Pubdate: Fri, 21 Apr 2000 Source: Chronicle of Higher Education, The (US) Copyright: 2000 by The Chronicle of Higher Education Contact: http://chronicle.com/ Author: D.W. Miller IN THE NATION'S BATTLE AGAINST DRUG ABUSE, SCHOLARS HAVE MORE INSIGHT THAN INFLUENCE To an outsider, the drug-treatment wing of Delaware's Gander Hill prison seems part family, part regiment, and part kindergarten. The 240 or so men here are separated from the general inmate population so that they can think recovery all day, every day, for up to 18 months. Overseen by a small counseling staff, the inmates assume job titles based on seniority and merit, and they manage their daily routine themselves. Each morning at 8, clad in white prison uniforms, they leave their dormitory for a motivational meeting that, says one inmate, "sets the tone for the day." After their morning chores, they trot single file back into the day room, rhythmically clapping and yelling "Or-i-en-ta-tion!" Inspirational slogans and murals cover every wall and pillar. Most of the residents settle into folding chairs, chanting and cheering as a senior inmate explains the ways of the community to the "babies," or brand-new residents. Several dozen others split off for encounter-group sessions, where they express their feelings or reproach and encourage their brothers. When asked, inmates explain that the "Key" program, as it is called, demands not only clean urine, but also a constant effort to become more reflective, responsible, and accountable. When they complete the program and get out of prison, they carry those expectations with them. Graduates move on to another residential treatment facility, called the "Crest" program, for the work-release portion of their sentences. In the third and final stage, they will continue with self-help therapy and other "aftercare" services. About a fifth of them will flunk out of the Key program. Many more will resume their dependence on alcohol or drugs after treatment ends. And some will end up right back in prison. Yet scholars still consider Key/Crest a standout in the field of drug-abuse treatment. Unlike many programs, it builds on insights from decades of research, tracks its graduates long after they leave, and has shown remarkable success at turning drug-abusing criminals into productive citizens. That achievement underscores the fact that, although scholars have learned a lot about effective therapies for drug dependency, their findings often do not influence the providers who treat drug addiction in this country, or the policy makers who decide how to wage the battle against drug abuse. In recent years, social scientists have scrutinized a range of psychosocial treatments for drug abuse. Although methadone has been successful in weaning people from heroin, similar pharmacological approaches have not been found for other illicit drugs. What's more, most addicts' problems are more complicated than simple drug use. Three major national studies in the past 20 years have demonstrated the effectiveness of therapies that reform the way drug abusers think and behave. "Now we have a better understanding that treatment is a process. It's not a magic bullet. It's not one-stop shopping," says D. Dwayne Simpson, a psychologist at Texas Christian University who directed the Drug Addiction Treatment Outcome Study, the most recent of the national surveys. Among the findings in the studies he reviewed: * Detoxification is just a prelude to sustained treatment. "If they are not in treatment for at least three months, you're not going to see evidence of change," says Mr. Simpson. * Recovery will be far more difficult for patients whose dependency is more severe, who have psychiatric problems, who are unemployed, or who lack a network of relatives or friends to see them through recovery. * Successful programs tend to provide patients with individual counseling; help them with medical, psychiatric, and family problems; reinforce their good behavior; and refer them to follow-up treatment, often in self-help groups. Researchers have put a variety of psychosocial therapies to the test -- and have found that many improve the odds of recovery. In various "cognitive" approaches to therapy, for example, the presumption is that many users turn to drugs to cope with adversity and to salve negative thoughts and beliefs. So therapists try to reshape patients' mental habits and teach them better ways to deal with their impulses. Other therapies rest on a "behavioral" theory of drug use. "Drugs control behavior by acting as reinforcers, the same way that food and sex and water and heat can do that," says Stephen T. Higgins, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Vermont. Drugs bring pleasure, and satisfying a craving for them feels better than resisting it. The goal is to find incentives that reward and reinforce a patient's decision to abstain. A third approach, which can incorporate cognitive or behavioral techniques, is the "therapeutic community," a residential program of up to two years' duration in which patients' own peers help instill self-control, responsibility, and other principles of "right living." What's uncertain is how all that knowledge is helping clients of the nation's 9,000 or so treatment facilities. Many of them rely on unproven strategies, including group therapy, relaxation techniques, and drug education. Even 12-step programs for drug abusers, such as Narcotics Anonymous, can point to little scientific evidence of their effectiveness, in part because their tradition of anonymity makes outcomes difficult to evaluate. Yet 12-step therapy is widely respected, and programs like Key/Crest, which recognize the importance of long-term treatment, typically rely on self-help groups for continuing aftercare. Of course, scholars themselves share the blame for providers' ignorance of research. Psychosocial therapies "have been found to be effective in relatively prissy treatment settings," where scholars run tidy, controlled trials with homogeneous groups of patients, says Alan I. Leshner, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, a part of the National Institutes of Health. "If we want to improve the use of treatment-based components, we have to find out whether they will work in real-life settings with real-life patients." To confront that problem, Dr. Leshner's agency has recently set up a "clinical trial network" to pay for long-term studies of treatment programs in 10 locations. Scholars will collaborate with staff members at community clinics to test the multitude of therapies for different kinds of drug dependency. For example, Kathleen M. Carroll, an associate professor of psychiatry at Yale University, will work with clinics in New Haven, Conn., to improve the ways in which pharmacological approaches and psychotherapy are used in concert. Without such collaboration, some of the most promising ideas for treatment could remain on the drawing boards. A good example of that problem is vouchers. Behavioral researchers like Vermont's Mr. Higgins reason that drug abusers can shake their dependency if they learn that abstinence is more rewarding than drug use. So scholars propose "contingency management": rewarding users for staying clean and sticking with their therapy sessions, job-training classes, and other paths to recovery. In prison, that's not difficult. The clients are supervised around the clock, and the promise of early parole is a powerful reason to stay with the program. Outside of prison, treatment providers have to be more creative. Mr. Higgins has been experimenting with vouchers that can be redeemed for goods and services. Basing his conclusions on studies in several cities, he calls a voucher system "the most reliably effective approach to getting cocaine addicts not to take cocaine. But people aren't sure how to use it in our health-care system. It has not been widely adopted in community clinics." Treatment providers have been skeptical of research that "didn't take account of the realities of the treatment world," says Merwyn R. Greenlick, a professor of public health and preventive medicine at Oregon Health Sciences University. He recently led a committee of the National Academy of Sciences that decried "the gap between research and practice." For example, he says, the voucher idea has prompted providers to say, "Even if we believe your research, how can you expect us to implement something that costs more than our entire budget?" Kenneth Silverman, an associate professor of psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University, thinks he may have the answer. In a small-scale experiment in Baltimore, he has already shown that a significantly greater proportion of cocaine-using welfare mothers on methadone stayed clean after receiving vouchers, worth up to $5,800 over one year, than did those who did not receive them. Now he's trying to tackle the idea's biggest weakness: cost. He has started a nonprofit company that trains and pays a modest wage to those women to perform data entry. The longer they stay drug-free, the higher their hourly rate, which will be paid by the clients who hire them and by Maryland's welfare-to-work program. Few treatment settings draw more urgent attention from scholars than prisons. "A hundred years of research shows that there is a relationship between drug use and other crime," says James A. Inciardi, a sociologist at the University of Delaware. For a society determined to curb drug use, prison is "a good place to start," he says, estimating that 70 percent of the prison population in the United States has a substance-abuse problem. "Prisoners have a lot of time on their hands. They're a captive audience." And the residential costs of treatment are, so to speak, already covered. That makes prisons ideal for programs that, like Key/Crest, demand radical changes from substance abusers. "Rehabilitation is the wrong word -- it suggests that you're bringing them back to where they were before," says Mr. Inciardi. Rather, the program "habilitates" users who never had the support networks, emotional maturity, and coping skills to avoid the temptations of drug use in the first place. The Key/Crest program tries to resocialize inmates to deal with their negative emotions and to trust confidantes. They must sever ties with their criminal cronies and repair those with family members. In Gander Hill, inmates deliver ritual criticism of fellows who do not take all of those responsibilities seriously. But this is always followed by expressions of love and respect -- "You're a beautiful individual, and a role model in the community." Many inmates wash out, but they are usually given second and third chances. Most are young men serving short sentences, although one convict has been behind bars for 18 years but volunteered for the Key program because "I wanted to do something different with my life." Therapeutic communities have been part of prison life for decades, but Delaware's Key/Crest program and a few others like it build on a crucial insight: They are demonstrably effective only when therapy continues during the inmates' transition back into the community. That's why Delaware pays for residential treatment during work release and makes the aftercare treatment a condition of parole. Mr. Inciardi's research shows that offenders who completed only the Key portion of therapy were no more likely than drug users outside the program to remain drug- and crime-free for a year after release. But those who received all three stages of therapy were half as likely to be rearrested, and two-thirds as likely to relapse, as the others. After three years, the differences persisted. For years, scholars say, their main message to policy makers has been: Treatment works. But that hasn't been enough to win over lawmakers partial to get-tough approaches to drug abuse. Programs like Key/Crest are a hard sell to most state legislators, says Mr. Inciardi. "Providing treatment, for many, suggests that they are soft on crime. 'Lock 'em up and throw away the key' is what they think their constituents want to hear." The same could be said of drug policy on the federal level. Although annual federal spending on drug control has doubled to about $19 billion in the last 10 years, the proportion spent on treatment has remained steady at around 20 percent. The rest finances efforts to disrupt the supply of narcotics and enforce drug laws. Advocates of greater support for treatment wish that lawmakers would view drug abuse more as a public-health problem and less as a criminal-justice problem. Scholars of drug policy have recently begun building a new argument for drug-treatment programs: They are cost-effective. Consider efforts to reduce cocaine use in this country. "In order to decrease the consumption of cocaine by 1 percent from current levels," says Martin Y. Iguchi, an economist and co-director of the RAND Corporation's research center on drug policy, "we would have to spend [either] $783 million more on source-country controls, $366-million more for interdiction, $246-million more for domestic enforcement, or $34-million more for treatment." In other words, one dollar spent on treatment delivers as much bang as seven bucks spent on the next most cost-effective option. Furthermore, researchers say, effective treatments not only reduce drug use but also lower the costs of crime, child neglect, disease, unemployment, and other social ills associated with drug abuse -- more than $100 billion a year, according to a 1995 estimate. Those savings, they say, should also be calculated in any cost-benefit analysis of treatment. "When you take a societal perspective, there's incredible cost savings associated with criminal-activity prevention," says Michael T. French, a health economist at the University of Miami. "You only have to avoid a few predatory crimes to, quote-unquote, pay for several treatment slots. There are very few treatment programs that don't show that." Cost-benefit analysis is unlikely anytime soon, however, to supplant the widespread notion that effective treatment means permanent abstinence. "Most people in the general public think drug addicts are just bad actors. Therefore they should just cut it out," laments George E. Woody, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania. "It's an all-or-nothing phenomenon in judging success: Either they stop or they don't stop," he says. In fact, experts urge society to take a more realistic view of drug treatment. They know that many drug abusers will relapse -- but that those who manage to moderate their habit still have a better shot at productive lives. "As treatment-evaluation scientists, we cannot use the word 'success,' because success is defined so many different ways," says Mr. Simpson, of Texas Christian University. Most clients of public clinics, he says, are drug users from high-crime neighborhoods with a poor education and few job skills. The popular expectation "is that the person becomes abstinent, crime-free, employed, and tax-paying. Well, that's nothing short of a biblical miracle." You certainly won't find the inmates of Gander Hill talking about their treatment as a permanent cure. "This is a mere training session," says Derrick, a garrulous "senior resident" of the Key program, "so in life you won't be left guessing." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk