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Substance Abuse and Therapy Boundaries

answered 08:16 PM EST, Thu October 11, 2012
anonymous anonymous
How important is it for someone who was diagnosed with bipolar to quit smoking marijuana. My brother is a heavy marijuana smoker who was just diagnosed with what we in the family have suspected for a while. My brother does not want to quit but because I expressed concern he agreed to slow down to a joint or two per day, instead of 5 or 6 per day. I think he needs to tell his psychiatrist that he is using marijuana as well. My brother disagrees. Do you think I should tell his psychiatrist if my brother won’t? Is that overstepping some patient doctor confidentiality boundaries?

Dr. Lani Chin Says...

Thank you for your post.  It sounds like you're very concerned for your brother.  It is not uncommon for individuals diagnosed with Bipolar Disorder to self medicate with substances such as marijuana.  In fact, substance abuse makes it quite difficult to diagnose many disorders because they can mask the symptoms.

Your concern is about patient doctor confidentiality boundaries.  You are in a complicated scenario because although you want your brother to receive the care he needs, this is something he needs to want for himself.  Even if you do call his psychiatrist, his psychiatrist cannot legally or ethically confirm he is a patient.  Additionally, your brother's treatment is exactly that.  It is HIS treatment.  If he wants to waste time by providing inaccurate information that may or may not hinder treatment, that is his choice.  Additionally, if his psychiatrist finds out about his substance abuse, there is no guarantee that your brother will then be on board for treatment.  

I understand that you have your brother's best interest in mind, but consider what this will do to your relationship with him in the long run.  He likely won't want to discuss anything else with you, let alone disclose anything that he wants to be remain confidential.  Although it's painful you need to wait for your brother to be committed to his treatment.  You'll know this has happened when he begins to take treatment seriously and he begins to address his substance abuse problem.  If you want to do something that might impact him, I would suggest you two attend a substance abuse recovery group.  There are groups similar to Alcoholics Anonymous that exist for marijuana that you can easily google in your immediate area.  Good luck to you and your brother.  I wish you both the best.

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Page last updated Oct 11, 2012

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