Pubdate: Fri, 21 Jan 2000 Source: Billings Gazette, The (MT) Copyright: 2000 The Billings Gazette Contact: P.O. Box 36300, Billings, MT 59101-6300 Fax: 406-657-1208 Website: http://www.billingsgazette.com/ Author: Pat Bellinghausen, NO EASY ANSWERS TO DRUG PROBLEM, U.S. OFFICIAL SAYS Dozens of Montana health care professionals, educators and others spent Thursday morning at two meetings to tell a top U.S. drug control official about the severe gaps they see in preventing drug abuse and in getting treatment for addictions. They didn't have to convince Dr. Donald Vereen Jr., deputy director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, about the importance of prevention and treatment. Vereen is a psychiatrist and public health expert with extensive experience in drug addiction and treatment. But he didn't offer any quick or easy solutions to the myriad of problems stemming from the methamphetamine epidemic that has swept Montana and other Western states. After being introduced by U.S. Sen. Max Baucus, Vereen addressed a standing-room only crowd of more than 100 people at the MSU-B teleconference center and dozens more at teleconference rooms in Miles City, Bozeman, Havre, Butte, Missoula, Great Falls and Kalispell. The ONDCP is responsible for coordinating drug programs among some 50 federal agencies. Of the 150 people working at the ONDCP, Vereen is among only four staff members who have clinical experience in addiction treatment. Vereen said the national drug control strategy has set a goal of cutting Americans' drug use by half over 10 years. He offered community grants and "technical assistance" to help Montanans develop an anti-drug strategy and ways to measure its effectiveness. "In such a large, rural state, we're aware of the challenges you face," he said. After Vereen and about 70 audience members moved to the Billings Education Association office to continue their discussion, Montana chemical dependency treatment experts talked briefly about their efforts to deal with methamphetamine. Bonnie Pipe, a chemical dependency counselor at the Northern Cheyenne Recovery Center's in Lame Deer, described how she and colleagues from around the state started a methamphetamine task force two years ago. It was a response to an alarming jump in the number of severely ill people needing treatment for methamphetamine addiction. In the last two months of 1997, Pipe saw seven "psychotic, paranoid and violent people" who were addicted to methamphetamine. Rimrock Foundation in Billings agreed to admit all of them and they each needed several weeks of treatment. That episode with seven clients exhausted the Northern Cheyenne Recovery Center's entire budget for the year, Pipe said. From that first brush with crisis, the methamphetamine task force was formed. It now has more than 150 members in five states. Members share information in a joint effort to "end the widespread problem of methamphetamine abuse/use that is occurring in our communities," according to the group's mission statement. Mona Sumner, chief operating officer at Rimrock Foundation, also is a task force member. She told Vereen about the difficulty in getting coverage for addiction treatment - even when the clients have health insurance that is supposed to include substance abuse treatment. Managed care companies deny a substantial number of claims to save money, even when the patients meet treatment criteria set by the American Society of Addiction Medicine, Sumner said. "Today, in my facility, every bed is full and the outpatient program is full. A third (of patients) have been denied insurance coverage," she said. Federal employees covered by federal insurance plans also have been denied addiction treatment benefits, Sumner said. Vereen said that the federal government soon will require chemical dependency treatment coverage in all policies covering federal employees. Employer self-funded plans created under ERISA, the federal Employee Retirement and Income Security Act, also avoid paying for addiction treatment because they are not subject to state mandates on insurance benefits, Sumner said. When private plans don't cover care, there is a cost shift to public programs and an increased need for free care from facilities such as Rimrock, Sumner said. "There's a great need for reform," Sumner told Vereen. "We'll take all the help we can get." Vereen said federal funds for drug abuse prevention and treatment have been increasing. But he said that most money comes in block grants to states, so the states have to determine how to allocate it. "You need to lobby, not only for more money, but for the strategic use of those funds," the doctor said, adding later: "We have a treatment gap in this country that has to be closed." Vereen's talks with health care professionals preceded the scheduled arrival in Billings of his boss, Gen. Barry McCaffrey, director of the ONDCP. How did the nation's drug czar and his top staff members come to plan a two-day trip to Billings? It started at a dinner in Washington, D.C., last fall. Both Vereen and Baucus credit Pat Butterfield, a registered nurse from Bozeman, for bringing the Montana methamphetamine problem to McCaffrey's attention. Butterfield, a public health nurse who teaches at the MSU College of Nursing, has a fellowship from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation because of her interest in environmental health. Vereen's assistant, Kate Maliarakis, is a nurse practitioner and Robert Wood Johnson fellow. At the dinner to discuss nursing research, Maliarakis brought her boss as her guest. Butterfield brought Baucus' health issues aide as her dinner guest. Methamphetamine poses environmental health hazards for people, including children, exposed to the poisonous production process for this illegal drug, Butterfield explained Thursday in Billings. Once methamphetamine has been "cooked" in a makeshift lab in an apartment, motel room or other place, dangerous chemicals remain in the furnishings and walls, creating hazards akin to "mini Superfund sites," Butterfield said. In addition health concerns, there are community problems about the costs of removing or cleaning up this contaminated structures, she said. The idea of a series of Montana methamphetamine meetings grew when the dinner guests discussed the issue with McCaffrey and Baucus. Although McCaffrey's flight into Billings was delayed for several hours Thursday, Vereen and Baucus had already promised they would return for followup meetings. No dates were announced. "This is just the first meeting," Vereen told the group at MSU-B. "It doesn't make sense for us to just come out one time." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk