Pubdate: Thu, 17 Aug 2006 Source: See Magazine (Edmonton, CN AB) Copyright: 2006 SEE Magazine Contact: http://www.greatwest.ca/see/Intro/letters.htm Website: http://www.seemagazine.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2367 Author: Mark Wells Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) IS A FIX FOR METH ON ITS WAY? Colleen Klein's Cure Could Be A Political Hot Potato The legislature will resume August 24, and Premier Klein has spending on his mind. What remains to be seen is if any of Alberta's surging oil and gas dollars will be directed to recommendations from his wife Colleen's task force on crystal meth. The task force report due this fall could spark a fight in government. Task force member and AUPE union president Dan MacLennan says the recommendations could easily carry a price tag upwards of $10 million. He also hinted that new methamphetamine addictions treatment spaces would be on the list of to-do items. "Addictions need a lot of support, and this one, from what I've heard from experts and families, seems to need continuous care for a longer period. 12 to 18 months could be normal," MacLennan says. Year-and-a-half long programs are a far cry from the three-month treatments currently available. But AADAC, which is also part of the task force, has already assumed the stance that the meth problem is in hand. The agency has already responded to criticisms from parents and addicts alike by adding youth-specific treatment beds and a treatment protocol specific to crystal meth users. Province-wide, AADAC now has 28 beds available to youth enrolled in the residential treatment program. Edmonton has eight treatment beds and five more will be added in 2007. Director of AADAC youth services Mark Miyamoto says wait times aren't a major issue. According to Miyamoto, the longest wait for a residential treatment bed is 12 weeks and AADAC has other programs available in the interim. There are no treatment beds specifically for meth addicts, he explains, because most youth seeking treatment from AADAC are not addicted to methamphetamine. "Across the board, alcohol and cannabis are the drugs of choice for young people," Miyamoto says. iHuman Youth Society outreach worker Wallis Kendall says Miyamoto is probably right that AADAC doesn't see a lot of meth-addicted youth. But, the veteran street youth worker added, that's because most meth-addicted youth don't go to AADAC for help. "What AADAC is seeing is the tip of the iceberg... The kids aren't talking to them. AADAC isn't working on the streets," he says. Kendall says he has tried to get meth-addicted street kids into AADAC, and usually can't. It's not AADAC's fault-the kids lives are just too erratic and their addictions too severe for AADAC's programs. Many live in group homes or on the street, without family support. Part of the problem is the kid's dependencies are so severe that they can't stay clean enough to earn admission to long-term government treatment facilities. AADAC isn't the only agency with such a prerequisite. Kendall says a provincial facility in Ponoka recently turned away a young woman seeking joint pyschological-addictions treatment because she took drugs before being admitted. Kendall's observational knowledge of meth treatment matches those of the experts consulted by the task force (iHuman was not part of the consultation): a three-week treatment program like AADAC's is not enough, and "after-care" is essential, he says. "How do I get food and clothes, and shelter? Am I expected to go right into school? How do I get tutoring help? What support do I get when I get out of treatment?... Kids often go back to selling drugs to support themselves-they've done it for four or five years and that's all they know," he warns. MacLennan says the diversity of the task force ensures that AADAC's perspective isn't the only one that will be heard. And he adds that there have been consultations with other agencies that work with street youth. "I think you can expect some cutting edge recommendations," MacLennan promises. And not all are related to drug treatment-expect to see money for community initiatives and more cops recommended. The only question remaining is if any of the recommendations will survive the division inherent to a government slogging through its final days before a leadership contest. On that point, MacLennan is optimistic. "I can't imagine any leadership candidate saying they aren't behind the fight against crystal meth." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom