Pubdate: Sun, 18 Nov 2007 Source: Greensboro News & Record (NC) Copyright: 2007 Greensboro News & Record, Inc. Contact: http://www.news-record.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/173 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) DOUBLE-TALK ON CRACK? Guilford County officials have found a private agency to run a new, 56-bed drug-treatment facility in High Point. St. Charles, Mo.-based Bridgeway Behavioral Health Inc. will operate the facility in the same location as a previous service provider, Alcohol and Drug Services, or ADS, on West Wendover Avenue in High Point. That's welcome and overdue news. All too often you can trace violent crime, jail overcrowding, homelessness, prostitution and the spread of AIDS and HIV in Guilford County back to the dirty needles of IV drug users and, especially, the seductive killer high on crack cocaine. In announcing the contract with Bridgeway, a county news release cited its "strong record for innovative outpatient and residential treatment." Some however, question whether the facility truly delivers what the county commissioners originally promised to make a dent in the county's considerable crack-addiction problem. The Right Approach? A 2004 News & Record series on the local crack addiction problem noted a 20-year grip by crack on the local community that had reached epidemic proportions. It also pointed out a critical need for, and a glaring shortage of, long-term treatment centers in Guilford County. Later, a consultant's assessment of the now-defunct ADS made clear the agency's failure to adequately provide long-term drug-treatment services. But the new facility has earmarked fewer than half of its beds for "low-intensity long-term residential treatment." Bridgeway typically provides a 21-day stay for patients, then a regimen of outpatient treatment. When it comes to crack addiction, some say, this is nowhere near enough. In the 2004 News & Record series, a facility frequently cited as a model for crack addiction treatment, Triangle Residential Options for Drug Abusers, or TROSA, typically involves a one-year residential stay and another year of outpatient treatment and support. This county's new facility "is just going to be turning over beds and putting crack addicts right back on the streets," said Susan Mills, a local drug-treatment advocate. Has the mission changed? Mills said the county commissioners gave the impression the new facility would specialize more in long-term treatment. Others in the drug-treatment community say they are surprised that the facility appears to place so little emphasis on long-term inpatient care. "It is the only treatment modality that allows the patient to begin the process of getting better," said Brenda Smith-Williams, who operates a treatment center called DREAMS. Smith-Williams said she had hoped patients at DREAMS, which provides up to 30 days of treatment, could graduate to long-term care at the county facility. Added Craig Thomas, executive director of Mary's House, which provides long-term treatment to women with children, including pregnant women: "There is much more of a success rate for long-term treatment. If they go back to their old playgrounds and playmates, we're in trouble. "When you're on a diet, you ought to not work at the Krispy Kreme." Mixed Messages Joe Fortin, a substance abuse "best practices" specialist with the county's mental health agency, The Guilford Center, said last week that the terms of treatment in the new facility have not yet been determined, although it could include 90-day stays. That seems more than odd, given that Bridgeway has already been picked for the contract and length and nature of treatment are no small details. Fortin also argued that not every patient requires a long-term stay at a treatment facility. "There's no agreement that certain drugs require certain amounts of time," he said. That's not what he told News & Record reporter Stan Swofford in 2004. Fortin cited numbers back then that seemed to support the effectiveness of longer-term care. After 90 days, the success rate of treating crack addiction is 40 percent to 60 percent, Fortin said in 2004. It rises to 60 percent to 80 percent after a year of treatment, he said. What gives? Has the conventional wisdom changed? Can we get straighter talk about what's going on here? Of course, the proof of the new facility's effectiveness will be in the results, and county officials say they will closely monitor those results. They also rightly point out that the new facility was never intended to be the be-all and end-all of drug treatment in Guilford County, just one of the solutions. But the new facility does seem to veer from the earlier commitment to longer-term inpatient care. Given the scourge crack has been in Guilford County, the millions of dollars it costs the taxpayers every year and the many ways it threatens public safety and the quality of life here, we need straight facts and clear, candid talk about how to fix this vexing problem. Spirited debate about which path to take is healthy. But the last thing we need is mixed signals and muddled missions. This is too important not to get right. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake