Pubdate: Fri, 04 Jul 2003 Source: Herald-Sun, The (Durham, NC) Copyright: 2003 The Herald-Sun Contact: http://www.herald-sun.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1428 Author: Claudia Assis Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) GROUP TO TOUR RALEIGH FACILITY FOR IDEAS FOR CREATING DETOX PROGRAM DURHAM -- A group of Durham pastors, mental health professionals and county officials will visit an inpatient substance-abuse treatment program in Raleigh next week to see if it could be replicated here. Doug Wright, chairman of the Mental Health Board, and Ellen Holliman, interim director of the Durham Center, met with representatives of The Healing Place of Wake County this spring. The program, based on Alcoholics Anonymous, offers free alcohol and drug detox and support services for homeless men, and is raising money to start serving women. "[The] method was an excellent one, with tremendous results, something we thought would work well in Durham," Wright said. The pastors have favored reviving a detox program at Oakleigh, a Durham Regional Hospital building that housed a 28-day substance-abuse treatment program until it closed two years ago. They won the County Commissioners' support for the idea in May, and Commissioner Phil Cousin agreed to be a liaison between the group and Duke University, which controls the building through its lease of Durham Regional Hospital. But some think the one-story building next to the northern Durham hospital on Crutchfield Street would be better used as a crisis center for people with mental illnesses and substance-abuse problems, Wright said. There is no such a center in Durham, and many such patients end up being treated in emergency rooms. The programs available in Durham are disconnected, said Tony Mulvihill, executive director of the Alcohol/Drug Council of North Carolina, a Durham-based advocacy group. A crisis center could become a focal point for referrals, he said. As it stands now, alcoholics and other addicts treated in emergency rooms often return to the situations that fed their abuse, only to end up in state psychiatric hospitals. Durham can't afford to dodge its responsibility to the community any longer, Mulvihill said. "[The county] has to find a way to get people into the right place to meet their needs," he said. "It needs to be a medical program where people are detoxed, which is a medical process." The Healing Place is modeled after The Healing Place in Louisville, Ky., which has received federal accolades. "We have replicated it very faithfully," said Fred Barber, the Raleigh clinic's first board president, adding that several cities have contacted the program about setting up similar services. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk