Pubdate: Sat, 15 Jan 2005 Source: Daily Courier, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Okanagan Valley Group of Newspapers Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/531 Author: Don Plant, The Okanagan Saturday FUTURE UNCLEAR FOR DRUG CENTRE KELOWNA - Tom overdosed on heroin twice last summer in Vancouver before addictions workers in Kelowna gave him the "greatest gift" -- his life back At 42, the former restaurant owner and maitre d' had bottomed out. He'd been shot at, beaten and spent time behind bars for trafficking. A friend and counsellor at Crossroads Treatment Centre in Kelowna arranged a bed for him so he could begin drying out after years of drug abuse Five months later, Tom is clean, sober and working as a volunteer in the Crossroads kitchen. He's renting a place for the first time in five years "I'm blessed to be here," he said. "These people are giving me my life back." But there's uncertainty about the future of the Valley's only residential treatment centre. As hundreds of addicts struggle to quit their habit in Okanagan cities, the Interior Health Authority is reviewing its yearly contract with Crossroads. Staff are afraid the IHA will stop funding the centre by early next year and try a new approach that abandons residential treatment "We're in the middle of an epidemic. We've got hundreds of people on the street. What are we doing for them?" said Tom. "Let's get more treatment beds. This place is always full. What does that tell you?" With an annual budget of $1.4 million, the Crossroads centre in Kelowna treats about 900 people a year. A drug addict or alcoholic who gets one of the eight "detox" beds usually spends four to 10 days going through withdrawal before he or she detoxifies from the substance. Medical experts stand by in case there's a seizure or other complication Ideally, an addict discharged from a detox bed goes straight to one of the centre's 43 treatment beds for up to four weeks. Those beds, however, are booked two to three months in advance. A patient out of detox may be stable, but there's often no bed or treatment available for him to learn how to kick his habit "Most go straight back to where they came from, which is usually a highrisk environment. They're very vulnerable to relapse," said Ronwyn Grace, the centre's executive director "They've received no treatment except detox. It's not long enough. This is an endless problem we have." Current research supported by the United Nations suggests addicts need a minimum stay of three months in treatment and the option of transitional housing for another six months to a year before they fully recover, said Grace. She says 28 days at Crossroads is a "joke" because many are just stabilizing when they have to leave. "You can't reverse years of behaviour and addiction in 28 days," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek