Pubdate: Mon, 06 May 2002 Source: Courier-Post (NJ) Copyright: 2002 Courier-Post Contact: http://www.courierpostonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/826 Author: Angela Rucker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) S. JERSEY STILL WITHOUT INPATIENT DRUG CENTER For more than two years, people who care for and about teenagers addicted to drugs have been waiting for the state to fulfill a promise to open an inpatient treatment facility in South Jersey. Parents, health providers and agencies interested in hosting the treatment facility are at turns frustrated and bewildered by what hasn't happened. The New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services, the agency charged with getting the treatment center off the ground, will say only that it is in favor of more treatment options for adolescents in South Jersey. Spokeswoman Laura Otterbourg declined to go into specifics about the status of the treatment facility now that James E. McGreevey is governor. The facility was promised during the administration of former Gov. Christie Whitman. Otterbourg would not say if a site had been chosen or how long it might take before the proposed center would open for business. This much is clear, however: The need still exists for intensive inpatient care for young people in the grips of marijuana, heroin, alcohol and other addictions. "There really are four inpatient beds in South Jersey. Those are, of course, filled up all the time," said Dr. Douglas Leonard, an assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-School of Osteopathic Medicine in Stratford. Those few beds, designated by various hospitals and clinics for drug-addicted patients, are not nearly enough. "There's just a horrible, horrible problem with addiction in South Jersey," Leonard said. Maureen McCarthy of Berlin Borough knows that too well. She has been trying to get her son, Ken Plummer, into an inpatient treatment facility to treat his addiction to marijuana and other drugs. She calls the last three weeks " the most frustrating, hellish experience of my life." "I'm on a waiting list for everywhere right now," she said. Though Plummer, 16, was offered a spot in a facility in North Jersey last week, McCarthy's health insurance wouldn' t cover it. She can't afford $300 a day out of pocket for the anticipated 45 days of care. For now, Plummer, is getting outpatient care at Genesis Counseling Center in Collingswood. "I've seen him really, really try," said McCarthy, who is also getting help from Genesis counselors to find an inpatient bed. "But all of us realize that he needs inpatient." In April 2000, then-Health and Senior Services Commissioner Christine Grant announced $2 million for a 75- bed residential treatment facility for the southern end of the state. It was a milestone since South Jersey has none. Several sites were considered, including in Camden and Moorestown. The treatment facility was supposed to be open by 2001. People like Susan Foose are still waiting. Foose, coordinator of Parent-to-Parent Coalition in Marlton, is credited with bringing the issue to the forefront during a 1998 town hall meeting. Foose, whose son died of a drug overdose in 1997, said some young people with drug addictions need the kind of intensive treatment that only inpatient care can provide. "To keep recycling people with this disease and wondering why the relapse rate is so high - it just doesn't make sense anymore," Foose said. A state health department report released last summer said more than 9,400 adolescents in New Jersey cannot access treatment - inpatient or outpatient - - because there are too few providers. That amounts to 65 percent of addicted youngsters who aren't getting the treatment they need. Community-based treatment is preferred, according to a a federal study, because it reduces drug and alcohol use, improves school performance and lowers criminal activity. The federal report published last year in the Archives of General Psychiatry looked at 90-day residential programs, short-term inpatient care (about 21 days) and outpatient therapy. "The peer group and the people, places and things are really critical to having somebody remain addicted," Leonard said. Separating addicts from those influences "goes a very long way to getting them to see more clearly. It is not an easy task. It is not a part-time task," he said. Those who cannot find inpatient care may opt for outpatient facilities. "We do an exceptional amount of intensive, outpatient programming," said Gabe Guerrieri, Genesis' executive director. "Our groups are very large. "In Camden County just recently Seabrook (House) closed its outpatient services so Genesis had to take on so many more kids and their parents," he said. Guerrieri, too, is perplexed that inpatient beds haven't come to South Jersey yet. "I don't think anybody knows what' s happening. It's been tossed and tossed around." Dr. Donald Krachman, vice president of physician services and executive director at Virtua Health Camden, had been negotiating with health department officials to set up the treatment facility on part of its campus for two years. Krachman said Virtua put every option on the table: buy, rent, lease, lease-purchase. "You name it, we tried it," Krachman said. The negotiations stalled. Moorestown officials figured they were out of the running after July, which was the last time they heard from state officials. Town Manager Jack Terry said the site, the former Parkside Lodge, is under contract for another use now. Officials in Washington Township, Gloucester County, are more hopeful. They, too, have spoken with state officials about a location in the township that would house a 64-bed facility. "I want to think positive. I hope it happens this year," said Thomas Mazzola, director of the Washington Township Family and Community Services, Municipal Alliance Program. "Our group has been meeting for 5 1/2 years. We've been promised that there was going to be a facility in South Jersey for 5 1/2 years," Mazzola said, citing verbal commitments that predate the health department's most recent announced plans. He said drug abuse, particularly heroin use, is the worst his office has seen in at least 14 years. He also worries that the new drug court program in Gloucester County, which gives nonviolent offenders the option of seeking inpatient treatment over jail time, will further tax the health-care system. Moreover, even when drug abusers and their families find treatment they sometimes must wrangle with insurance companies to pay for it. "It's a very difficult field to be in and it's very frustrating. You have more failures than you have successes," Mazzola said. The state has provided $2.57 million above the usual substance-abuse funding allocated for South Jersey residents until more facilities, including an inpatient one, can open. The money is welcome but doesn't get to the root of the issue, providers say. "There's no reason in the world why South Jersey should not have these new facilities. I am frustrated with the previous administration ... and disappointed," said state Sen. John Matheussen, R-Gloucester, who confirmed the year-plus negotiations between the state and officials in South Jersey. "At the same time, I'm also hopeful that this administration can and will get it done," he said. "This is something that the people of South Jersey absolutely, positively need." Both Matheussen and Parent-to-Parent say they plan to meet with the new health commissioner, Clifton R. Lacy, this month. "As concerned citizens and grieving moms and struggling parents, we're very grateful that the door is still open," said Foose of Parent-to-Parent. "I'm an optimistic person. I think eventually (the treatment facility) will happen." That help could be the answer for parents who are going through the same ordeal Jeanette Gerlack has experienced. The mother from Salem County said she learned her 19-year-old daughter was using heroin three years ago. Since then, the young woman has been in at least five inpatient institutions in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Most were a two-hour drive from home. "Trying to get into these facilities is impossible," said Gerlack, whose daughter has been clean for three months. "It's very frustrating. When you're going through this, you have a window of opportunity. She'd ask for help one day and the next day she didn't want it." Having easily accessible treatment at the time her daughter needed it could have saved a lot of heartache, Gerlack said. In addition, her family spent $22,000 for expenses an insurer would not cover during her daughter's first year of treatment. At one facility, the insurer covered only outpatient care. But because her daughter hadn't stayed clean, the facility would only treat her on an inpatient basis. "The funding is not there. The facilities are not there when the funding is," she said. "It's just a difficult thing." - --- MAP posted-by: Alex