Pubdate: Fri, 21 Dec 2001 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2001 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Louise Elliott, The Canadian Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) ONTARIO PAYS FAMILY $150,000 FOR DRUG-ADDICTED TEEN'S U.S. TREATMENT Beds Here Were Full TORONTO - The family of a drug-addicted teen will receive $150,000 from Ontario's Ministry of Health after a paucity of beds forced the boy into a U.S. treatment program at his parents' expense. The victory means other families who cannot access the 10 beds assigned for addicted teens in Ontario could also be entitled to compensation, and that could reach into the millions, said the family's lawyer yesterday. "This case is basically an acknowledgment that there are no residential drug treatment programs for adolescents in Ontario," said Toronto lawyer David Baker, who won the settlement on behalf of a 15-year-old boy and his parents. "Obviously, sending adolescents out of the country is not the best way of treating them for drug addiction." The first round of the case was settled in September, but Mr. Baker said he is awaiting a decision on another $35,000 claim for detoxification payments, which could push the family's out-of-court settlement to $185,000. The ministry says it will respond to that request, now before its Health Services Appeal Review Board, by next Friday. Mr. Baker, who was set to launch a constitutional challenge on the boy's behalf, said the settlement should convince the government to start putting some money into treating teenagers. As many as 300 to 400 teens between ages 13 and 17 require residential treatment services each year in the province, said the head of an addiction services umbrella group based in Sault Ste. Marie. "If it's going to cost $150,000 a kid to send those kids out of the country, that's a lot of money we could use here," said Russell Larocque, head of the Ontario Youth Managers Co-ordinating Group. If parents cannot pay, that means many teens are going untreated, he added. While refusing to comment on the case, a Ministry of Health spokesman said yesterday the government might devote more dollars to teen residential programs in the next budget. "As we look toward next year, the ministry is going to have to look at what can be done in terms of getting these centres up and running in Ontario," said John Letherby. Only $5-billion of this year's $110-million budget for drug and alcohol services is allotted to teenagers, he said. One program exists for teen addicts who require 24-hour-a-day, 7-day-a-week supervision to get over their addictions -- usually because they face serious mental illness or other problems as well, Mr. Larocque said. Ten beds at the Margaret Smith Centre in Thunder Bay are the only ones in Ontario allotted for the 13 to 17 age group, Mr. Letherby said. Wendy Nolan, the head of addiction services for St. Joseph's Care Group in Thunder Bay, said the program has a three-to six-month waiting list and demand always exceeds the centre's capacity. The centre no longer accepts teens from across the province, since it lost its only psychiatrist in May, she added. Meanwhile, experts say the demand for teen services is huge and growing. One director of a drug treatment agency in Toronto said he could place one child a month in a residential facility. Dennis Long, of Breakaway, said his organization treats about 1,000 children and teens a year. For U.S. treatment, Ontario families are now paying on average about US$14,000 a month for the first month, and about $4,000 each month after that. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager