Pubdate: Wed, 28 Apr 2004 Source: Peterborough This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 Peterborough This Week Contact: http://www.peterboroughthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1794 Author: Mike Lacey NON-MEDICAL ISSUES RELATING TO ADDICTION TREATMENT NOW GETTING LONG OVERDUE ATTENTION A pilot program focusing on the non-medical side of addiction treatment has seen a good response in Peterborough. The program, officially running since the fall, is a pilot project of the social services department. Eight other Ontario communities are offering the same program. The purpose, says Ontario Works (OW) manager Nancy Fischer , is to focus on a variety of issues unrelated to the medical side of addiction treatment. The City's employment counselor help clients in a number of ways, perhaps simply walking them to a treatment centre or helping them look for a new apartment to live in. Participants are receiving Ontario Works benefits and have volunteered for the program. Currently, the department is helping close to 100 people and has two trained counselors and a third just finishing training. Locally, FOURCAST helps clients with the medical side of treatment while a program counselor helps with all the other living issues that come up. "They support the treatment plan," explains Ms Fischer. "There's a lot of barriers besides treatment." Ontario Works' John Coreno , concurs. "(Addiction) is a symptom of other issues a person needs to deal with," he says. "You have to deal with the sources." "They should be focused on treatment," Ms Fischer adds, noting when a person is worrying about a number of issues in their life, kicking an addiction is that much harder. It can be as simple as finding appropriate housing for a person. If someone is weaning him or herself off alcohol but they live in an apartment above a bar, his or her treatment will progress better if they move to another apartment, she explains. "We make sure the supports are in place so when they do relapse, it's not as big of a drop," adds Mr. Coreno. When the previous Tory government originally unveiled the program a couple of years ago, it called for mandatory drug testing. That brought the expected cries from social justice groups which derided the government for proposing such a program. After discussions with social service department officials across Ontario and various addiction treatment representatives, the provincial government pulled back from that original plan. The objective now is not to identify OW clients addicted to a substance but to help them become employable. "We only deal with addictions as barriers to employment," Ms Fischer explains. "What we see now is a result of listening," adds Mr. Coreno. "The ministry has chosen not to dictate to us. The program is driven very much by the early sites telling the province what works and what doesn't." The plan is to have this program rolled out across the province by the end of 2005. In Prince Edward-Lennox-Addington County, the program has evolved to the point now that those who are acting as counselors were previously clients. That's where Peterborough will hopefully head, says local representatives, but adding that municipality has had its program running a year longer than Peterborough. One of the drawbacks of the program is that it only helps people on social assistance. "How can we continue to help somebody who's gone off of social assistance?" asks Mr. Coreno. "That will be a challenge we all will have to face." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake