Pubdate: Mon, 14 Jan 2002
Source: Greenwich Time (CT)
Copyright: 2002, Southern Connecticut Newspapers, Inc
Contact:  http://www.greenwichtime.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/697
Author: Edward Spauster

DRUG TREATMENT NEEDS TO HAVE GREATER SUPPORT

To the editor:

Kudos to The Advocate for shedding light on the ravages of substance abuse 
and giving such consideration to a difficult issue ("The Forever War," 
Advocate news series, Dec. 23 to Jan. 6). Few people realize that this is 
America's No. 1 health problem -- a conclusion reached by the prestigious 
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation after an exhaustive study of the subject. 
"Addiction is a chronic, relapsing brain disease," it states.

The human struggle portrayed by The Advocate might lead one to conclude 
that this is primarily an urban male problem. Far from it. The spotlight 
was on LMG Programs' Liberation House -- a residential population of men 
only -- admittedly, the most challenging of the thousands of clients who 
are helped every day by our many education, prevention and treatment programs.

To quote the RWJ Foundation, "no population group is immune to substance 
abuse and its effects. Men and women, people of all ages, racial and ethnic 
groups and levels of education drink, smoke and use illicit drugs." It 
adds, "young adults are most likely to use alcohol, tobacco and illicit 
drugs. Men are more likely than women to use most substances. Whites are 
more likely than blacks or Hispanics to drink alcohol. People with more 
education are likely to drink, but those with less education are more 
likely to drink heavily."

The College on Problems of Drug Dependence -- a leading scientific 
organization in the drug abuse field -- paints a graphic picture of how 
substance abuse permeates our entire society:

* Cocaine has been used by over 22 million Americans, about 1 million of 
whom are now regular abusers.

* Heroin is used by 2 million Americans, about 1 million of whom are now 
physically dependent addicts.

* Of 59 million women of child-bearing age (14-44) nearly 5 million are 
using illicit drugs such as marijuana, cocaine and heroin.

* Drug abuse is associated with myriad health problems, and drug abusers 
are substantively over-represented in hospital settings.

These are staggering statistics, reinforced by the grim cost of substance 
abuse to the U.S. economy. Each year it is estimated at over $414 billion, 
a burden that affects all of society through productivity losses, as well 
as costs related to medical care, crime, destruction of property and other 
losses.

So what can we as a community do about this? The CPDD recommends:

* Drug abuse should be viewed as medical and public health problems. 
Treatment can be effective and it is much less costly than the alternative 
per-patient costs: Treatment, $3,000 to $8,000 per year; incarceration, 
$40,000 to $70,000 per year; untreated, $50,000 to $100,000 per year in 
criminal activity.

* Allocation of federal drug abuse expenditures should be redistributed 
from interdiction and criminal justice activities (now 70 percent) to 
public health and research activities.

We know that two out of three men leave Liberation House clean, sober and 
employed, with varying degrees of hope. We also know that the realities of 
re-entry into the world outside are overwhelming, even terrifying. If even 
a small percentage of interdiction and criminal justice expenditures were 
allocated to supplying more comprehensive supportive social services to 
people in recovery, we would greatly reduce the threat of relapse.

What these men need is safe housing, good jobs, education and stable 
friends and family. The road they travel is not only daunting; it's often 
paved with incredible impediments. Almost 200 men graduate from Liberation 
House each year, but there are only about 25 halfway house spots for them. 
At the very least, more housing would go a long way to strengthen their 
recovery efforts.

Let me reiterate what all the medical and scientific journals state, 
including the Journal of the American Medical Association: "Treatment of 
addiction is as successful as treatment of other chronic diseases such as 
diabetes, hypertension and asthma. Drug treatment reduces drug use by 40 
percent to 60 percent and significantly decreases criminal activity during 
and after treatment. The most effective programs either provide on-site, or 
are closely linked with, a wide variety of treatment elements and support 
services. Moreover ... recovery can often be a long and complex process ... 
the patient may need other medical services, family therapy, parenting 
instruction, vocational rehabilitation and social and legal services."

In other words, this truly requires a broad, community commitment.

After reading The Advocate articles, a friend asked why I wasn't 
discouraged by working in an area where only a few "make it" after a first 
round of treatment. To me, recovery is a lot like learning to ride a 
bicycle. Maybe two out of 60 people will hop on the first time and take off 
without a problem. The rest of us will get on, fall off, get on, fall off, 
and after numerous bumps and bruises, we'll get the hang of it.

The men of Lib House who "got it right" after the first try are truly 
blessed. Ultimately, after a lot of tries, many more will make it. And I 
want to be there to shake their hands.

Edward Spauster

Stamford

Via e-mail

The writer is president/chief executive officer of LMG Programs.
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MAP posted-by: Beth