Pubdate: Tue, 19 Mar 2002 Source: Advocate, The (LA) Copyright: 2002 The Advocate, Capital City Press Contact: http://www.theadvocate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2 Author: Kevin Blanchard Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) BUDGET WOES FORCE STATE DETOX CENTER TO CLOSE IN LAFAYETTE LAFAYETTE -- Acadiana's only public medical detoxification facility closed Monday, the first program of several inevitable to be cut at the University Medical Center in Lafayette, a state public hospital spokesman said. As a state facility, UMC is required to balance its budget. Projections for the next fiscal year, which starts June 30, are that the hospital will be about $4 million in the red, spokesman Don Buchanan said. Cutting the in-patient center will save about $250,000, Buchanan said. The center gives drug addicts and alcoholics a safe environment in which to rid their bodies of the substances they abuse, the first step in some people's treatment. Even with the center cut, that still leaves a hefty $3.75 million deficit. Hospital officials are working to prioritize programs to decide which ones might be cut or determine where more money can be found, Buchanan said. Decisions about cuts will be made keeping in mind the importance of preserving the core medical services the public expects and the medical education program, while also looking at what services are duplicated by other medical facilities in the community, Buchanan said. "These things (cuts) aren't treated lightly," Buchanan said. The center at UMC in Lafayette has 13 beds, which was cut to seven in January, Buchanan said. Monday, there were six patients in the program. When those patients graduate or leave, their beds won't be refilled, Buchanan said. "No one's going to be shoved out the door," Buchanan said. Also, no one who goes to the hospital in need of medically supervised detoxification will be turned away, Buchanan said. According to the state Department of Health and Hospitals, the only other public medical detoxification centers in Louisiana are in Independence and New Orleans. In Acadiana, there are now no medical detoxification units -- public or private, said Janice Fox, director of the Acadiana Recovery Center. There are also no "social" detoxification units, Fox said. While medical detoxification is in a hospital, with 24-hour medical supervision and possible medication, social detoxification isn't connected to a hospital and involves mainly close observation and encouragement, Fox said. The Acadiana Recovery Center, which opened three years ago, takes patients after they've gone through any necessary detoxification, Fox said. There's a real need for medical detoxification, mainly in cases of severe alcohol or drug dependence, Fox said. "It's a real hardship for the community," Fox said. Meanwhile, the state hospital system will continue to wrestle with budget problems, as it has in the past, Buchanan said. For every $30 the state funds its hospital system, the federal government pays $70, Buchanan said. In good years, the state has been able to take advantage of this system, Buchanan said. But in lean budget years, a seemingly small budget cut on the state level can multiply into much more federal matching funds lost, Buchanan said. DHH officials are beginning to talk with state hospital officials to see if anything can be done to keep a detoxification center open in Lafayette, DHH spokesman Bob Johannessen said. The 139-person-long waiting list at UMC's unit is evidence the program is needed, Johannessen said. "We need to find a way to expand services and not cut back services," Johannessen said. "But all that's difficult in a budget crunch." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth