Pubdate: Wed, 29 Dec 2004 Source: Messenger-Inquirer (KY) Copyright: 2004 Messenger-Inquirer Contact: http://www.messenger-inquirer.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1285 Author: Associated Press TREATMENT CENTERS HELP STATE BATTLE METH PROBLEM BOWLING GREEN -- Studies have found that Kentucky's publicly funded system of drug and alcohol treatment is effective in helping methamphetamine abusers put down the powerfully addictive drug. But advocates say the state should dedicate more money for the programs. The University of Kentucky's Center on Drug and Alcohol Research studies of the past two years found that treatment helps significant numbers of addicts stop abusing all drugs, find full-time jobs and stay out of trouble. The studies also show that the treatment programs save the state money by cutting prosecution costs. "Hey, this stuff works," said Robert Walker, project director for the study. "I couldn't tell you the number of studies that have shown positive outcomes and cost savings." The most recent study, released in October, found that 60 percent of people surveyed had stayed off illegal drugs, 64 percent abstained from alcohol; full-time employment increased by 45 percent and arrests were cut by 51 percent. Further, it found the state gained about $100 million by spending about $25 million on treatment instead of prosecuting and jailing offenders. The UK studies examined 1,730 people who agreed to follow-up interviews after entering treatment during a 12-month period in 2000 and 2001-2002. Use of methamphetamine is soaring in the Midwest and South, especially in rural areas. It is a highly addictive stimulant that can be snorted, smoked or injected. Felecia Peacock, a recovering addict, remembered the grip meth had on her. "It's euphoric," she said. "You stay up for hours. There's no eating. There's no sleeping." But now, Peacock, 32, works at the Bowling Green halfway house where she stayed after completing a 28-day treatment program at a center in Louisville. She said she no longer wakes up needing meth to start the day. "I don't think about getting high," she said. "I don't have a daily desire to use." Advocates of the treatment programs say Kentucky needs to spend at least $50 million more on mental-health and substance-abuse treatment. Walker said Kentucky spends about $25 million a year -- mostly federal money -- on programs to treat drug and alcohol abuse. The state ranks 44th in the nation in that spending category. Martin Wesley, executive director of Park Place, a community mental-health treatment center in Bowling Green, said meth users respond well to treatment. "They're sick of it," he said of the problems meth brings to users. But the drug "is spreading like wildfire" and more slots are needed for treatment, he said. "We're just maxed out," Wesley said. Wesley and others said the state should take advantage of a Medicaid provision that would allow Kentucky to provide more treatment through 70 percent in federal matching funds for the 30 percent in state money. "We obviously continue to advocate for additional money for substance-abuse treatment," said Dan Howard, executive director of the Association of Regional Mental Health Boards. "It makes more sense to treat substance abusers than to lock them up in jails." The UK study found people in residential treatment were more likely to stay clean. For example, people who reported using illegal drugs when they entered residential treatment reported a 56 percent drop in illegal drug use afterward. People who got outpatient treatment reported an 18 percent reduction in illegal drug use after treatment. Of the 26,300 people treated for substance abuse through the state's regional mental-health system, about 30 percent received residential treatment, according to the UK study. Walker said residential treatment offers a more intense, structured program supervised by professionals with medical training. But such programs are far more costly, about $150 a day per person. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth