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An Addiction Doctor Shares Her Own Story of Recovery

Dr. Nicole Labor treats addiction at Akron's St. Thomas Hospital, carrying on the tradition begun there in 1935 of treating addiction as a disease.
JEFF ST.CLAIR
/
WKSU
Dr. Nicole Labor treats addiction at Akron's St. Thomas Hospital, carrying on the tradition begun there in 1935 of treating addiction as a disease.

Akron's St. Thomas Hospital was the first in the world to admit alcoholics for treatment. That was in the early days of Alcoholics Anonymous.

A doctor carrying on that tradition at that hospital today has an inside understanding of what it takes to get sober. On this Week鈥檚 Exploradio, Dr. Nicole Labor shares her insights on treating addiction .

Bold tattoos wind around Dr. Nicole Labor鈥檚 arms and peak out from under her shirt collar. Inked onto her right hand are two molecules that hold special meaning for Labor.

are neurotransmitters produced by the brain that regulate pleasure, gratitude and other good feelings.

鈥淓verything that you do in life that you enjoy comes from one of those chemicals," says Labor, "that鈥檚 it.鈥

Dr. Nicole Labor treats addiction at Summa's St. Thomas Hospital and at the Interval Brotherhood Home treatment center.
Credit JEFF ST.CLAIR / WKSU
/
WKSU
Dr. Nicole Labor treats addiction at Summa's St. Thomas Hospital and at the Interval Brotherhood Home treatment center.

She says the chemicals tattooed on her hand keep it real for her as a reminder of the biology behind cravings.

Labor grew up in New Jersey, a bright kid with what she calls a normal family life.

But early on she discovered she craved alcohol more than her friends.

In college she used drugs of all kinds.

Eventually prescription opioids joined the mix, "and that rapidly progressed to heroin because it was so much cheaper, and it was a lot easier to find.鈥

Meanwhile she had entered medical school. 

鈥淚 had scheduled all of my rotations at different hospitals in and around Newark, N.J., because that鈥檚 where my drug dealer lived and that was where the best dope was and the cheapest dope.鈥

By her third year of med school, still shooting heroin, Labor had hit rock bottom.

鈥淥ne day I was in a rotation in New Jersey and there was a psychologist at the family practice, and I had gone in and said I was having a panic attack. She asked me about my history and I was wearing a sweater and I pulled up my sleeves and showed her my arms and said, 鈥業 don鈥檛 know what to do.鈥欌

Labor went into detox, spent months in rehab, plus a year of outpatient treatment while finishing medical school. 

鈥淪o I have 12 years clean now. But I still go to meetings, I still have a sponsor, I still work a program; that鈥檚 how I stay clean.鈥

She voluntarily continues monitoring by the Ohio State Medical Board.

Addiction is a disease

Labor treats addicts at . That鈥檚 where AA pioneer admitted the world鈥檚 first patient to be medically treated for alcoholism.

Labor says more than 80 years later, the medical establishment still struggles with defining addiction as a disease.

鈥淲e still judge the people that do it. We still have opinions about what kind of people they are,鈥 says Labor.

鈥淲e say, 鈥榶eah it鈥檚 a disease, but it鈥檚 not like cancer, it鈥檚 not like diabetes.' And my response is, 'No, you can鈥檛 have both. It鈥檚 either a disease or not.  If it鈥檚 a disease it is just like cancer and diabetes and it deserves to be treated the same way.'

Sister Mary Ignatia was a pioneer in the AA movement and was the first to treat addiction as a medical condition at St. Thomas Hospital in Akron.
Credit AA
/
AA
Sister Mary Ignatia was a pioneer in the AA movement and was the first to treat addiction as a medical condition at St. Thomas Hospital in Akron.

Addiction is a disease of the brain鈥檚 reward centers says Labor.

鈥淧art of the brain that becomes addicted, that old limbic system, the midbrain area 鈥 they have no control over that. Nobody has control over that. That becomes dysfunctional; it actually breaks down.鈥

Labor describes it this way.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e in the desert and it鈥檚 day five with no water and your organs are shutting down and you鈥檙e literally going to die. And I hand you a bottle of water. But I tell you if you drink this, I鈥檓 going to take your kids, your job, your wife, your house -- you would drink the water. Everyone would.  There鈥檚 no macho person out there who thinks they can withstand this, it鈥檚 not possible.鈥

鈥淪o you drink the water, satiate that tiger, the midbrain, so that the urge to live is taken care of, and then other part of your brain comes back on line and starts going, 鈥極h my God, I can鈥檛 believe I gave up all that  stuff for water,鈥 and you start trying to manipulate me into giving your stuff back.That鈥檚 exactly what addicts do.鈥

Taming the tiger

The 鈥榳ater鈥 that Labor gives patients with addiction is or other drugs that ease detox and give the addict time to develop stronger coping skills.

鈥淭hese medications are tools that I have in my toolbox, and they have a specific purpose and they take pressure off that midbrain to allow me to strengthen the frontal cortex.鈥

The frontal cortex is the seat of reason, which she says needs to tame the tiger of dependency running wild in the brain鈥檚 reward center.

Akron is the . Labor believes its 12-step program is still the best way to empower sobriety.

鈥淚 think spiritual growth is the ultimate goal, and so however you get there is fine with me," says Labor.

"In my experience both personally and professionally the 12-step groups are the quickest and easiest way to get there.鈥

Treating addiction is a calling for Nicole Labor, along with breaking down the stigma that goes with it.         

Copyright 2021 WKSU. To see more, visit .

Jeff St. Clair
A career in radio was a surprising turn for me seeing that my first love was science. I studied chemistry at the University of Akron and for 13 years lived the quiet life of an analytical chemist in the Akron area,listening to WKSU all the while in the lab.
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