Pubdate: Sat, 27 Aug 2005 Source: Farmington Daily Times (NM) Copyright: 2005 NorthWest New Mexico Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.daily-times.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/951 Author: Ryan Hall Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) NAVAJO HEALTH OFFICIALS TREAT METH FARMINGTON - The Navajo Nation Department of Behavioral Health will soon add rehabilitation counseling for methamphetamine addicts to its range of programs, following a two-day seminar in Farmington. Raymond Keeswood, prevention specialist for the Shiprock Outpatient Treatment Center, said the department has focused on education and use prevention since 2003, when "five or six kids" died in Tuba City, Ariz., as a result of meth. However, the department's counselors are now seeing a trend where clients who have become addicted to meth are coming in for rehabilitation services. Keeswood noted the counselors currently specialize in alcohol and marijuana addiction rehabilitation programs, but have not been trained to assist meth addicts. "The use of meth has also been prevalent among our clients. [Counselors] are having a hard time with it," Keeswood said, adding rehabilitation services are needed on the Nation because of increased use of meth among Navajos. "The jail system works sometimes and sometimes it doesn't," he said. The seminar conducted Thursday and Friday at the Courtyard by Marriott in Farmington was designed to address that problem. Sam Minsky of the Matrix Institute of Los Angeles conducted several sessions for the more than 30 employees of the Shiprock office of the Department of Behavioral Health that attended the conference. The seminar covered three different Matrix Models, highlighting triggers, cravings, brain models and addiction, conditional and obsessive thinking, motivational interviewing, stages of recovery and several other key concepts. The final segment of the seminar involved role-playing, with the counselors acting as recovering meth addicts and Minsky playing the part of the therapist conducting a group session. "They just really begin to look at what their clients might be needing. It's like filling that gap," Keeswood said. The group session stressed understanding of the emotions clients may go through and actions they might take during therapy sessions and the rehabilitation process. During the role-playing exercise, the "patients" talked out of turn, were distracting, told the therapist they were mad at him and purposely said trigger words that might remind others of their addictions. All of the scenarios are things that are common in real group therapy and rehabilitation sessions. By acting out the worst scenarios, including a client feeling like they didn't belong, the counselors tested Minsky and were able to see how to handle such a case. Minsky stressed to the audience that the most important part of a group therapy session was to maintain a safe and controllable environment so the patients could feel as comfortable as possible when discussing their addiction and recovery. According to Keeswood, a key concept in the sessions and in the Matrix Model is "stop thought," or the process of replacing thoughts of using meth with other activities, distractions or emotions. "Stop thought" eventually leads the user to consider the consequences when they crave meth, and replace that craving with one for something else other than the drug. Keeswood and Rita Cantsee, program supervisor for Shiprock Outpatient Treatment Center, both said the new model, complete with the 16-week therapy and counseling sessions, will allow the Department of Behavioral Health to attack the growing meth problems from both ends. The department will continue to push education and prevention while adding the new focus on rehabilitation to help those who have already begun to use meth. To that end, a ground breaking ceremony for a new 72-bed residential treatment facility was also announced Friday. The ceremony will take place Sept. 30, with the center opening in 2007. The treatment facility will be located behind Indian health Services in the old hospital building. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman