Pubdate: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2006 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Jen Skerritt Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) TREATING ADDICTS COSTS US BILLIONS Takes Toll On Health Care, Justice Systems MARC Pelletier carried his black bag out of a local drug rehab facility yesterday morning and lit a cigarette to celebrate his 21st, and final, day of treatment. Pelletier has been a relapsing crack addict for 13 years and has been clean for 30 days. Although he said he's finally kicked his habit, Pelletier already lost everything else to his addiction -- from his job of 18 years to his daughter to Child and Family Services. "It's a terrible world," he said. "It's great to be straight." But Pelletier isn't the only one paying a high price because of substance abuse. An increase in binge drinking and illegal drug use from the early 1990s is contributing to the estimated $1.5 billion price tag of substance abuse in Manitoba, a new study suggests. Yesterday, the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse released its first cost study on alcohol, tobacco and illegal drugs in Canada since 1996. The national cost of substance abuse and its toll on health care, the criminal justice system and costs associated with premature death and disability jumped from $18.5 billion in 1992 to nearly $40 billion in 2002. Tobacco and alcohol account for nearly 80 per cent of the cost of substance abuse in Canada, despite a drop in smoking-related deaths and illness. Manitoba ranked seventh out of 13 provinces in its spending, behind Ontario, which spends more than $14 billion and Quebec, which spends more than $8.5 billion annually. Addictions Foundation of Manitoba CEO John Borody said adults in their early and mid-20s are binge drinking, or consuming five or more drinks on a single occasion, and the use of street drugs like crystal meth is also on the rise. Two years ago, Borody said, no youths were in AFM treatment programs because of crystal meth addictions. Now, 50 per cent of youth in rehab are meth addicts. In a 1994 Canadian Addictions Survey, 5.4 per cent of Canadians reported they binge drink at least once a week, compared with seven per cent of respondents in 2004. In 1994, 28 per cent of Canadians said they used marijuana at least once compared with more than 44 per cent in 2004. The use of crack cocaine by Canadians also increased by seven per cent from 1994 to 2004. "The wait lists were always long, but they are longer," Borody said. AFM is now looking at ways to handle the demand for alcohol and narcotic treatment programs. Borody said they are hiring outreach workers to help street kids stop using and launched a pilot project allowing anyone from the community to attend group meetings at River House residential treatment centre. Although Borody said more people are seeking treatment for addiction than ever before, he noted more drug addicts are using a variety of substances and more also suffering from a mental illness. "It's forced us to look at the way we deliver our programs," he said. Dave B., a recovering crack cocaine addict, said he was unaware of treatment programs until he was sent to prison 10 years ago for dealing drugs and selling illegal weapons in Alberta. Dave has been addicted to cocaine, crack, intravenous drugs and alcohol, and will leave what he says is his last stint in rehab today. Reaching out to addicts and offering them hope is the best way to motivate people to change, Dave said. "Before I had no desire to get anywhere," he said. "All I wanted to do was get high." Cost Of Treatment Total cost to Manitoba health care: $1.5 billion Tobacco cost to Manitoba health care: $175 million Illegal drug cost to Manitoba health care: $35 million Illegal drug cost to Manitoba criminal system: $24.5 million Alcohol cost to Manitoba health care: $114 million Alcohol cost to Manitoba legal system: $28.5 million Total cost of substance abuse to each Canadian: $1,267 - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman