Pubdate: Thu, 10 Nov 2005
Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand)
Copyright: 2005 New Zealand Herald
Contact:  http://www.nzherald.co.nz/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300
Author: Simon Collins

ADDICTS 'DYING' ON WAITING LISTS

Some drug addicts are dying on the waiting lists for rehabilitation
after the closure of 10 residential treatment centres in the past 11
years, say addiction services.

Addicts are waiting up to six months for treatment in some parts of
the country.

The latest closure, of the 35-bed Kahunui centre at Opotiki two weeks
ago, leaves no residential facility in the central North Island and
only one remaining Kaupapa Maori residence - Dunedin's Moana House,
which only takes addicts referred through the justice system.

Tim Harding, the chief executive of the former National Society of
Alcohol and Drug Dependence (NSAD), now known as Care New Zealand,
said the number of residential beds had more than halved in the past
decade, and some addicts were losing motivation to get treatment while
they waited for beds.

"It's about securing that window of opportunity. If you have to wait
two or three or even four to six months, then you can lose
motivation," he said.

"It is serious and it is a killer."

A spokeswoman for Narcotics Anonymous in Nelson, Janine, said addicts
there were no longer allowed to go to Wellington and had to wait three
to four months for treatment in Blenheim or Christchurch.

Asked about the consequences, she said: "Death. The consequence of
that is sometimes death. That is the reality."

A friend of hers in Nelson who was treated at Wellington last year was
not allowed to go back after a funding cut and had to wait five months
to enter a programme in Christchurch.

"Luckily, she had enough support from friends and family to keep going
with the work she had begun."

Auckland film-maker Carthew Neal said a friend of his who became a "P"
addict in Nelson faced a three-month wait for rehabilitation. Mr Neal
told her story in a documentary screened on TV2 last night.

The national manager of the Salvation Army's Bridge programme, Major
Lynette Hutson, said the national committee on addictions treatment
met at Wellington on Friday and expressed concern about the fallout
from the Kahunui closure, coming on top of the others in recent years.

"We are concerned that any further cuts will actually destabilise the
entire capacity to deliver these types of services. It's quite
fragile," she said.

"We are the largest provider of alcohol and drug services and I know
that we have signalled that certainly we couldn't sustain any
reduction in our services."

The Salvation Army is closing its treatment centre on Rotoroa Island
in the Hauraki Gulf on December 31 after 95 years.

However, Major Hutson said those beds would be replaced by two houses
in Manukau and one in Glen Eden, with treatment services beginning
this month in the army's existing centres in those places.

Two private treatment centres have also filled the gap - for those who
can afford it. Capri Academy opened in Auckland in 1999 and treated
former MP Mark Peck for alcoholism this year; and Lyttelton Unity
Trust opened this year. But Capri charges $4500 a week for the first
two weeks and $2000 a week after that.

Capri clinical director Tom Claunch said half of his clients were P
addicts and he achieved a success rate approaching 80 per cent.

But Mr Harding said families should not have to pay to get urgent
treatment for their loved ones.

* Drug and alcohol helpline, 0800 787-797 (10am-10pm) or
www.adanz.org.nz (link below).

Closed

Bridge Haven, Upper Hutt, 1994 Miranda House, Stratford, mid-1990s
Aspell House, Plimmerton, late 1990s Clairmont House, Timaru, late
1990s Belmont, Nelson, late 1990s Queen Mary, Hanmer, 2003 Queen Mary
Taha Maori, 2003 NSAD, Marton, 2003 Argosy House, Auckland, 2004
Kahunui, Opotiki, Oct 25.

Closing

Rotoroa Island, Auckland, Dec 31.

Opened/opening

The Bridge, Dunedin, 1996 Capri Academy, Auckland, 1999 Lyttelton
Unity Trust, 2005 The Bridge, Manukau, Nov 7 The Bridge, Glen Eden,
late November. 
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