Pubdate: Sat, 16 Dec 2006 Source: Wall Street Journal (US) Page: P1 Copyright: 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.wsj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/487 Author: Christina Binkley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) SOBERING VACATION A New Wave of Addiction Treatment Centers Is Turning Malibu into the Capital of Luxury Rehab -- and Raising Questions About Whether Five-Star Service and Recovery Mix. MALIBU, Calif. -- Each sumptuous bed here at a retreat called Promises has been fitted with Frette linens and a cashmere throw. The elongated pool beckons as does the billiard room beyond, tucked into the Santa Monica mountains overlooking the Pacific Ocean. But not just anyone can come to this exclusive getaway -- and really, not many would want to. Promises is an addiction-treatment center that caters to a mix of celebrities, corporate chiefs, their families and people who want to live like them. Promises is part of a growing niche in the burgeoning business of addiction treatment: centers that are truly, deeply luxurious. With more than a dozen recovery centers in this seaside village, Malibu has become the center of the high end of the industry -- perhaps logically, given its resort-like location, enclaves of celebrity homes and proximity to Los Angeles, a city whose primary industry is rife with partying and free-flowing cash. California law has helped by allowing rehab centers to be located in residential neighborhoods if they have no more than six beds. At Renaissance, where a staff of 50 caters to a dozen patients, one bedroom suite for a single resident measures 2,000 square feet -- as big as many three-bedroom homes. Another center, Harmony Place, will supply personal concierges and pedicures if patients ask. A few miles north of Promises on the Pacific Coast Highway, Passages offers surfing instructors. Clients stroll around in swim trunks chatting on cellphones in a sprawling sea-view mansion that is hard to distinguish from a luxury resort. "We are a very comfortable place to do some very uncomfortable work," says Don Grant, admissions director for Harmony Place. There are conflicts between recovery and luxury, according to addiction experts. Many of the 14,000 or so treatment centers in the U.S. adhere to guidelines that include an element of hard labor -- bed making, floor scrubbing, laundry and other duties that are intended to serve as equalizers among all addicts. Robert DuPont, former national drug czar under presidents Nixon and Ford and now president of the nonprofit Institute for Behavior and Health in Rockville, Md., says: "Self-centeredness is the key to the addiction....To get well, they have to leave their ego behind." But at luxe centers that charge $35,000 to $75,000 a month, many clients expect five-star service, not equality. Some Malibu facilities argue that they treat people who might not otherwise seek rehab. "We're talking about people who wouldn't go into treatment in a place where they had chores," says Mr. Grant, of Harmony Place, where clients do their own laundry. Chris Prentiss, co-founder of the center called Passages, eschews the benefits of chores. "We don't believe in punishment," Mr. Prentiss says. "There's no floor washing here." Most of the other treatment facilities here adhere to the traditional 12-Step philosophy that has guided addiction treatment for decades: From Step 1, an admission to being powerless to the addiction, through Step 12, promising to carry the recovery mission to other addicts. The rehab process involves hours of daily group and individual therapy with licensed counselors treating people who generally arrive in crisis, often with injuries sustained in falls, car accidents or other mishaps that precipitated their arrival. The minimum stay for most centers is about 30 days -- an industrywide norm established by insurance carriers. Some carriers might reimburse for a fraction of the cost, but many patients in these places pay for the whole thing themselves. Patients at some Malibu centers can take acupuncture and walks on the beach with therapists. There is also equine therapy, an art that Sal Petrucci, a former dentist who founded Renaissance Malibu, says doesn't involve riding, but involves getting a horse to respond to vocal commands. He describes it as trying to "get into the soul of the horse and connect as one with it." In the case of a celebrity who is in the midst of a project, Promises will provide a sobriety escort who will ferry the celebrity to and from the set, making sure he or she doesn't sneak off and relapse. For many years, the Betty Ford Center was considered the pinnacle of addiction treatment. But in recent years, as the rehab taboo has lessened and more people have sought treatment, the Ford Center's larger, more hospital-like facilities, with costs of roughly $21,000 for month's stay, have maintained their reputation for excellence but have come to seem more clinical against the new competition. While earning double-digit profit margins, many Malibu operators are expanding rapidly. Renaissance is working on a plan to expand to the Philippines and England as well as elsewhere in the U.S. Passages has purchased two houses on one gated Malibu street and is in negotiations to buy a third, and Mr. Prentiss, its co-founder, says he hopes one day to own all seven homes on the street: "At nearly $60,000 a month, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out we're taking in $20 million a year." It's hard to tell, though, whether these places are any more successful than any other. And with the exception of Passages' Mr. Prentiss, the Malibu centers aren't claiming to be more successful -- just more comfortable. There is no standard to measure the success of addiction treatment. The problem lies both with the lack of a clear definition of success - -- sober for one year, five years or a lifetime? -- and verifying it, which would require addicts to report in honestly. People often say they choose the Malibu facilities because they've heard famous people went there, and assume the treatment must be good, or because they want the creature comforts. "I knew I had to do something," says Kristen Bufe, who attended Passages for two months in 2004 after she could no longer find a fresh vein to shoot up heroin. "I'd heard of rehab, but I had this vision of Betty Ford where you had to clean toilets and things like that." Many experts believe that creature comforts have little to do with success in recovery, and that the best way for addicts to improve their chances is to simply spend more time in rehab. Dennis O'Sullivan is the executive director of People in Progress, a residential rehab center that treats former prisoners and other down-and-out addicts in the San Fernando Valley. At a cost per client of $60 a day, covered largely by donations and government programs, People in Progress clients sleep on bunk beds with blankets donated by a local homeless shelter. But clients are required to commit to living there for a year. "The longer your exposure to treatment, the better your chances of recovery," Mr. O'Sullivan says. Just a few years ago, Promises was the only luxury rehab center in Malibu. Richard Rogg, a lanky recovering cocaine addict, was running a West Los Angeles recovery center in 1997, when some deeply troubled clients surprised him by demanding more luxury. "They're being wheeled in on a gurney to save their lives, and they're looking around going 'what's the thread count of the sheet?' " Mr. Rogg says with a shake of his head. Still, he looked around with the thought of upgrading his center when he came upon a sprawling Mediterranean home in Malibu with a separate guest house. He bought it. Within weeks of opening in Malibu, "some of my friends referred some celebrities," Mr. Rogg says. Soon, comings and goings at Promises were being photographed by paparazzi from on a hillside using long-range lenses. Mr. Rogg, a lantern-jawed former real-estate developer with a sometimes morose demeanor, says he was surprised by the center's popularity with big names. "I didn't come up here and say, 'Let's hit up the rich and famous and get all these celebrities,' " he says. His celebrity contacts have come in handy. These days, Mr. Rogg is creating a new Los Angeles facility that will treat low-income mothers and their children, to keep the children out of foster care. Earlier this year, at a fund-raiser at the polo games at Will Rogers State Park, actor Tom Arnold spoke, as did comedian Richard Lewis. Actor Louis Gossett Jr. addressed the crowd: "My name is Louis and I'm an alcoholic." They raised $280,000 for the treatment shelter that day, Mr. Rogg says, noting with a hint of cheer, "That's enough for our first year of operations." A 12-Step devotee, Mr. Rogg and others say that Promises Malibu maintains a sober approach to recovery. Every patient has chores. Corporate executives, he says, are often the best workers, wiping out ashtrays with fervor. Promises patients have come to call the facility "the Rock" for its seat in the coastal mountains, as well as its tough-love role. "They hit you mind, body and spirit. The money spent has given me a new life," says one former client, whose employer, an advertising agency, sent him there, and is now deducting the cost from his pay. "It might have fancy sheets and it might have triple-A food, but at the end of the day, it's a hard-core program." It took only a few years before other entrepreneurs -- many of them recovering addicts themselves -- began to replicate Promises' business model. The copycats are a source of steady irritation to Mr. Rogg and none more than Passages, whose treatment philosophy is at odds with Promises but whose name he says is similar. One former Passages client says he ended up there because he was looking for Promises when he was loaded and got the names mixed up. Mr. Prentiss, of Passages, argues that he has discovered a cure for addiction that involves uncovering a core problem through hours of individual therapy. This approach stands in stark contrast to many rehab centers around the country. Mr. Prentiss is a real-estate developer and the self-published writer of self-help books with titles like "For Once in Your Life, Be Who You Want, Have What You Want." He opened Passages as the "recovery plan" for his son Pax, the now-32-year-old co-founder, who had been addicted to heroin and other drugs since adolescence. "We cure people every day," says Mr. Prentiss. He argues that "alcoholism doesn't exist. It's a condition created so that insurance companies would pay for treatment. If I had an itch and scratched, would you say I have scratchism?" Claims of a "cure" run counter to most in the addiction-recovery business. "I know of no reputable scientist who doesn't see it as a chronic disease," says Barry Karlin, chief executive of CRC Health Group Inc. in Cupertino, Calif., a fast-growing chain of rehab centers. The evidence Mr. Prentiss offers of his success is anecdotal: It includes the case of a young woman who did drugs because, Mr. Prentiss says, she believed she wasn't pretty. "I took her into the bathroom and stood her in front of the mirror. I took her hair back and I took her shoulders and pulled them back. She was lovely." Mr. Prentiss says that by the end of her stay, the young woman was using makeup, had her hair fixed and now makes a living as a model. Two koi ponds flank the entrance to Passages' marble and gilt main building, where 34 therapists treat 29 patients in three residences where most share a room. They include two spiritual counselors -- one drives a Lexus sports car and says she's psychic -- as well as massage therapists, "life purpose counselors," hypno-therapists and an "image therapist" who encourages patients to use digital cameras to express themselves. One chef came from Spago. The staff leans toward attractive young women dressed in jeans and T-shirts. Sitting in a cushy leather lounge chair in Passage's great room, Mr. Prentiss greets, hugs, and pats his clients as they roam by. "How ya doin'?" he asks a young woman who passes with her just-delivered dry cleaning. "Not too well," she responds. After she disappears, Mr. Prentiss confides, "She just found out she's pregnant two days ago." Not everyone who attends these places is rich. One patient at Passages recently was a Hawaii bartender who paid the fee for three separate stays with an inheritance from her mother. Her hands shake as she pours herself a glass of lemon water. "She'll be dead if she doesn't get it this time," Mr. Prentiss says, out of earshot. Another recent client there sells cable-television services door to door. Convinced that Passages offered a solution that didn't label him diseased, he paid his bill by remortgaging his Los Angeles condo. "When you're there putting your heart and soul into therapy -- and then you get a massage," he says, "it's the relief." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake