Pubdate: Fri, 23 Apr 2004 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2004, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/TorontoSun/home.html Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Jason Botchford COUNSELLING RULES URGED Experts Call For Certification Guidelines Experts are urging the provincial government to create guidelines that would stop people who have no training from working as drug counsellors. Currently, no certification is needed and anyone who wants to can "put a shingle on their door and start taking clients," said Jeff Wilbee, the executive director of the Alcohol and Drug Recovery Association of Ontario. "There is no accountability. You wouldn't want a physician (who) wasn't licensed and you wouldn't want a nurse who wasn't certified. Here, we have people doing these jobs who have no training at all," said Wilbee, who also sits on the Canadian Addiction Counsellors Certification Board (CACCB). COCAINE TOPS LIST Cocaine remains the most common illicit drug for which treatment clients seek help -- among both Toronto residents and those in the rest of Ontario. More than one-third (35%) of clients in the past five years have sought help for cocaine use. Wilbee said most people without training who become counsellors do so for the "right reasons" but lack the knowledge to deal with the increasingly complex problems. "If you don't get the proper treatment then you probably are facing what we are worried the most about -- a relapse," Wilbee said. "It's an issue of quality of care." Former addict Jerry Frew, 44, told The Toronto Sun he has been counselling clients for years without any training. "I have the training of the street; you can't replace that," Frew said. Wilbee acknowledged people like Frew have a point. "You can't replace passion and experience, but does that go far enough?" Wilbee said. "It's time this work was professionalized." LAUNCHING A COURSE Next month, the CACCAB will launch its online training course to help people in remote spots of Ontario get certified. To become certified counsellors people will need 6,000 hours of field experience, specific training in several different addictions, take written and oral examinations, and finally, sign a code of ethics. "I think it's a good idea and if it gets more respect and money for the industry, that is a good thing," Frew said. Wilbee said training guidelines will cost money. "I know everyone cries for money but this area of work is grossly underfunded," Wilbee said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin