Abstract

This study analyzes how staff in Swedish alcohol and other drug (AoD) treatment interpellate service users as people who can benefit from relapse prevention. Relapse prevention is a widely used intervention. Research is scarce, however, on how relapse prevention is practiced locally and how treatment staff perceive the relationship between AoD use as a problem and relapse prevention as a solution. Drawing on Actor-Network Theory and critical studies of AoD issues within this tradition, we elucidate how staff through specific interpellative logics enact service users, their individual characteristics, and living conditions. The data derive from interviews with 18 professionals working with assessment, counseling, case-management, therapy, and healthcare at AoD treatment agencies in the Stockholm region. The results show that the participants drew on four interpellative logics, and thereby enacted service users as four different object types. Region and network logics pinpointed that individuals have stable observable characteristics that determine their problems and eligibility for treatment (e.g., living conditions, diagnoses). Fluid and fire logics emphasized that their characteristics also vary depending on context and can be present and absent at the same time (e.g., harms, agency). This flexible interpellation of service users echoes the tendency among treatment staff to embrace sometimes irreconcilable understandings of AoD problems and to enact multiple realities of addiction. This suits a professional field where many factors are thought to cause and help resolve problems, but where the treatment supply is often limited to specific interventions. We conclude that it is easier to create a reasonable match between the service delivered and the potential service user if the characteristics of the latter are considered diverse and flickering. This exemplifies Carol Bacchi’s tenet that problem representations are adjusted to fit the solution at hand.

Highlights

  • This study analyzes how staff in Swedish alcohol and other drug (AoD) treatment make up service users as persons who can benefit from relapse prevention interventions

  • While some participants claimed to deal with heterogeneous service users, and others with a more homogenous group, they all stressed that region differences exist and that these play a key role in relapse prevention and the rehabilitation process

  • In Faye’s reasoning, there appears to be no conflict in simultaneously stating that addicted persons both lack and have agency. This interpellation of service users relies upon the fire logic that lets the brain disease model of addiction (BDMA) explain the behavior that interventions target, and it lets the volition of individuals explain why relapse prevention can be effective

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Summary

Introduction

This study analyzes how staff in Swedish alcohol and other drug (AoD) treatment make up service users as persons who can benefit from relapse prevention interventions. While some participants claimed to deal with heterogeneous service users, and others with a more homogenous group, they all stressed that region differences exist (though they used other words) and that these play a key role in relapse prevention and the rehabilitation process This is illustrated by Barbara (nurse at a specialized clinic) who describes that some patients are denied admittance, and that those who are admitted are relatively affluent and share an “unhappiness with their alcohol consumption”: We usually explain to people why we started this agency, and that we have rather specific criteria for admittance. In Faye’s reasoning, there appears to be no conflict in simultaneously stating that addicted persons both lack and have agency This interpellation of service users relies upon the fire logic that lets the BDMA explain the behavior that interventions target, and it lets the volition of individuals explain why relapse prevention can be effective. It describes what typical service users are not, but what they can be

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