Pubdate: Sun, 03 Jul 2005 Source: Cyprus Mail, The (Cyprus) Copyright: Cyprus Mail 2005 Contact: http://www.cyprus-mail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/100 Author: Stefanos Evripidou Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) LIFE ON THE OUTSIDE LAST week we looked at life in an inpatient centre dealing with the addiction of drugs when psychologists at Ayia Skepi Therapeutic Centre in Filani village opened a small window to the world of intensive, sequestered treatment, where addicts were prevented from contact with the outside world for months. The aim of this policy is to deconstruct the force behind their habit and build up enough self-esteem to help them face the world on a stronger footing. Today, we get a look inside the outpatient centre I Tolmi in Nicosia, where drug addicts who continue to live, work and interact in society try to kick the habit by visiting a couple of times a week. Unlike the inpatient centre, when I Tolmi's participants leave the centre after each session, they return to the house, family, spouse or job where their habit first started. TOLMI opened in Larnaca in 1992 to deal with alcohol addiction. Soon after, it became apparent that drug use was becoming more prevalent and in 2000 a Nicosia centre opened, followed by one in Limassol four years later. The board of directors (volunteers, former addicts and members of staff) are hoping enough funds and sponsors can be raised to open a much-needed outpatient therapeutic centre in Paphos soon. The proportion of people now seeking help for drug, rather than alcohol, abuse at one of the Tolmi centres on the island has reached 95 per cent. The Sunday Mail visited the Nicosia centre. Up a small flight of stairs, the a flat has been transformed into an outpatient centre with rooms for individual therapy, group therapy and a small room for drama therapy. Funds seem tight. Tolmi psychologist Georgios Poyadjis explained that people from all walks of life, educational and social backgrounds, from 16 years up come seeking help for drug addiction. "We have a 24-hour hotline. We get police, doctors, and lawyers calling us wanting treatment for a client. This is a good motive, getting treatment before a trial. We insist that addicts are clean before therapy starts. To get a paper from us to use in trial we insist they do a six-month programme," he said. Those that complete a six-month programme can go on to do a further six months. The treatment is called 'tertiary prevention', where trained individuals try to help addicts from using again. Therapy takes place four times a week, two hours a session. Anyone participating on the programme gets two sessions alone with a psychologist, one in group therapy, one doing drama therapy and, as Poyadjis tellingly says, "when we have money we do occupational therapy too". There are 70 drug addicts currently in the programme, 40 are fully involved while 30 are half in half out, still thinking about it. "Most, 35, are here for heroin, around 15 for marijuana and other substances while the remainder are multi-users, who take a bit of everything apart from heroin," said Poyadjis. The majority are socially active, may work sporadically or go to school. Around 85 per cent are male. "From the kids that come here, we ask at least one parent to have one session of therapy per week with us, by themselves." Going to the centre "means a change of life and thinking," Poyiadjis said. "There is no magic; it is the work of the person. We help them respect themselves and become productive citizens in society. "The risk of relapse is quite high but if someone relapses, it gives us a chance to work on what we missed about that person before," he said. He acknowledged that people from a healthy family environment had a better chance in an outpatient centre, compared to addicts who need distance from dysfunctional family environments to begin the process of losing the addiction. "Incomplete socialisation is the biggest problem. There are many factors involved - manipulation, authority exercised in the family. Every person is different. No one therapy fits all. The aim is to mould and re-socialise the person." Statistics show that from those who complete a one-year programme, 60 to 70 per cent stay clean for three years. "Those in society run more risks of relapse but if they face those risks, it makes them stronger. Research shows patients who complete outpatient programmes can stay clean four to five years longer than those in inpatient programmes. It's also cheaper. A person in therapy costs us UKP 500-UKP 700 a year, inpatient centres can cost up to UKP 50,000 a year per person." From those who come to the centre, half end up leaving after one or two visits. "A big problem is denial. There is a shift in attitudes. Young people think marijuana is nothing. Over the last two to three months, there has been a lot of skunk around from Holland. The Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content in skunk can bring on paranoia, psychosis in a lot of cases. Normal grass has four to six per cent THC content, where as skunk has up to 20 per cent now. "So first you have to deal with denial, try to minimise it because it's always there. You need to motivate people to stabilise the decision to stop drugs, make them realise they have a problem, then build on that," said Poyadjis. "The philosophy behind this is the need to change the whole person. Give them social and psychological skills to work on their behaviour, find the underlying problems." For those who make it and stay the course, the biggest problem they have to face is finding a job afterwards. "When people get clean, they are stigmatised. It's a small society and it's very hard to get a job. They face a lot of problems getting back into society. Most people who finish with us don't want to be identified with the programme, apart from our treasurer, an ex-addict who owns a restaurant and tells everyone." Poyadjis highlighted the seriousness of stigmatisation for former addicts. "We had a professional businessman who was shooting heroin for eight years. When he got clean he didn't want anyone to know. After three years, he met his fiancee. We had eight sessions just discussing whether to tell his fiancee about his past or not. Eight. He did in the end." Asked how therapists deal with questions on the effects of drugs that science knows little about, like ecstasy, he replied: "We don't tell them things like drugs are good or bad. Who am I to say that? We ask them questions about how it affects their lives, we let them know continuous use of marijuana creates problems, that there is no control over the production of ecstasy, that it is made in clandestine laboratories. "It's not 'why do you try drugs?' It's why do you continue using them, that is the root of addiction," he said. Tolmi has 12 members of staff working in the three centres: nine psychologists, one drama therapist, one sociologist volunteer and one social worker. The budget for the three centres comes to UKP 60-70,000 a year, markedly less than what Tolmi would like. "We asked the Health Ministry to give us equipment to run our own drugs screening tests for participants but we have heard nothing. So, we have to ask people to pay UKP 20 to 30 a week to make their own tests," said Poyadjis. "We get UKP 15,000 from the Anti-Drugs Council a year, UKP 6,000 to UKP 7,000 from the government, and the rest is left to us to raise. Last year members of staff went months without payment. Our biggest problem is money. We have become a revolving door; all therapists pass through here first, and leave because we just don't get enough money." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth