Pubdate: Mon, 21 Jun 2004 Source: Eau Claire Leader-Telegram (WI) Copyright: 2004 Eau Claire Press Contact: http://www.leadertelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/236 Author: Dr. Michael M. Miller HELP TREAT ADDICTIONS The passing of Samuel Johnson, who transformed Johnson Wax into the internationally successful and acclaimed SC Johnson Corp., deserved the front-page attention it received. Johnson was a wonderful philanthropist and community activist. Among his endeavors were his tireless efforts to reduce stigma about alcoholism and other drug dependencies, and to improve treatment opportunities for those with addiction. Johnson informed the business community about how it is in their business interest, not just an act of warm-heartedness or community good will, to address alcoholism and other drug additions as the health care problems that they are. These problems impact the workforce by affecting productivity, absenteeism, workplace injuries, and health care utilization. Every company has valued employees on its workforce who have alcoholism or other drug dependencies. For instance, 80 percent of those with cocaine addiction are employed. The fact that these individuals have addiction is often unknown to the employer; the employer knows them as good employees who may have developed family problems, distractibility, or may have even kept their disease from surfacing at work altogether. As health care costs continue to rise, one of the most effective strategies for business is to provide health insurance benefits for alcohol and other drug addiction and thus not create financial barriers to access such treatment for employees. Utilization of emergency rooms, hospitalization, and overall health care costs decrease as a result of effective treatment of addiction. Recovering persons are solid and, grateful employees, and to assist an individual into recovery is a far better business proposition for employers then recruiting and retraining someone to replace a valued employee who happens to have developed this brain disease (as opposed to some other neurologic or other medical condition). Dr. Michael M. Miller Madison - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin