The African-American community has a statistically higher percentage of substance abuse than the general population. The following are some of the reasons for the high rate of addiction in African Americans:
- The inferiority complex resulting from the poverty of the urban areas that many African Americans inhabit
- The high concentration of drug and alcohol sales in African-American residential areas
- The apathy toward education that keeps many African Americans trapped in illiteracy and poverty
- The lingering Jim Crow prejudices that prevent African Americans from obtaining jobs that pay them as well as white Americans
- The drug use of African-American role models who seem unafraid of white rules or oppression and use violence to maintain a fearful respect in others
- The cultural expectation of white Americans that African Americans will drink heavily, abuse drugs, drain resources and hamper society
- The despair of being part of an oppressed and marginalized social group whose human rights seem to have reached a standstill
As long as the African American community is left in the rut, the issue of drug dependence among them will never improve.
Differences between White and African American Drug Addicts
Addiction recovery specialists cannot afford to use a generalized approach for all of their patients, as African Americans face many challenges foreign to white addicts.
Members of the white community usually begin their addictions because of the following reasons, among others:
- The stress resulting from pressure to excel
- The desire to escape a painful life
- The fun their friends claim that drugs bring
African Americans often have different relations with the drug world, including the following situations:
- Living dominated by drug lords who control their families through debt
- Needing to sell drugs to supplement their family’s inadequate income
- Emulating their African-American role models, who are feared fighters and abuse drugs regularly
- Seeing drugs regularly abused and easily obtained in their communities
Those working with African Americans in addiction recovery must know about the African-American experience in order to administer effective healing therapy.
Ways to Approach Addiction in African Americans
Therapists specializing in African American recovery treatment may utilize the following strategies:
- Presenting recovery as a way to redeem the ancestral slavery by breaking out of addiction
- Asking the patient what particular strengths he possesses and explaining how sobriety can help him regain these
- Referencing recovered African-American addicts
With help any African American drug addict can recover.
Finding Help for African American Drug Addicts
Please call our toll-free helpline, 844-496-9429, today if you are looking for addiction recovery treatment specific to the needs of an African American drug user. We are available 24 hours a day to listen to your concerns and point you toward help, so call us today.
Further Reading About Addiction Help for African Americans
- Addiction Help for African Americans
- Addiction in the Digital Age
- Are There Medications to Stop Addiction?
- Attitudes and Stereotypes Toward Types of Drugs
- Becoming Addicted to Your Treatment Medication
- Can Steroids Cause Anxiety?
- Co-occurring Disease Rates in Addicts
- Dangerous Drug Combinations
- Difference Between Abuse and Addiction
- Does the DARE Program Work?
- Drug Tourism
- Drugs and Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder
- Economic Status and Abuse
- Elderly Addicts
- History of Rehab Facilities
- How Drug Abuse Destroys Your Skin and Complexion
- How Long Do Drugs Stay in Your System?
- Over-the-Counter Medicine
- Recovery: Abstinence vs. Moderation
- Relationships and Addiction
- Same-Day Rehab Admittance
- Science and Addiction
- Stimulants Commonly used by College Students
- The Concerns of Prolonged Drug use
- The Evolution of Administering and Consuming Medicine
- The Health Dangers of IV Drug Use
- The Origins of Drugs
- The Role of Genetics
- Utilize Drug Testing to Spot Abuse
- What Is Stimulant-Induced Psychosis?
- Why Do Some States Have Bigger Drug Problems Than Others?

Paul Lendner ist ein praktizierender Experte im Bereich Gesundheit, Medizin und Fitness. Er schreibt bereits seit über 5 Jahren für das Managed Care Mag. Mit seinen Artikeln, die einen einzigartigen Expertenstatus nachweißen, liefert er unseren Lesern nicht nur Mehrwert, sondern auch Hilfestellung bei ihren Problemen.