Safety Culture in the News

Safety Culture in the News

Safety Barriers Address Vulnerabilities in Recovery

Safety Barriers Address Vulnerabilities in Recovery

How can an individual in recovery stay sober when the areas of his or her brain that process decisions aren’t functioning properly, Kevin McCauley, MD, senior fellow with Meadows Behavioral Healthcare, asked NCAD attendees in his Saturday session. In other words: How can a person protect themselves from relapse when their ability to assess relapse is, in itself, impaired?

McCauley, who is in recovery after developing an addiction to prescription painkillers after surgery when he was a flight surgeon for the U.S. Navy in the 1990s, discussed the need for a recovery management plan and developing a safety culture to solve common problems early in recovery.

McCauley drew parallels between aviation safety checklists used during his time in the Navy and recovery plans. Much like no single safety barrier can prevent mishaps, no single element of a recovery plan can entirely prevent a relapse, McCauley said. He made the analogy that the parts of safety checklists and recovery plans are similar to a stack of slices of Swiss cheese—each has holes, but when you put enough together, they form a solid block of cheese, or a safety checklist/recovery plan that accounts for all potential problems.

“If I try to consciously process this risk, I’m going to fail,” he said. “But if I put enough safety barriers in my life, it doesn’t matter if I’m craving. It doesn’t matter if I am offered the chance to get high. Those safety barriers should protect me. … At some point, consciousness will break down. You have to have other factors in place.”