Pubdate: Fri, 18 Jul 2003 Source: Providence Phoenix (RI) Copyright: 2003 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group Contact: http://www.providencephoenix.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/648 Author: Alex Provan Cited: Physician Leadership on National Drug Policy http://center.butler.brown.edu/plndp/ THE DRUG WAR Group Targets Cutting Abuse by Youth In On the Penitentiary System in the United States and Its Application in France, the work that originally brought Alexis de Tocqueville to America, he asks, "What is the principal object of punishment in relation to him who suffers it?" His answer: "It is to give him the habits of society, and first to teach him to obey." If this is the ethos of the American criminal justice system, it may explain why drug addicts are usually classified as criminals and put in prison until they can be expected to have acquired the habits of society and learned to obey. According to the Physician Leadership on National Drug Policy (PLNDP), it also betrays a fundamental misunderstanding of the "personal nature of addiction" and highlights what has proven to be a misguided belief in the effectiveness of incarceration to reform drug addicts. Kathryn Cates-Wessel is the associate director of PLNDP, started in 1997 at Brown's Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies. Cates-Wessel, 45, believes that most people understand that "tough on crime" approaches to drug addiction don't work. But while public opinion is shifting, getting politicians to support treatment measures remains difficult for other reasons. "One of the biggest obstacles involved is the stigma," she says. "People just don't feel comfortable dealing with addicts." Recasting addiction as a medical problem is an integral part of the mission of PLNDP, a nonprofit, nonpartisan group. Its most recent report, about adolescent substance abuse, came out in October and recommends more rehabilitation options and increased use of treatment programs in juvenile detention centers. The report was distributed to every state governor and member of Congress. To change the prevailing dynamic, PLNDP avoids the decriminalization talk common among many advocacy groups, focusing instead on the plethora of economic evidence that medical treatment is more effective and less costly than incarceration. This argument could be especially effective given widespread state and national budget deficits. For now, though, PLNDP has found that the Office of National Drug Control Policy spent 49 percent of its $19.2 billion budget on domestic law enforcement in fiscal 2003, with the rest divvied up between prevention, treatment, interdiction, research, and international projects. Another study in the report finds that incarcerating a drug addict costs the government $39,600 per year, while residential treatment costs $12,467 and improves the chances that a drug addict will not reenter the criminal justice system. The problem is, if not worse, less visible with adolescents. According to Cate-Wessel, the primary referral source for treatment for kids is the juvenile justice system. "Adolescents tend to have less dependency, tend more toward binging," she says. There are critical junctures in an adolescent's development when normal recreational use can turn into abuse -- times when prevention and treatment can prevent the development of addiction. PLNDP recommends periodic screenings for mental and substance abuse, so that fewer adolescents find help only after they are in a detention center. So far, PLNDP has focused on the state and national levels. On Friday, July 18, the group is co-sponsoring its first Providence event, an interdisciplinary workshop called, "Adolescent Substance Abuse and Mental Health Care: A Public Health Priority." As Cate-Wessel puts it, the workshop represents the "translation of policy to practice." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake