Pubdate: Sun, 23 Apr 2000 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 2000 Houston Chronicle Contact: Viewpoints Editor, P.O. Box 4260 Houston, Texas 77210-4260 Fax: (713) 220-3575 Website: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Author: Wiliam Raspberry Note: Raspberry is a Pulitzer Prize-winning syndicated columnist based in Washington, D.C. DRUG CZAR MCCAFFREY LAYS SOME FACTS ON THE TABLE For the moment, Barry McCaffrey, who heads the Office of National Drug Control Policy, doesn't want to argue drug policy. He wants to use a modest lunch in his office to get some facts out so that when people do argue drug policy, they can argue from agreed-upon facts. He's talking about lots of people, "including the president of the United States, who said at least twice that the United States, with 5 percent of the world's population, uses half the world's supply of illegal drugs." Wrong, says McCaffrey. The real figure? Nobody knows for sure, but the retired general and present drug "czar" thinks the presumed half may be closer to 11 percent. Does it matter? Of course it matters, he says. You can't make rational policy until you have some fairly clear idea of the problem the policy is to address. Painting pictures of America as a drug-ridden society leads to bad policy -- as does the tendency in some quarters to conflate the various drug abuses into a single dreadful statistic. Quite apart from the different -- and differentially addictive -- drugs of choice, McCaffrey is saying it is important to distinguish between two broad types of drug users. "One group of people takes drugs to feel better. The second group of people is using drugs to feel good." What is he talking about? "I've got underlying mental health problems, psychiatric problems," he says, lapsing into his habit of describing other people in first-person terms. "I'm a 14-year-old girl and I'm sitting there in this treatment center with 16 other girls telling this drug policy guy I wouldn't be alive today were it not for drugs. I was using drugs to self-medicate. I've got a severe mental health problem, and, by the way, if you diagnose me with that mental problem at an earlier age, and start treating that, I won't turn into a chronic addict at 25." That's the first group of abusers. The second: "You go down to the Johns Hopkins Research Center where they have laboratory rats and rhesus monkeys. If you take a male rhesus monkey and give him an option of pushing a lever to open a trap door to get at water, food, a lady rhesus monkey or cocaine, for sure he'll go for the cocaine. He'll wind up chronically addicted to cocaine. He'll malnourish himself. ... He will choose cocaine over any other reward -- and it won't have anything to do with mental health problems or growing up with a bad rhesus monkey mother. It's the drugs." The point? Some drug abusers can stop on their own; some can't. It's what our young people know, and what too many of their well-meaning advisers can't bring themselves to acknowledge. Not everyone is equally susceptible to addiction. Drawing a link between casual use and hard-core addiction makes as much sense to them as drawing a link between the glass of cabernet you have at dinner and the stupefied wino devoting his life to collecting "spare change" for the next bottle of cheap wine. But then there are the others. "I'm not undisciplined or immoral or weak," McCaffrey describes them. "My brain is telling me I must continue this behavior or I'm going to feel intensely bad. At this point, I'm exhibiting severe problems and mental health challenges. I'm malnourished, HIV positive and I've got a whole host of medical, social and legal problems. You can't, at this point, disentangle them, but for sure what the numbers tell me is if you get me off drugs, in mandatory treatment and testing, even for say 30 days, I've got the flush back in my cheeks, and a lot of my problems start disappearing. Keep me in treatment for a year, and the likelihood of my going back to work and remaking family connections skyrockets." But if McCaffrey is right -- not just about our haphazard use of statistics but also about drug abuse typology -- why isn't he screaming from the rooftops that throwing people in prison for abusing drugs (or for selling drugs to support their addictions) makes no sense at all? Why isn't he saying that the drug problem ought to be treated more like a medical problem than a criminal justice problem? And how do the facts he lays out support the administration's proposal to stick a $1.6 billion military, criminal justice and drug interdiction nose into Colombia? - --- MAP posted-by: Greg