Treating addiction requires both science and compassion, says Dr. Gabor Maté

Dr. Gabor Maté drew from his experiences treating addicted men and women in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside when he published the bestselling nonfiction book In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts a decade ago. Supplementing his personal insights with medical research, Dr. Maté offered a compassionate perspective on addiction that continues to resonate with readers.
Below, the Order of Canada member answers a few questions reflecting on the book's 10th anniversary, which is being marked with an updated edition of the book.
1. What surprised you most when the book first came out?
"Repeatedly people told me that the book 'humanized' addicts for them, by which they meant the Skid Row drug-dependent individuals I depict in the opening chapters of Hungry Ghosts. It surprised me how many well-meaning and compassionate humans, including health care workers, acknowledged their difficulty seeing some others as human. It's a problem we all share, I think, if we are honest with ourselves.
"Even more surprising has been that many grieving parents whose sons or daughters had died of overdoses would thank me for helping them understand what had happened to their children. It is not obvious that such parents would be grateful to an author who points to multigenerational family trauma at the core of all addictions. It is inspiring to see how truth, however painful, is what matters most to many people."
2. What was the most memorable reaction you received from a reader?
"That's an easy one. One woman wrote me that her husband, 20 years clean of alcohol, had never wanted to have children for fear of passing on the 'alcoholism gene.'
"She said, 'Reading your book convinced him that his drinking addiction had been due not to genes but to his childhood trauma. We now have a beautiful three-month old baby girl. We are both in our mid-40s and we are thrilled!'