Timothy Harrington
2 min readFeb 24, 2024

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Will you please consider not using the word, "abuse" or "abuser" in your communications. The word “abuse” carries a negative connotation, especially as it’s commonly connected to harm inflicted on another, as in child, domestic or sexual abuse.

Fortunately, decades of research have given us a deeper understanding of what drives an individual’s compulsion to continue using drugs or alcohol despite negative consequences. This deeper understanding has also shone a light on the harm caused by negative labels.

Surprisingly, research has shown that even some medical professionals judge a person differently depending on whether they’ve been labeled as a substance abuser or as suffering from a substance use disorder.

In a 2016 paper he co-wrote for the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) entitled ‘Changing the Language of Addiction,’ Michael P. Botticelli states, “Stigma isolates people, discourages people from coming forward for treatment and leads some clinicians, knowingly or unknowingly, to resist delivering evidence-based treatment services.”

An article in U.S. News & World Report by Ruben Castaneda quotes Dr. John F. Kelly, director of the Recovery Research Institute at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and Associate Professor at Harvard Medical School as stating that avoiding stigmatizing labels “can save lives.” Kelly cautions that calling someone a substance abuser unfairly labels them as deliberately choosing to continue misusing a substance, “which some people believe should be punished, not treated.”

A research paper published in the International Journal of Drug Policy supports Dr. Kelly’s conclusion. Over 500 mental health practitioners attending a conference completed a survey asking for their treatment recommendations for two individuals who had relapsed. The patients were identical except one was described as a substance abuser and the other as having a SUD. The clinicians who evaluated the “substance abuser” recommended a “more punitive” approach, including jail or community service rather than continued treatment.

Mental health professionals have long argued that labeling someone as a substance abuser is defining the entire person by their disease. However, when a person is said to have a substance use disorder, it is understood they have a medical problem that does not define their entire person. Just like a person with cancer or heart disease is far more than their diagnosis, a person with an alcohol or drug use problem has an entire identity apart from their illness, no matter what their label.

As Botticelli writes in ‘Changing the Language of Addiction,’ “This is not just about being politically correct. There’s scientific evidence to show that language matters. We know stigma plays a huge role in why some people with substance use disorders avoid or delay seeking treatment.”

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Timothy Harrington
Timothy Harrington

Written by Timothy Harrington

Champion of Family and Community Powered Change Related to Addiction, Mental and Emotional Health Challenges

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