual.

 

When Hoover first heard about the mandate, she said she didn’t realize officials would take it so seriously. She said she filed two medical exemptions, a religious exemption and two appeals, but they were all denied. The Dec. 15 flu shot deadline came and went. Hoover’s last day of employment was Dec. 21.

Fellow nurse Kacy Davis said she and her colleagues were “horrified” over Hoover’s firing, calling her their “go-to” nurse and a “preceptor.”

“It was a good place to work,” Hoover said. “We’ve worked together all these years. We’re like a family.”

The hospital said in a statement that it implemented the mandate to promote patient safety based on recommendations from the American Medical Association, the American Nurses Association, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It announced the mandate in September. Of the hospital’s 26,000 employees statewide, 95 percent complied. That means 1,300 employees did not comply, but only eight were fired.

“IU Health’s top priority is the health and wellbeing of our patients,” said hospital spokeswoman Whitney Ertel. “Participation in the annual Influenza Patient Safety Program is a condition of employment with IU Health for the health and safety of the patients that we serve, and is therefore required.”

The CDC recommends flu shots for everyone older than six months of age. Dr. William Schaffner, chair of preventive medicine at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tenn., said hospital patients are especially vulnerable to flu complications because their bodies are already weakened.

“I cannot think of a reason for any health care professional to decline influenza immunization that’s valid,” said Schaffner, a former president of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases, adding that people with egg allergies may have to avoid the flu shot to prevent anaphylactic shock, but even that hurdle has been remedied. The Food and Drug Administration approved an egg-free vaccine in November.

Schaffner said invalid excuses to avoid the shot include being afraid of needles and simply promising to stay home when they’re sick. Patients now have the option of a vaccine nasal spray if they want to avoid needles. And since flu victims become contagious before they start to feel sick, they can get patients sick even if they stay home when they have symptoms.

Over the last several years, hospitals have been moving toward mandatory vaccinations because many only have 60 percent vaccination rates, Schaffner said. He is leading an effort for a similar mandate at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Nurses in particular tend to be the most reluctant to get vaccinated among health care workers, Schaffner said, citing his opinion.

“There seems to be a persistent myth that you can get flu from a flu vaccine among nurses,” he said. “They subject themselves to more influenza by not being immunized, and they certainly do not participate in putting patient safety first.”

In October 2011, Vanderbilt broke the world record for number of vaccines administered in an eight-hour period in an event called Flulapalooza. From 6:50 a.m. to 2:50 p.m., they vaccinated 12,647 people. By that evening, more than 14,000 people had been vaccinated, and there were no severe adverse reactions, he said.

But still, Hoover’s lawyer, Alan Phillips, says his client had the right to refuse her flu shot under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits religious discrimination of employees. Religion is legally broad under the First Amendment, so it could include any strongly held belief, he said, adding that the belief flu shots are bad should suffice.

“If your personal beliefs are religious in nature, then they are a protected belief,” Phillips said.

Phillips, who is based out of North Carolina, has made a name for himself fighting for employees’ rights to get out of mandated flu shots, but he has never needed to go to court. Although he usually handles a couple dozen health care workers per year, he had 150 this fall in 25 states.

Dr. Damon Raskin, an internist with his own practice in the Pacific Palisades in Los Angeles, said hospitals should mandate flu vaccines as a matter of public safety. The flu can lead to complications like pneumonia and death, said Raskin, who is also affiliated with the Cliffside Malibu Addiction Rehabilitation Center.

“I think if the health care worker has some problem with religious faith then perhaps during flu season, they shouldn’t do that job,” Raskin said, suggesting that the worker do something administrative instead during flu season. “It’s not fair to the patient. The people who are most at risk are in the hospital.”

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Cliffside Malibu

Dr. Damon Raskin

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Son of billionaire Clippers owner Donald Sterling dead, drugs suspected January 2, 2013

January 2, 2013

Son of billionaire Clippers owner Donald Sterling dead, drugs suspected

Sad news this morning as KTLA and CNN are both reporting the son of billionaire Donald Sterling, owner of the Los Angeles Clippers basketball team, was found dead allegedly surrounded by drug paraphernalia.

 

Police are still investigating the death of Scott Sterling, 32, son of Clippers owner Donald Sterling, whose body was found at a home in Malibu.

Local Los Angeles affiliate KTLA reports that detectives were called to the 22600 block of Pacific Coast Highway at 11:29 p.m. on Tuesday, from information provided by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. Confirmation on the death came from the L.A. County Coroner’s office.

An autopsy will be performed to determine the cause of death. According to KTLA, it appeared to be an overdose with drug paraphernalia allegedly discovered at the scene.

Scott Sterling made headlines when he was 19 years old, after he shot his childhood friend, Philip Scheid, who he claimed attacked him with a knife, allegedly over an actress’ affections. The incident happened at Donald Sterling’s home on Beverly Drive in Beverly Hills.

More than a year after the shooting, prosecutors dropped file charges, saying the victim wasn’t credible. The conclusion left police frustrated as ballistics reports showed that the victim was shot from behind from at least 15 feet away, yet the young Sterling claimed self-defense.

“No rational person would entertain the possibility of his story being true,” Beverly Hills Det. Sgt. Jack Douglas wrote in a memo to prosecutors.

Dr Damon Raskin, consulting board certified internist at Cliffside Malibu (www.cliffsidemalibu.com) a premiere residential rehabilitation facility, spoke to Monsters and Critics this morning (Jan. 2) on this developing story:

“Although it is still too early to tell, it appears that this may be another tragic tale of a privileged individual who did not seek help for his depression, addiction or both. When there are so many resources available to help, it is a sad day when another young person succumbs in this way.”

Dr Damon Raskin, consulting board certified internist at Cliffside Malibu (www.cliffsidemalibu.com) a premiere residential rehabilitation facility, spoke to Monsters and Critics this morning (Jan. 2) on this developing story:

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Cliffside Malibu

Dr. Damon Raskin

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The Huffington Post / Cliffside Malibu Male Menopause: Is It Ruining Your Marriage? January 2, 2013

January 2, 2013

Male Menopause: Is It Ruining Your Marriage?

A few months ago, a 72-year-old judge walked into Dr. Damon Raskin’s Pacific Palisades California internal medicine office with a problem he could barely articulate. The judge, well-known in his community, was fatigued all the time and had lost his passion for life. With a simple blood test, Raskin was able to figure out something else the man had lost: testosterone.

Low testosterone levels were zapping the judge’s zest for living, diminishing his sex drive, reducing the results of gym workouts and even causing him to lose the sharp focus he held for his life’s work. But he was one of the lucky ones. He knew things didn’t have to be this way just because he was 72 and he sought help.

After using a testosterone gel for two weeks, the judge called Raskin and reported he had renewed intimate relations with his wife of 40-plus years, was feeling more like his old self and had basically found his mojo. Huff/Post50 caught up with Raskin, an expert on the subject, to talk about the problem that is popularly known as male menopause. Raskin is the supervising doctor for Ageless Men’s Health, a nationwide facility dealing with men’s health and anti-aging issues.

HP: How common is male menopause?
Raskin: Over the last five to seven years, we are seeing many more patients with male menopause. I think, to some degree, the problem has always existed but now men are starting to come forward realizing that low testosterone levels impact their lives adversely and that needn’t be the case.

HP: Any hard numbers?
Raskin: The leading research on the problem of male menopause is the Hypogonadism in Males study, known as the HIM Study. It found that 38 percent of the men over 45 tested by their doctors have low testosterone. And that doesn’t count the men who aren’t presenting themselves in medical offices seeking care. I believe it is an underdiagnosed condition and is way more prevalent than we think.

HP: But just like female menopause, isn’t this just a fact of biology? You get older, systems fail kind of thing?
Raskin: Female menopause is very different for a number of reasons. For one, we have points that help us define what’s going on — perimenopause, menopause, post-menopause. We use markers that are very obvious to denote where a woman is, when her menstrual cycle stops, when she experiences hot flashes, when she notices a diminished libido. With men, there are no milestones like that. Men’s bodies are changing, but many of them don’t understand that it could be because of hypogonadism — lowered testosterone levels.

HP: What are the symptoms that typically bring a patient to see you?
Raskin: Interestingly, it isn’t only lowered sex drive although that’s certainly one of them. Often, they just feel almost depressed, not like their old selves, they don’t want to do the things that used to bring them pleasure. They have lost their zest for life. Yes, in some cases, there is also erectile dysfunction and diminished sex drive.

HP: So, it’s the husband telling the wife that he “has a headache?”
Raskin: Yes, and he worries about why he’s not in the mood anymore. Sometimes it feels like general fatigue and there may be other conditions going on that we need to rule out.

HP: Like what?
Raskin: Underactive thyroid, anemia, their body composition is changing and they have more belly fat. They are working out but not seeing the results.

HP: So is this something that is confined to older men, guys in their 60s or 70s?
Raskin: Absolutely not. There are men in their 80s who don’t experience lower testosterone levels and men in their 40s who do. Men with Type 2 diabetes are more prone to low testosterone. So are men with high blood pressure and men taking certain medications. Opiate use can lower testosterone. Men who have used — abused — steroids in the pursuit of athletics are also prone to it when the steroid use is stopped. Obesity has also been linked to low testosterone.

HP: What’s the diagnostic process and treatment like?
Raskin: We run a screening blood test and testosterone levels are low, we screen to see what other causes might be present. If those are ruled out, the testosterone replacement therapy is fairly simple. It can be a patch, a gel — that’s the most common — or even shots. These are all prescription medications.

HP: And that’s it?
Raskin: No, there are follow ups to make sure the levels don’t get too high. If testosterone levels are high, it can cause some irritability and aggressiveness. There are some potential links to prostate cancer, although no long-term studies have been done linking testosterone replacement therapy with prostate cancer. In some cases, a woman might complain that before the therapy, her husband wasn’t interested in having sex … and now she says he wants to have it all the time. There are side effects

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Dr. Damon Raskin at Cliffside Malibu

Dr. Damon Raskin

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Celebzter / Cliffside Malibu How Low can she go? An expert’s dire warning if Lindsay doesn’t get help ASAP November 30, 2012

Novemeber 30, 2012

How Low can she go? An expert’s dire warning if Lindsay doesn’t get help ASAP

With each of her disturbing antics seemingly hitting a new low, you would think logically that Lindsay Lohan couldn’t sink much further.

But in these all-too-common occurrences and brushes with the law, the trouble-magnet’s behavior just gets worse….and worse.

At this point in time, to say she is spiraling out of control, is an understatement- she is in need of serious professional help.

As new details emerged of her 4am arrest when she punched Tiffany Eve Mitchell in the face at club Avenue in New York (the fight was said to be over Max from British boy band “The Wanted” who rejected her sloppy drunk advances; she was allegedly high, according to RadarOnline; she spat on the girl; she screamed at the cops),  is this free fall into the depths of depravity a serious cry for attention or the sign that psychologically, she has bigger issues that just drug and alcohol abuse?

For normal people, several stints behind bars and countless trips to rehab would have signaled their rock bottom, but for Lohan the pit seems wide, open and gaping.

Richard Taite, founder and CEO of Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center and best-selling author of Ending Addiction for Good, says that Lohan isn’t just a problem to herself, but now possess a risk to others around her.

“She is definitely spiraling out of control,” he tells Celebzter. “She is continually getting into trouble and any reasonable person can tell she needs help.  Given her numerous arrests and convictions, any sober person would be motivated to stop their destructive behavior but addicts don’t think that way.”

“She is walking a slippery slope and if she doesn’t get help soon she will, in all probability, seriously hurt herself or someone else,” he adds.

Having two warring parents is not helping her cause either. Today her dad, Michael, pointed the finger of blame clearly at Dina (she has so far remained mum on her daughter’s latest brush with the law) and Taite thinks that Lohan is sliding into a drug and drink oblivion to block out the dysfunction of her family unit.

 

 

“This can typically happen to people when they don’t get their emotional needs met as children.  Sometimes, the anger they feel consciously or unconsciously causes them to act out aggressively. To dull the emotional pain they may turn to drugs and alcohol.  Lindsay has had so many episodes of this nature that she really needs to get professional, long-term treatment where she will learn to change her lifestyle and habits.”

 

 

The question now is, will this girl, who is only 26, and has been given more chances than most people have to reform and clean up her act, get help before it is too late?

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Cliffside Malibu

 

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Empower Radio / Cliffside Malibu Creating Change November 28, 2012

Creating Change

The incidence of substance abuse is on the rise for men and women over the age of 50. Dr. Raskin from Cliffside Malibu shares advice and information about what to do if an elderly loved one is suffering from an addiction. He discusses the complications that are specific to this population, as well as little known facts about the hidden problem of substance abuse among the elderly.

 Click here to listen

 

Dr. Damon Raskin, M.D has been doing what he loves for the past 16 years.  As a board certified internist, he has dedicated his career to helping his patients through both minor and major medical interventions.  For 10 years Dr. Raskin has specialized in working in addiction detoxification.  Dr. Raskin first became involved with addiction medicine when he was hired as a consultant at  a rehab center in Southern California before moving on to Cliffside Malibu as one of their medical specialists.  At Cliffside Malibu he works closely with patients who are going through detoxification.  Dr. Raskin believes that the detox process can be very dangerous and he stresses it is important that the addict doesn’t stop using suddenly as it can be as harmful as their actual addiction. Dr. Raskin recognizes that it is beneficial for the addicted patient to slowly and calmly re-train their bodies to function without drugs  for optimal treatment.

Cliffside Malibu

Dr. Damon Raskin

Original Article

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Forbes / Cliffside Malibu Where The Rich And Famous Go For Addiction Treatment November 27, 2012

Novemeber 27, 2012

Where The Rich And Famous Go For Addiction Treatment

Richard Taite is a bit of an incongruity. For the CEO of one of the world’s most successful addiction treatment facilities (financially and in treatment success rate), he’s refreshingly down-home and modest, in an industry that’s often not so. Part of his humility might come from the fact that he was an addict himself for 20 years before getting clean, becoming professionally successful, and founding Cliffside Malibu. So he understands his patients’ plights in the most intimate way.

“If you had told me twenty years ago that I would one day get sober,” Taite says, “marry an amazing woman who consistently inspires me to be a better man, have a child who is the love of my life, and become the founder of one of the leading addiction treatment centers in the world, I would have laughed in your face. Then I would have taken another hit of crack.”

In the throes of his addiction, Taite was smoking crack every day, going for a week or more without sleep, and eating a Big Mac once a week just to stay alive. He was homeless at one point, too. He ultimately managed to pull himself out of addiction in a sober living facility and a lot – a lot – of therapy. Today he says that the core issues with addiction for most people come from long held and erroneous beliefs about oneself that begin in childhood. Abusing alcohol or drugs, he explains, is often an addict’s attempt to cope with these beliefs that develop early but, unfortunately and destructively, stick around and shape us as adults. His treatment facility’s methods center around helping the patient get to the bottom of their “issues,” which has to happen first for a person to surface from their addiction.

“I’m the worst CEO on the face of the Earth, FOR SURE,” Taite jokes. Some would say he hasn’t always made the best financial decisions with the organization, spending out-of-pocket money to help clients in unconventional ways. “If,” says Taite, “you run a business like a love call, you are a ‘bad businessman.’ But you get to help a lot of people, and in the end that’s exactly why we are so successful.”

The fact that his facility looks much like a luxury resort is somewhat of an accident. He bought the house that would later become Cliffside Malibu to live in himself, and thought he would spend the rest of his life there. That did not happen, however, as the house quickly evolved into his treatment facility – the Ralph Lauren furnishings and ultra-modern flat-screen TVs that he handpicked for his own use now remain for the comfort of his patients.

“It’s funny,” says Taite. “The therapists I interviewed and who toured the site, were disgusted by having a flat-screen in every room. I said to them, ‘You want me to teach these people how to fall asleep in 30 days?’ If you’re a therapist with little experience, you don’t know addicts. An addict doesn’t know how to fall asleep: he passes out.  If I can help him pass out watching MSNBC on a big-screen TV, instead of using his drug of choice, then we’re doing pretty good.”

To be sure, treatment comes with a hefty price tag. Depending on the length of the stay, which can range from 30 to 120 days, the cost of sobriety can cost many tens of thousands of dollars. Taite has brought in the most highly skilled staff he could find to support his integrative treatment approach, he says, and has a guarantee on clients’ treatment success. “My staff are top-notch people, and they are not desensitized to the process, which is what you often find in addiction treatment. They’re here because they love what they do, and never lost that.” Taite and his team use a theory of behavior change, originally developed by Dr. James Prochaska, in their treatment, which he credits for the facility’s high success rate.

Getting into the head of an addict who’s a bigwig is a particular challenge since there is so much at stake, and so much power and ego involved. As with other individuals, helping the high-powered recover is not a switch that happens over night, it’s more like a very gradual dial, says Taite, which takes time to turn. “The exec, the CEO – he’s so successful at making money, you can’t tell him anything, you can’t talk to this guy. With the ‘dial,’ though, you can win his heart over, even if you can’t win over his head right away. He thought the first day of treatment is going to be worst day of his life, that all the fun is over. When you win his heart, you have this guy; and it’s not what he expected.”

Taite adds that at the end of the day, the goal is to create a shift in his clients’ heads so that existence “is no longer driven by the trauma, the anxiety of your past. Everything in your childhood, every story you developed when you were 8 is now running your 45-year-old life and creating wreckage. A lot of these high-functioning guys don’t have the tools; that’s why they use. Once you replace the trauma and the stories with the truth, you realize what’s real and what’s not. We addicts have a built-in forgetter, however, so you have to do constant maintenance and constant reminding.”

There is, of course, an extra degree of privacy at Cliffside Malibu because many of his patients are highly visible in their normal lives. “The fear is, ‘it can’t leak it out that CEO is a drunk and that we might lose billions in stock,'” says Taite. “These guys get a little bit of perspective while they’re here. They stop creating wreckage; they stop self-sabotaging, and start to actually begin to take in and be present for their children, their wives. And, of course, they become volumes more productive at work.”

In answer to the question of whether he has to turn people who can’t afford treatment away, Taite says, “That’s a bad deal. That’s a really bad deal. That’s why I wrote the book [Ending Addiction for Good] – because 99% of people can’t afford good treatment. This was the global way I could address that problem. We do turn people away; that’s why my staff won’t let me answer the phone, because I have a very hard time doing that. Sometimes we have to make recommendations about other places for treatment. What do you do when someone has no money?

“What I’m doing is putting something out there that has worked for us and, hopefully, based upon our reputation in the community, the directors, clinical directors or program directors of the 1150 or so nonprofit treatment centers in California and in places just like that around the country will say ‘wow, this is what they do at Cliffside Malibu, I want to try this.'” So Taite’s book was his way of disseminating the models he uses to other treatment facilities around the country, and perhaps the world. “It doesn’t cost anything to become better educated in your craft and to better serve the people who you’re charged with helping.”

As to how Taite is able continue his “love call” with the same enthusiasm with which he began, he says this: “The reason I do this every day, and continue to love it every day, is because I’ve got a three year old daughter and wife who is 42 about to have our second baby. We got it together just in time so we didn’t miss out on that. We’ve got intense love and gratitude for something that saved our lives. I understand what successful treatment takes, because I lived it and have helped so many others achieve it. And if you know how to do something – like treat a person for addiction – and you don’t do it… well, then you’re a *&^$%^#$@ idiot.”

Original Article

Cliffside Malibu

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Empower Radio / Cliffside Malibu Creating Change November 20, 2012

Creating Change

On this edition of Creating Change, Doug talks with Dr. Constance Scharff, Addiction Research Consultant for Cliffside Malibu Addiction Treatment Center. Dr. Scharff offers tips and discusses science-based principles for helping people overcome addictions. Dr. Scharff will also share insights from her new book co-authored by Richard Taite titled, Ending Addiction for Good: The Groundbreaking, Holistic, Evidence-Based Way to Transform Your Life. This episode of Creating Change will help you separate fact from fiction when it comes to addiction and recovery.

[Click Here To Listen]

Constance Scharff has a PhD in Transformative Studies, specializing in addiction recovery. She is a researcher with the Institute for Creative Transformation, the Transformative Studies and Addiction Research Consultant for the Cliffside Malibu Addiction Treatment Center. Dr. Scharff is also the world’s leading expert on using ecstatic spiritual experience to maintain long-term sobriety. The focus of her ground-breaking research is understanding addiction as an opportunity for spiritual transformation. She is a nationally renowned transformational consultant, helping addicts in recovery navigate difficult spiritual experiences and grow in positive directions from them. An author and poet, Constance currently writes on the subjects of addiction recovery, relapse prevention, ecstatic spiritual experience, personal transformation and Jewish mysticism. Her most recent works will be available in late 2012 and early 2013. These include a book on addiction co-authored by Richard Taite titled, Ending Addiction for Good: The Groundbreaking, Holistic, Evidence-Based Way to Transform Your Life (Wheatmark, 2012), a book of Jewish-themed poetry called, I Want a God with Arms (Sociosight Press, 2012), and a first-person account of radical spiritual transformation, Becoming Ahuva (Sociosight Press, 2013).

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Stephanie Bongiovi’s drug incident deeply upsetting, says addiction expert November 15, 2012

Stephanie Bongiovi’s drug incident deeply upsetting, says addiction expert

Stephanie Rose Bongiovi, the 19-year-old daughter of Jon Bon Jovi, allegedly overdosed on heroin this week and was subsequently arrested at her college in Upstate New York.

Police found Stephanie unresponsive after it was reported she had taken the drug. When medical personnel arrived on the scene, they found Bongiovi was still alive. A search of her room uncovered a “small quantity” of heroin as well as marijuana and drug paraphernalia.

Stephanie is the eldest child of four, and Bon Jovi’s only daughter.

Frequent guest commentator to Monsters and Critics, Richard Taite, founder and CEO of Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center, took the Bon Jovi family story to heart.

Taite, a father himself, doesn’t want to see this happen in any family.  Cliffside Malibu is a residential rehabilitation facility that is a gentle, quiet place where those in recovery from addiction find a profound connection with the human spirit and nature serving as a healing backdrop. Richard Taite’s own beginning was not as idyllic. A recovered addict himself, his life lessons accrued and his team of the best in medicine make the spot in Malibu unlike any other recovery center.

“As a father of a daughter myself, I can honestly say that it is an absolute blessing that this nineteen year old girl was arrested.  What most laypeople and, unfortunately, professionals in the treatment industry don’t know is that heroin, specifically, has its own set of complications.  What feels the best for a heroin addict who is doing it intravenously is to get as close to death as humanly possible without actually dying.  That’s the goal.  That’s where the euphoric state is, right there on that edge, which is why there are typically no old heroin addicts.  They either get well or they die.  If that was my daughter, my only daughter at that, and the oldest of my four children, setting an example for the other three, I would seek immediate help for her.  And by immediate, I mean yesterday.”

Bongiovi was arrested under charges of possession of a controlled substance, possession of marijuana and criminally using drug paraphernalia. A 21-year-old male was also charged with possession.

She was released from custody and is reportedly recovering has been ordered to appear in court at a later date.

Cliffside Malibu

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Raskin - Test Country / Cliffside Malibu Cliffside Malibu Doctor Explains in an Exclusive Interview Why There’s No Such Thing as “Safe” Substance to Abuse November 15, 2012

Novemeber 15, 2012

Cliffside Malibu Doctor Explains in an Exclusive Interview Why There’s No Such Thing as “Safe” Substance to Abuse

What better way to understand substance abuse and treatment than to get first-hand account from professionals who deal with drug addicts. They know the symptoms and they can tell with preciseness how addiction could damage life and relationships.

Hence, when TestCountry got the chance to interview Dr. Damon Raskin, a board certified internist working at Cliffside Malibu, one of the first questions we had to ask is how dangerous prescription drugs and other illegal drugs are  for people.

 

Dr. Raskin cited some of the substances that we need to be paying close attention to, such as alcohol, prescription medicines, and synthetic drugs. He describes prescription drugs “extremely dangerous” and synthetic drugs like bath salts and Smiles “frightening” for their potency and toxicity. The consequences that are associated with these and other commonly abused drugs, as well as the changing drug abuse trends, are enough to remind people the kind of harm they could get into when they consider experimenting and abusing banned substances.

“Mixing different types of drugs is like playing Russian roulette. Even a relatively small amount of alcohol, opioids and central nervous system depressants can cause accidental overdose and death,” Dr. Raskin said.

Before joining Cliffside Malibu, Dr. Raskin was a consultant at a rehab center in Southern California. For 10 years, he has specialized in addiction detoxification. At Cliffside Malibu he works closely with patients who are going through detoxification. He believes that the detox process can be very dangerous and he stresses it is important that the addict doesn’t stop using suddenly since abrupt withdrawal can be as harmful as the actual addiction.

To read the full text of Dr. Raskin’s interview, please visit Cliffside Malibu Treatment Center Exclusive Interview About Prescription Drug Abuse.

Cliffside Malibu

Dr. Damon Raskin

Orignal Article

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Celebzter / Cliffside Malibu ‘Clearly Bobby Brown hasn’t really dealt with his issues’, says addiction expert following Brown’s latest DUI bust October 25, 2012

October 25, 2012

‘Clearly Bobby Brown hasn’t really dealt with his issues’, says addiction expert following Brown’s latest DUI bust

In the early hours of Wednesday, Bobby Brown found himself on the wrong side of the law- again.

The 43-year-old was pulled over just before 1 a.m. near the intersection of Ventura Boulevard and Corbin Avenue in Tarzana and “when they approached him, they smelled the alcohol,” L.A. Now reported.

Brown was booked and released, LAPD Officer Venus Hall said. L.A. County Sheriff’s Department records show bail set at $25,000, with Brown leaving before 8 a.m.

It was his second arrest of the same nature this year, and it comes after he checked into rehab In early August as part of his plea deal for the first DUI bust.

Dr. Damon Raskin, of Cliffside Malibu, tells Celebzter that he feels Brown still hasn’t conquered his demons and needs to seeks additional help.

“Clearly Bobby Brown hasn’t really dealt with his alcohol issues and would be a good candidate for long-term residential treatment center,” Dr. Damon Raskin, who does not treat Brown, says. “He also might be a good candidate to be on medication that could help prevent another relapse.  For example, there is Naltrexone shots that the patient takes once a month that help prevent cravings and relapsing.”

He adds: “Relapsing happens all the time with all kinds of people, it’s not just because Bobby Brown a celebrity but being in the spotlight makes a person more at risk for a relapse.

“There also might be some underlying psychiatric  issues that caused him relapse, you have to remember that he has pressures of being in spotlight, of maintaining a certain lifestyle and there is the recent death of ex-wife, Whitney Houston, and the possible relationship issues he has with his daughter and the Houston family.  This can all push a user or an alcoholic to return to that troublesome lifestyle”

Brown is due back in court Nov. 16.

Original Article

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Tony Scott had anti-depression drugs in system, death ruled a suicide October 23, 2012

October 23, 2012

Tony Scott had anti-depression drugs in system, death ruled a suicide

English born film director Tony Scott had an anti-depressant and sleep aid in system at time of his suicide on August 19 in Los Angeles.

The director had a therapeutic level of Mirtazapine, also known as Remeron, as well as the insomnia medication Lunesta in his bloodstream at the time of his death, the Los Angeles County Coroner said.

 

Scott climbed up the Vincent Thomas Bridge and jumped to his death as horrified onlookers dialed 911.  It is now reported by multiple news sources that Scott had an anti-depressant and a sleep aid in his system when he committed suicide.

The director had a therapeutic level of Mirtazapine, also known as Remeron, as well as the insomnia medication Lunesta in his bloodstream at the time of his death, the Los Angeles County Coroner said.

His death was ruled a suicide caused by “multiple blunt force injuries” and drowning, the coroner ruled.

TMZ reported that Scott scaled a barrier fence and jumped off of the massive Vincent Thomas suspension bridge during the daylight.

Both TMZ and The Los Angeles Times reported that authorities released 911 recordings from witnesses who reported Scott’s suicide.

“We are just on the Vincent Thomas Bridge, and there’s a guy that looks like he’s just about to jump off. Oh my God, he’s jumped! He’s jumped!” an unidentified woman told an emergency dispatcher in the recordings first obtained by TMZ.com.

“It’s dangerous. He just parked his car in the lane there, and he’s jumped.”

Scott reportedly parked his black Toyota Prius with its emergency lights flashing in the slow lane of the bridge.

An erroneous report surfaced quickly that Scott had inoperable brain cancer which was dismissed by his immediate family as false.

Scott did leave notes in his car and office.

The director was survived by his third wife and their twin sons.

Medical and addiction expert, residential rehabilitation facility Cliffside Malibu’s internist Dr. Damon Raskin, spoke to Monsters and Critics about the perils of not adequately treating clinical depression.

He tells Monsters and Critics, “Clearly Mr Scott was suffering from depression. Insomnia is a very common symptom of depression, and is often difficult to treat. Physicians will often combine antidepressants and sedative hypnotics like Lunesta to help patients with both their mood disorder and sleep disorder. Remeron is often used to help patients sleep as well. It is considered a ‘sedating’ antidepressant. This combination is not dangerous in and of itself if taken at the recommended doses, but in this case, it is obvious that the depression was not adequately treated.”

Dr Damon Raskin, M.D is a board certified internist. For 10 years Dr. Raskin has specialized in working in addiction detoxification. Dr. Raskin has been interviewed for national and local media on all topics related to addiction and can be reached at

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Palisadian Post / Cliffside Malibu Raskin Treats Addiction Medically October 23, 2012

 

October 23, 2012

Raskin Treats Addiction Medically

Many residents like to think of Pacific Palisades as a tiny corner of paradise un’affected by drug and alcohol issues. Dr. Damon Raskin, an internist who has about 1,000 patients in his Palisades practice, discounts that notion.

‘Addiction affects all ages and all socioeconomic classes,’ said Raskin, who has been helping patients with addictions for the past 10 years, including six at Cliffside Malibu, a drug and alcohol rehabil’itation center north of Zuma Beach.

‘We’re seeing a lot of opiates, especially drugs like Oxycontin, Vicodin and Percocet,’ Raskin said. ‘People are getting it off the street and from their friends’ medicine cabinets. They ‘doctor shop’ and also go to emergency rooms asking for pain medicine.’

Once a patient admits he (or she) has a problem, some try to stop ‘cold turkey.’ The alternative is a ‘medically supervised’ detox program, which Raskin considers pref’erable, because when people who are drinking a fifth of vodka or two bottles of wine daily suddenly stop, their bodies can go into seizures.

Raskin also noted that people who are taking 20 to 30 Vicodin a day have developed a tolerance, and for them to stop suddenly can be life-threatening. Even those going through detox ‘can have insomnia, vomiting and severe muscle aches and it becomes so uncomfortable they go back to the substance to stop the pain,’ Raskin said. ‘Their attitude is ‘Screw this, I’m out of here.”

The doctor’s goal is to make the patient comfortable with non-addictive drugs during detox, which can take 10 to 15 days depending on the substance.

He was asked about those who recommend no medical intervention during detox. ‘It is unsafe and bad judgment and tortures the patient,’ Raskin said. ‘We want to help people get in the ‘right way’ to help their sobriety. We help them detox in the safest way.’

He continued, ‘Some who are ad’dicted often start on substances as a form of self-medication for depres’sion, anxiety, bipolar or psychological issues. Others get hooked because they start a drug for a real reason, a real pain, but then they realize they love the high. The drug bonds to an opiate receptor in the brain that then releases dopamine, which makes a person feel good, like a runner’s high.

‘Over time they need more and more of the substance,’ Raskin said. ‘Yet others have a genetic component that is part of their brain that won’t let them stop.’

According to Raskin, many people try to quit on their own, but it’s difficult. ‘They will say, ‘What’s a glass of wine?” and eventually find themselves back to several bottles a day.

Raskin recommends a rehabilitation center because patients are given other therapies aimed at preventing a relapse. ‘Patients struggle every day [after rehab],’ he said. ‘Even though they are clean, they attend AA and NA, but recovery goes on indefinitely.’

After detox, Raskin can also give a monthly injection (Vivitrol or the generic Naltrexone) that prevents craving. Even if a patient tries the substance that he or she was addicted to, it no longer gives a high. ‘I give the injection once a month for 12 months. It gives a patient time to break a habit.’

What are the prevalent drugs in the Palisades? ‘You name it,’ said Raskin, who has also seen heroin addiction, mostly in people in their 20s.

How can parents tell if their children are on a substance? ‘It is sometimes hard to tell the difference between typical adolescence behavior and drug abuse,’ Raskin said, but changes in grades, attitude and different friends could be indicators. Other warning signs are drug paraphernalia, empty plastic bags and a child’s losing weight.

Raskin also alerts parents to a new over-the-counter product that will result in a clean urine test regardless of what the child may be abusing’although it may not be foolproof. He recommends a saliva, hair or blood test if a parent is worried that a child is using drugs.

Original Article

Cliffside Malibu

Dr. Damon Raskin

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Palisadian / Cliffside Malibu Raskin Treats Addiction Medically October 17, 2012

October 11, 2012

Raskin Treats Addiction Medically

Many residents like to think of Pacific Palisades as a tiny corner of paradise un’affected by drug and alcohol issues. Dr. Damon Raskin, an internist who has about 1,000 patients in his Palisades practice, discounts that notion.

‘Addiction affects all ages and all socioeconomic classes,’ said Raskin, who has been helping patients with addictions for the past 10 years, including six at Cliffside Malibu, a drug and alcohol rehabil’itation center north of Zuma Beach.

‘We’re seeing a lot of opiates, especially drugs like Oxycontin, Vicodin and Percocet,’ Raskin said. ‘People are getting it off the street and from their friends’ medicine cabinets. They ‘doctor shop’ and also go to emergency rooms asking for pain medicine.’

Once a patient admits he (or she) has a problem, some try to stop ‘cold turkey.’ The alternative is a ‘medically supervised’ detox program, which Raskin considers pref’erable, because when people who are drinking a fifth of vodka or two bottles of wine daily suddenly stop, their bodies can go into seizures.

Raskin also noted that people who are taking 20 to 30 Vicodin a day have developed a tolerance, and for them to stop suddenly can be life-threatening. Even those going through detox ‘can have insomnia, vomiting and severe muscle aches and it becomes so uncomfortable they go back to the substance to stop the pain,’ Raskin said. ‘Their attitude is ‘Screw this, I’m out of here.”
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Daily News / Cliffside Malibu Coping with a Rebellious Drug Addicted Teen October 16, 2012

October 16, 2012

Coping with a Rebellious Drug Addicted Teen

More people in America are turning to rogue online pharmacies to purchase prescription painkillers like Oxycontin.

‘Mom, if you won’t give me money to buy my pills, I’ll have to become a prostitute or a dealer myself!’

No matter how many reality TV shows get cooked up around the idea of “intervention,” addiction is still a health care process. If it turns into a “fed-up parent” power struggle, it can actually speed up the disease progression.

BILL: “I’m a single mom and an attorney with a good income,” writes Peggy. “My daughter Tina began sneaking my Oxycodone pills when I had a ski accident last winter.”

DR. DAVE: We hear about that all too often — kids experimenting with their parents’ pills. They never think how expensive they are before they become addicted. That quote above was Tina’s blackmailing threat to her mother?

BILL: When Peggy wrote us, I turned to Richard Taite, CEO of Cliffside Malibu Addiction Treatment Center. “I advise parents who have a child with a drug or alcohol problem,” he responded.  “That if you tell your kid the only thing you are willing to pay for is his treatment or he’ll be put out on the street, then you will get your kid back. The parents who cave to the almost terrorist-like demands of their addicted children end up either losing them or creating years of unnecessary wreckage.”

DR. DAVE: I’d go a step beyond Richard’s overall advice. Parents tend to enable their kid either to keep using so they don’t end up on the streets, or they speed up the addiction by saying “It’s my way or the highway!” Often one parent takes one path and another takes the other, with the addict and enabler divorcing the intervening parent!
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Celebzter / Cliffside Malibu Expert Opinion: Was Johnny Lewis high on PCP when he murdered elderly landlady and dismembered her cat? September 28, 2012

September 27, 2012

Expert Opinion: Was Johnny Lewis high on PCP when he murdered elderly landlady and dismembered her cat?

His history of drug abuse was well documented, landing him behind bars countless times and saw him in and out of rehab.

And all signs are now pointing to the fact that Johnny Lewis was high when he savagely murdered his 81-year-old landlady, Catherine Chabot Davis, on Wednesday.

According to new details which have emerged overnight, Lewis stormed into the apartment of Davis at about 10:40 a.m. He then smashed her furniture, beat and strangled her. He also dismembered her cat, reportedly tearing it apart with his hands.

After the brutal crime, Lewis hopped a nearby fence and confronted one  of Davis’ neighbors, Daniel Blackburn, and a handyman- both were badly beaten  and claim that Lewis showed “super-human strength” and was “phenomenally strong.”

One of the neighbour’s told the Los Angeles Times that Lewis was hardly deterred by the blows he took, that it was  like “hitting him with a fly swatter.”
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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu  Actor Johnny Lewis acted out under drug influence, addiction expert doctor weighs in September 27, 2012

September 30, 2012

Actor Johnny Lewis acted out under drug influence, addiction expert doctor weighs in

Actor Johnny Lewis was found dead yesterday in Los Feliz area of Los Angeles, California in what is being described as a horrific crime scene.

Reportedly Lewis’ landlady, Catherine Davis, was bludgeoned to death before he fell to his own death.

Multiple sources – including TMZ and the Los Angeles Times – report he was released from jail less than a week before police say he fatally attacked his 81-year-old landlord, despite two convictions in August that earned him jail time.

The Los Angeles Times reported that Lewis, 28, pleaded no contest Aug. 8 to one count of assault with a deadly weapon and was sentenced to 365 days in Los Angeles County jail with three years of probation, a district attorney’s office spokeswoman said. Nine days later, he pleaded no contest to a burglary charge in separate case and received 291 days in jail.

He was released from custody Friday afternoon, according to published online jail records show.
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Celebzter / Cliffside Malibu Expert Opinion: She says she is doing ‘amazing’, but does Amanda Bynes need help? September 20, 2012

September 20, 2012

Expert Opinion: She says she is doing ‘amazing’, but does Amanda Bynes need help?

 

There has been much speculation that Amanda Bynes was set to check into rehab after increasing pressure, but the actress is remaining defiant, despite her various incidents of late, that she is ok.

In fact, she told PEOPLE that she is doing “amazing.” .

“I am retired as an actor,” she went on to say. “I am moving to New York to launch my career. I am going to do a fashion line, I am not talking about being arrested for DUI because I don’t drink, and I don’t drink and drive. It is all false.”

But is Bynes in denial? And should she be seeking some professional help?

Dr. Damon Raskin, addiction expert at drug and alcohol rehab facility, Cliffside Malibu, says Bynes needs treatment of some sort.

“It’s very hard to see whether this is a primary psychiatric disorder, like a manic episode, or whether this is a drug or alcohol fueled state,” he says. “Both could be possible, or it could be a combination,  One thing that is clear is she clearly needs to seek medical attention to help get to the diagnosis, and get the proper treatment she needs. She is clearly unsafe to drive or be out in public.”

 

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Eating to Wellness: Recipes and Insider Menu Tips For People in Recovery August 24, 2012

August 24, 2012

Eating to Wellness: Recipes and Insider Menu Tips For People in Recovery

 

One forgotten aspect of wellness in a rehabilitation facility is the food that is served to people detoxifying from a myriad of chemical compounds.

Often times these patients are nutrient starved and have no idea how to eat for optimal health and best results for recovery.  When destructive behaviors take over, the body suffers from lack of sleep and proper diet. This is why alcoholics and drug addicts who are not sober look so haggard and old before their time.

Cliffside Malibu,  a luxury treatment facility nestled in the Malibu Hills, distinguishes itself from other facilities by the quality of their staff, including a special Chef who creates remarkable organic and varied menus for all their patients, from meat eaters to vegans, all of whom have starved themselves of nutrients in large part because of their varied substance abuse.

Chef Esmael A. Paniza, known affectionately as “Mangi,” was hired by Cliffside Malibu‘s CEO and Founder, Richard Taite, for his exceptional ability to create a variety of cuisines to help their patients heal and rebuild their bodies.

“The nickname ‘Mangi’ was given to me by my late godfather. Little did I know that this name means ‘eat’,” quips Chef Mangi, whose background in the The Art Institute culinary arts program earned him the “Highest Achievement Award” and High Honors at his culinary arts’ school graduation.

“I love what I do. I think love is the best ingredient of all that you can put in any cooking,” says Chef Mangi.

Did you know that in order to fully recover from chemical dependency, you need to restore the nutrients your body has been robbed of while using drugs or alcohol? The Cliffside Malibu menu planning revolves around the guests’ dietary preferences, Kosher, vegan, vegetarian, macrobiotic, and also tailors it with what’s in season.
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ABC News / Cliffside Malibu Binge Drinking College Students Report Being Happier August 20, 2012

August 20, 2012

Binge Drinking College Students Report Being Happier

 

The negative effects of binge drinking are well-known, which makes the findings of new research released today linking binge drinking and reported happiness in college students troubling to many health experts.

The survey of 1,595 undergraduate students revealed binge drinking students report being happier than their non-binge drinking peers. The results were released this morning at the Annual Meeting of the American Sociological Association in Denver.

Specifically, the survey revealed that happiness was directly related to “status” — with wealthy, white, male, heterosexual and/or Greek-affiliated students being happier than “lower status” students.

However, in “lower status” students — in other words, less wealthy, female, non-white, homosexual, and/or non-Greek affiliated students — those who binge drink report levels of social satisfaction that are comparable to their high status counterparts.

Binge drinking is defined as consuming more than four drinks per session for females and consuming more than five drinks per session for males.

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Physician's Money Digest / Cliffside Malibu Increased Access Puts Physicians at Risk for Addiction August 15, 2012

August 15, 2012

Increased Access Puts Physicians at Risk for Addiction

 

Trends, both positive and negative, can tell us a great deal about the world around us. Robert Waldman, MD, head of the detox program at the Cliffside Malibu treatment center in Los Angeles, says that where physicians and addictions are concerned, the trend is a negative one.

According to Waldman, in the past many states had active diversion programs whereby a physician might voluntarily seek private and properly monitored treatment administered by a state agency with the right to do so. More recently, many states have eliminated those programs, and physicians are no longer feeling that encouragement, Waldman says.

“And so, I suspect, though I don’t have facts to share, that unfortunately this action is going to send professionals back under cover,” he says. “In the past I’ve treated podiatrists, surgeons and medical doctors who had voluntarily presented for treatment, but I haven’t seen any in quite some time.”

 

(more…)

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Telemundo / Cliffside Malibu Cliffside Malibu on Telemundo August 13, 2012
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National Enquirer / Cliffside Malibu Cliffside Malibu discusses detection of heroin with The National Enquirer. August 8, 2012

August 8, 2012

 Cliffside Malibu discusses detection of heroin with The National Enquirer.

national-enquirer

Drug abuse AND addiction physicians tell The ENQUIRER exclusively that if MACAULAY CULKIN would undergo a hair follicle test it would provide evidence whether he’s  used heroin in the past few months.

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Everyday Health / Cliffside Malibu Bath Salts: Dangers of a New Synthetic Drug July 30, 2012

July 30, 2012

 Bath Salts: Dangers of a New Synthetic Drug

Until recently, most Americans hearing the phrase bath saltsprobably conjured an image of a relaxing, therapeutic soak in the tub.

But that was before a spate of bizarre incidents involving people often likened to zombies. Like the Georgia man, 21, who rambled incoherently about eating people and, when he did not blink at the pepper-spray police blasted in his eyes, was Tasered 14 times before police could subdue him. Or a 35-year-old central New York woman, who, growling and barking like a dog, rampaged naked through her town before police subdued her with a Taser, witnesses said. She later died of an apparent cardiac arrest.

Police Allege Face-Biting Attack in Louisiana

Police and many drug experts believe events like these have been fueled by the synthetic drug called “bath salts.” And while every bath-salts experience is not ending up in the news, it is causing “an alarming number of ER visits across the country” and thousands of calls to poison control centers, says the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).

Until quite recently, they were entirely legal.
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Blog Talk Radio / Cliffside Malibu Overcoming Addictions with Cliffside Malibu July 25, 2012

July 25, 2012

Overcoming Addictions with Cliffside Malibu

This episode features an interview with Richard Taite, CEO of Cliffside Malibu treatment center.

Listeners will learn about the stages of change model of recovery,
as well as tips for dealing with loved ones with addictions.

 

Listen to internet radio with Breakfree to Success on Blog Talk Radio
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Worth Wealthy Wise / Cliffside Malibu Cliffside Malibu: A Gracious Portal to the Journey Home July 23, 2012

July 23, 2012

Cliffside Malibu: A Gracious Portal to the Journey Home

From the moment my bare feet touched the earth of Cliffside Malibu, a luxury treatment facility, I knew I was in the garden of centered souls. Unencumbered by my ridiculous choice of stilettos, I was very curious to connect with the man who planted the seeds, provided the nourishment and brought in the sunlight that inspired such abundant growth. I visited with Richard Taite, Founder and CEO.

I realized Cliffside Malibu was a reflection of the person Richard had become. It is a kind, gentle, quiet place that births an environment for a profound connection with the human spirit within all those who arrive for whatever purpose. Richard serves as the compassionate and devoted parent welcoming and honoring his ‘family’ into a home he created for them. With genuine esteem for all who arrive, he is there to serve the highest good of all who come through the door.

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu The Depths Of Drug Despair: How Did An American Heiress And Her Billionaire Husband Sink So Low? July 18, 2012

July 18, 2012

The Depths Of Drug Despair: How Did An American Heiress And Her Billionaire Husband Sink So Low?

Their fondness for illegal substances such a crack cocaine and heroin was widely known. Their full-blown addiction, however, not so much. Only those in Eva and Hans Kristian Rausing’s privilege world, knew to some extent. But not the full extent.

After being arrested for driving erratically in London last week, her husband, estimated to be worth a staggering $10 billion as heir to the Tetra Pak fortune, was found with drugs on him, and subsequently arrested.

A search by UK police in his 5-story mansion discovered something they weren’t looking for: The body of his wife.

Reports have varied since the discovery, but now the latest news suggests Eva could have been dead in one of the two squalor rooms they occupied for a MONTH. The mother-of-four was only 48.

Rausing and his wife have previously donated large sums of money to anti-drug charities, including the Mentor Foundation, which is an international program that steers youth away from drug use and abuse.

But in the end, all the money in the world or the charities they helped ultimately could not stave off their own demons.

We spoke to addiction expert, Richard Taite, President and CEO of Cliffside Malibu, to get his opinion, and he provides an enlightening, if not incredibly troubling insight into just how deep in the trenches the couple were with their drug addiction.

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Addiction expert on Ambien, and Kerry Kennedy crash July 17, 2012

July 16, 2012

Addiction expert on Ambien, and Kerry Kennedy crash

Kerry Kennedy’s recent crash over the weekend has raised questions about the suspected cause, a prescription sleeping pill callled Ambien.

Kennedy, the ex-wife of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, may have been under the influence of the sleeping aid when she was involved in a crash with a tractor-trailer on a New York highway and subsequently left the scene. She was arrested and charged with driving while impaired Friday, and is due in court Tuesday.

ABC News reported that Kennedy told police she had been taking Ambien sometime Friday morning. But her family said in a statement released to ABC News that there were no drugs involved.

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ABC News / Cliffside Malibu Kerry Kennedy Arrested After Car Accident July 17, 2012
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Celebzter / Cliffside Malibu Behind Closed Doors: American Moms Drowning In Stress & Turning To Adderall As They Struggle To Keep It All Together June 28, 2012

June 28, 2012

Behind Closed Doors: American Moms Drowning In Stress & Turning To Adderall As They Struggle To Keep It All Together

Prescription drug abuse in America is nothing new. Study upon study has shown that more Americans are abusing prescription drugs than illegal  ones due to how readily available they are and the lack of legal consequences that come from taking them.

But mostly, the abuse of prescription drugs is associated with college students, but now there is a new face to addiction: Moms who are trying to do it all.  Across America, with the stresses of the economy, working and trying to raise a family, the people you’d least expect, are using trickery to get prescriptions.  Adderall is specifically designed to treat those with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, but many of those taking it actually don’t suffer from the disorder. Between 2002 and 2010, there’s been a 750 percent increase in Adderall prescriptions for women between 26 and 39. Critics say clearly not all of these women need the drug for ADHD.

We consulted addiction expert Richard Taite, President and CEO of Cliffside Malibu to see why American women are drowning in their secret addiction and the dangers they face. Here is our interview with him…

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Addiction Expert on Nick Stahl’s Rehab Exit June 20, 2012

June 20, 2012

Addiction Expert on Nick Stahl’s Rehab Exit


Actor Nick Stahl, who appeared in “Terminator: Rise of the Machines,” is reportedly missing?.

iThe actor entered a rehabilitation facility in late May and was meant to spend at least 30 days inside. Both TMZ.com and E! Online report that Stahl’s friends and family are worried after Stahl left the facility against his doctors’ advice over a week ago. He is now reported missing.

Stahl reportedly went to stay with a friend after leaving rehab and was then seen around downtown Los Angeles before going back to a friend’s house. He has not been seen since he left that house on Thursday.

An unnamed source told E!, “Now he’s disappeared. We can’t find him anywhere,” they said of the so-far futile search efforts. “He has not made contact with anyone. We are all just desperately looking for him … Everyone just wants him to come home. It’s a terrible situation. We are searching, but we have no solid leads.”

The actor also has limited access to his 2-year-old daughter, Marlo, due to his alleged drug and alcohol abuse.

Frequent expert advisor in matters of addiction and recovery to Monsters and Critics, Richard Taite, President and CEO of Cliffside_Malibu, shared his thoughts on when people give up too soon in a rehabilitation environment:

“Anytime someone leaves a facility against treatment advice it’s sad. What usually happens is the patient starts feeling his feelings, the ones he or she used to medicate over and needs to get loaded. Top-notch facilities that make containment a priority have fewer instances of patients leaving against treatment advice.

But this happens at every facility… And it’s heartbreaking every time.”

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Celebzter / Cliffside Malibu Expert Opinion: Is Lindsay Lohan’s “Exhaustion” Something More? June 18, 2012

June 18 2012

Expert Opinion: Is Lindsay Lohan’s “Exhaustion” Something More?

On Friday it emerged that Lindsay Lohan was found non-responsive in her Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Marina del Rey, with her representative, Steve Honig, citing “exhaustion” for her apparent collapse.

He went on to add that Lindsay has been “working a gruelling schedule for the last couple of days” on the Elizabeth Taylor biopic.

Then, on Saturday, she was pictured with dark, puffy eyes and a bloated face, as the long days seem to be taking a toll on the 25-year-old.

But is it work, or play that is affecting the star?

We consulted addiction expert Richard Taite, President and CEO of Cliffside Malibu, who has his own theories on what may well be going on with the actress, whose problems with substance abused have long been chronicled.

Below, he shares his thoughts…

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Expert Opinion: Should Hard-Partying Rihanna Go To Rehab? June 13, 2012

June 13, 2012

Expert Opinion: Should Hard-Partying Rihanna Go To Rehab?

She’s beautiful, rich and young, but is Rihanna having too much fun?

According to reports coming out of Britain, her mentor Jay-Z wants the star to check into rehab and curb her partying ways.

A source told Closer magazine: “Rihanna has been out of control for months.

“She was supposed to catch a flight back to the UK last week, but she ended up missing it, which was the final straw for management.

“Jay-Z hit the roof when he found out, and told Rihanna, “Go to rehab now or I’ll drop you from the label”. She’s not happy, but she now feels she has no choice.”

We spoke to our to go-to addiction expert  Richard Taite, President and CEO of Cliffside Malibu, to get his take on Rihanna’s situation.

(more…)

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Monsters and Critics / Cliffside Malibu Addiction expert on Lindsay Lohan: ‘This looks like it will end very badly…’ June 13, 2012

June 13, 2012

Addiction expert on Lindsay Lohan: ‘This looks like it will end very badly…’

News on Lindsay Lohan’s Friday Pacific Coast Highway crash has emerged, as the star apparently had an open container of alcohol, law enforcement sources tell TMZ.

i

TMZ reports that the tow truck driver claimed police confiscated a plastic water bottle from the trunk of the Porsche, one that TMZ’s law enforcement sources confirm contained alcohol.

Another TMZ law enforcement source paints an unclear picture, that the bottle was found in the “debris field” and “scooped up along with other parts and placed in the trunk before it was towed away.”

There is no violation if indeed this container were being transported in the trunk. Lindsay had no alcohol in her system at the time of the accident.

Addiction expert and founder and CEO of Cliffside Malibu, Richard Taite, has followed the troubling stories of Lindsay Lohan in the past few years.  Mr. Taite tells Monsters and Critics: “Lindsey Lohan may not have broken the law, but she is clearly on the wrong path. Booze in the trunk? Not exactly on the road to becoming her best self considering her recent past.  I obviously wish her nothing but the best.  Unfortunately, right now this looks like it will end very badly, I am sorry to say.”

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