Pubdate: Wed, 09 May 2007 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2007 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) ADDICTION CENTRE TARGETS YOUNG Latest Addition To The Exchange District Is Set To Open This Fall AN addiction treatment centre that will help young adults struggling with alcohol, gambling and drug abuse will be the latest addition to The Exchange this fall. St. Raphael Centre is relocating to 456 Main St., where it will offer addiction recovery services that are tailored uniquely to individuals with help from psychiatrists, doctors, nurse practitioners, and mental health counselors. The move is expected to be publicly announced in upcoming weeks. The registered charity has been operating for 12 years in St. Boniface, where it has offered supports for addicts who have already visited a primary treatment centre. Josie D'Andrea, executive director, said the day program will be able to handle 100 addicts between age 18 and 35, along with extra counseling supports for families. Within the next two years, D'Andrea said, they will expand to become a full residential treatment centre to meet the growing need for addiction services in Manitoba. The charity has already raised more than $150,000 to remodel the second floor of the former bank building at the intersection of Main Street and McDermot Avenue and will continue its capital campaign to expand again. "If we feel we have an epidemic now, we need to pro-act to offset the explosion," D'Andrea said, noting the number of youths struggling with alcohol and drug abuse will continue to get worse. "There are drugs in every junior high school and I would begin to suspect even the elementary schools. There will be a population coming out (of school) with serious addictions because of trauma, abuse, and everything else that contributes to addictions." According to a Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse Survey in 2006, Manitoba spends $1.5 billion on substance abuse and its effects. The increased use of illegal drugs and alcohol abuse is contributing to the cost on health care, premature death, criminal justice costs and disability. D'Andrea said the centre is modeled after vitanova -- a successful addiction treatment centre in Toronto. Franca Damiani-Carella, vitanova's executive director, said her program focuses on treating the addict along with their family to avoid any relapse. In five years, she said the program has had an 82 per cent success rate. Damiani-Carella said many people self-medicate to mask the pain and suffering they feel because of trauma, abuse or a mental illness. Although she said addiction services are underfunded, they end up costing the system billions of dollars -- due to deaths, organ transplants, crimes to feed drug habits and chronic illnesses. St. Raphael Centre will use vitanova's model to treat an addict on a case-by-case basis, with the help of their family if possible. Damiani-Carella said once addicts learn to feel their pain instead of numbing it, recovery is possible. "You can't even describe the need because it just gets worse and worse and that is bringing on new drugs and new problems," she said. D'Andrea said there are wait lists for most addiction treatment services in the province and more help is badly needed. She said the earlier they intervene, the more likely an addict is to recover. Often, long-term heavy drug and alcohol abusers have caused irreversible brain damage and are less likely to completely recover. The day program should be up and running by September. "It's universal," Damiani-Carella said. "It can touch all families of all cultures. Addiction does not have a reason." For more information on St. Raphael Centre, contact 956-6650. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom