Pubdate: Wed, 23 Aug 2000 Source: Willamette Week (OR) Contact: 822 SW 10th Ave., Portland, OR 97205 Fax: (503) 243-1115 Website: http://www.wweek.com/ Author: Kathryn D. Wright TREAT THE DISEASE I find it frustrating in all of the concern and coverage that Jon [Beckel] has received, that nobody has mentioned that Jon was a late-stage alcoholic and suffered greatly from the disease ["What Happened to Jon Beckel?," WW, July 12, 2000]. When first hearing about Jon's hospitalization, I assumed that Jon had suffered from a seizure in alcohol withdrawal. Seizures from alcoholic withdrawal can be fatal, and it is as much an unforgivable lapse for the police to fail to assure medical attention to an alcoholic in withdrawal as it is for the police to club an inmate to death. Yet Jon's alcoholism is ignored. Why? Because the general public has no clue that it is not a behavioral choice but a disease that will prove fatal if unchecked. Whether Jon died from complications of an alcoholic seizure, a head wound suffered during a seizure, or a head wound resulting from a personal assault, it is certain that he would be alive today if he had not been drinking. Jon is the second person I have known personally who has died from alcoholism, in Portland, in less than three months. Still, as a society we do little more than blame the alcoholic. Willamette Week covers the tragedy of heroin addiction, but alcoholism is a different story. Why? Kathryn D. Wright, Southwest Pine Street - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D