Pubdate: Wed, 14 Sep 2005
Source: Boston Herald (MA)
Copyright: 2005 The Boston Herald, Inc
Contact:  http://news.bostonherald.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/53
Author: Laura  Crimaldi
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

SHORTAGE OF BEDS MAKES DETOX DIFFICULT

Four years after state officials slashed funding for detox beds, heroin 
addicts desperate to get clean are being turned away by the dozens daily at 
Boston's detox centers, health advocates say.

"When you  reach out for help and it's just not there, it's like signing a 
death  sentence," said Tom Griffin, 37, a Charlestown native who spent a 
week calling  detox centers for a bed in June. "The more they cut beds, 
they are killing  people on the streets." Every day,  CAB Health and 
Recovery Services in Boston processes 35 or so requests for a  detox bed 
from patients without insurance, said CEO and president Kevin Norton.  Of 
those requests, four to five patients can be admitted. Beginning  in 2001, 
a combination of cuts to MassHealth basic insurance and state funding  for 
detox beds reduced the slots available in Boston from 310 to 190, said 
John  Auerbach, executive director of the Boston Public Health Commission. 
Statewide, beds dropped from 950 to 500 in the same period. The 
cuts  closed detox programs at Lemuel Shattuck Hospital in Boston and 
CASPAR in Cambridge, Auerbach said. The Faxon House in Quincy, which also 
offered detox,  went out of business.

To make up  for the shortfall, Mayor Thomas M. Menino authorized grants to 
offer low-cost  alternative detox methods, including acupuncture 
detoxification. A separate  $180,000 grant awarded in 2003 funded a 
butrenorphine treatment program.  Prescribed by a doctor, butrenorphine is 
a maintenance drug that lessens an  addict's heroin cravings.

Some beds  are coming back on line. Since fiscal 2004, $21 million has been 
set aside in  supplemental money for substance treatment. That cash  opened 
87 beds and restored "transitional" beds for patients leaving detox,  said 
Michael Botticelli, assistant commissioner for substance abuse services 
at  the Department of Public Health.

"What  we're really trying to do is not only think about detox bed 
capacity, but also  total system capacity," Botticelli said. DPH is also 
bringing 20 detox beds and  35 transitional beds on line for women in the 
criminal justice system. Despite the  restorations, Auerbach said detox 
centers have yet to reap benefits because  "many of the programs laid off 
staff and converted the facilities into other programs.

They were unsure this was going to be stable funding." Griffin, an addict 
for 10 years, said he slept in the halls of Charlestown's Bunker 
Hill  housing project and continued to shoot up as he waited for a bed. A 
social  worker eventually secured MassHealth insurance for him and he 
checked into CAB's  facility in Danvers. Now, he says, he hasn't shot up in 
100 days, works as a  security guard and lives in a Somerville halfway 
house. Not  everyone who is turned away is lucky enough to make it into 
treatment. "If we  say, 'Maybe tomorrow,' we may lose them and then we see 
them overdosing in  places like the Public Garden," Norton said.
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MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman