Pubdate: Fri, 03 Feb 2006 Source: Salisbury Post (NC) Copyright: 2006 Post Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.salisburypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/380 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) TREATMENT AFTER THE TRAGEDY It shouldn't take a fatal accident to get an alcoholic or drug abuser into a serious treatment program. Too often, however, that's the heartbreaking chain of events. People with a substance problem may deny for years that they need help; sometimes family members and friends are accomplices in that denial, too. Then someone gets behind the wheel of a car while impaired, and lives are shattered. Only then does longterm, professional intervention enter the picture, usually because a judge has ordered it. That's the case for Roger Allen Silcox, who was sentenced to 18-22 years in prison for a 2003 drunken driving crash that killed 26-year-old Lawania Chantelle Turner of Charlotte. Judge David Lee ordered him to enter a substance abuse treatment program and participate in counseling. At his trial, Silcox said that he had never intended to hurt anyone. But even though the intent wasn't there, the pattern of behavior was. According to court testimony, Silcox had two previous driving-while-impaired convictions in New York. During the trial, he acknowledged that he was an alcoholic but said he had not received treatment, beyond an eight-week class required for reinstatement of his driver's license. His wife and father also both acknowledged his drinking problem. Like the recent drunken-driving accident that left 17-year-old Tiffany Woodie in a coma and Michael Ray Self Sr. facing charges, this case raises troubling questions about why repeat DWI offenders are able to keep their licenses and keep driving. It also raises the question of why those suffering from substance abuse problems go for years without seeking the help that might help free them from their demons -- and save someone's life. The admonition we always hear is: Don't drink and drive. That message can't be repeated often enough, or loudly enough. But our emphasis on that message shouldn't obscure another that's at least as more important. If someone has a substance abuse problem -- and people who drive while impaired definitely have substance abuse problems -- then that person needs treatment. Treatment is available -- for anyone. All it takes is a phone call -- to a counseling center, to a substance abuse hotline, to a group like AA, to your family doctor or minister. They can point the way. Treatment is available -- but you have to make the call. If you have a loved one or friend who abuses alcohol or drugs, then you may need to tell that person to seek help -- and put the phone in his or her hand. Roger Silcox will finally undergo treatment for his alcoholism, and Michael Ray Self also will undergo treatment under a judge's order. It's almost too painful to contemplate how different many lives might be today if they had acknowledged their problems earlier and sought help sooner. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake