Pubdate: Fri, 05 Jan 2001 Source: Star-Ledger (NJ) Copyright: 2001 Newark Morning Ledger Co Contact: 1 Star-Ledger Plaza, Newark, N.J., 07102-1200 Website: http://www.nj.com/starledger/ Forum: http://www.nj.com/forums/ Author: Carol Ann Campbell EXPERTS AWAIT BUSH'S DRUG-TREATMENT POLICY A Unique Perspective As George W. Bush prepares to take office, substance abuse experts are watching to see if the new president's own past battle with alcohol plays out in public policy. Bush will be the first American president to have acknowledged publicly a struggle with alcohol, although he has said he does not consider himself an alcoholic. Experts don't know if Bush will be more sensitive to the problems of people with addictions, or if he will dismiss traditional routes to sobriety, such as counseling and 12-step programs, because he found simpler methods to end his own drinking. Bush said he quit drinking in 1986. During the presidential campaign, he told a group of men at a private recovery center that he heard a higher call. "I haven't had a drop to drink since then," he said. "It wasn't because of a government program in my particular case. We need to understand the power of faith in people's lives when it comes to fighting addictions." The president could play an important role in substance abuse. "He can really make a difference by what he says or does on this issue. He's a role model, and he sets the agenda for public discussion," said Peter Kerr, a spokesman for Phoenix House, a substance abuse treatment provider with centers in eight states. Some people in the field fear that Bush's own experience, along with the president-elect's call for smaller government, will translate into less money for drug treatment. The president presides over a huge substance abuse bureaucracy that distributes more than a billion federal dollars annually for research and treatment. Few expect Bush to highlight the issue while in office, since bold moves in the area of substance abuse might stir up talk about his own past, including a 1976 conviction for drunken driving. "My gut feeling is that Bush will not step up and be an advocate," said John Ramspacher, a drug and alcohol counselor at Princeton House North Brunswick. "It will be a touchy subject he may want to sidestep. . . . He may also feel, 'I didn't go to any fancy center. People have to just pull themselves up by the bootstraps.'" Kerr said he believes Bush's own experience will give the president greater sensitivity to people struggling with addiction. "But whether he'll convert that sensitivity to action, we don't know," Kerr said. Bush has provided few specifics about how often he drank, and he has declined to answer questions about drug use. Yet in various interviews he has said drinking came to interfere with his life. "Alcohol was beginning to compete for my affections for my wife and my family," he told one interviewer. In a 1997 interview with NBC News, Bush said he gave up alcohol at 40 because "I was drinking too much." He said his wife gave him an ultimatum: It was either her or Jim Beam, referring to the bourbon. Several professionals interviewed said they hope Bush does not believe most substance abusers can simply stop the way he did, without professional intervention or a 12-step program. "The danger is if people say, 'My solution is a solution for everybody.' People who are very religious and devout can still fail," said Hugo Franco, medical director of Pollakes Mental Heath Services at Monmouth Medical Center in Long Branch. For most alcoholics in recovery, sobriety requires a lifelong commitment. Some relapse. Many rely on continual support from others, either through professional counseling or Alcoholics Anonymous. Most Americans don't see Bush as a recovering alcoholic but as someone who drank heavily while young, according to Richard Colligan, senior drug and alcohol counselor at Overlook Hospital in Summit. Colligan does not interpret Bush's election as a sign of greater acceptance of alcoholism, which he believes the public still views as sinful behavior. He's disappointed that neither presidential candidate -- Bush or Al Gore -- put much emphasis on the issue of substance abuse during the campaign. He and many others see a critical lack of drug and alcohol treatment in New Jersey. "There just wasn't much said by anybody about the severity of the problem in America," said Colligan. Several professionals said they could not make a diagnosis for Bush but that the ability to simply stop drinking might indicate he was not classically addicted. None of the professionals interviewed suggested that Bush's sobriety was not genuine. "He did not follow traditional means, but that does not mean that he did not address his problem," said Bill Warner, clinical director of Blake Recovery Center of the Carrier Clinic, a mental health center in Belle Mead. "Many people do things to excess and are able to make changes. The thing about addiction is that it goes beyond the ability to stop." Ramspacher agreed. "Even the founders of AA have said the program is not for everybody," he said. "They have acknowledged there are other paths to recovery. And how do we know Bush has not resolved a lot of things that led to him drinking? He has probably acknowledged somewhere inside himself that if he takes one drink he's off to the races." Historians say several presidents in U.S. history were known to drink heavily, when such behavior was commonplace, but none talked about it to the public. "There were presidents in the 19th century who clearly drank too much," said Jan Ellen Lewis, an historian at Rutgers University in Newark. "They were not in a position to make the same sort of acknowledgment. It was not the same recovery culture." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth