Pubdate: Tue, 15 Jan 2008
Source: Rapid City Journal (SD)
Copyright: 2008 The Rapid City Journal
Contact:  http://www.rapidcityjournal.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1029
Author: Katie Brown, Journal staff
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)

PROGRAM HELPS FEMALE ADDICTS REGAIN LIFE FREE OF LETHAL DRUG

Methamphetamine use among women in South Dakota has  contributed to a 
dramatic rise in the number of women  incarcerated in the state, more 
so than with men, but a  new program to battle the problem is showing 
some  progress.

Between 2005 and 2006, the state penitentiary system  had a 19 
percent increase in the female offender  population.

"That's way bigger than what we typically see," said  Laurie Feiler, 
deputy secretary for the South Dakota  Department of Corrections.

Over the past decade, the number of male inmates rose  53 percent to 
3016 in 2007, and the number of female  inmates rose 143 percent to 
362, according to  department records.

Feiler said in 2006, almost half of female inmates  coming into the 
state prison system had meth problems.

Feiler said many of those women were not incarcerated  for a direct 
meth crime, but often their crime was  related to their meth abuse, 
such as theft or writing a  bad check in order to pay for the addiction.

The meth abuse is determined by chemical dependency  evaluations 
conducted on each inmate, regardless of  crime, when they come into the prison.

A diagnosis is given based on that and treatments are recommended.

In response to the increased use, Feiler said, "In  early spring of 
2006, we started working with the  Department of Human Services and 
the Department of  Health in terms of what would be the best way to 
handle  it."

The answer was to form a women's meth treatment program  run by the 
department of corrections. The program  started in August 2006.

The program is a four-phase treatment plan offered to  women who 
qualify for it because of their addictions.

Gib Sudbeck, director of the South Dakota Division of  Alcohol and 
Drug Abuse, said the four-phase plan was  modeled after a system 
being used at UCLA.

"They have been operating meth-specific programs since  the 1980s," 
Sudbeck said.

Sudbeck said the state is seeing more women than men  coming into the 
prison system requiring treatment for  meth.

Sudbeck said women often begin using meth as a  weight-loss tool. The 
drug gives users more energy when  they first begin to use.

"Women today have so many different roles and so many  things they 
have to do on a daily basis," he said.  "Meth is a very high-energy 
source. They can accomplish  all the things they need to do in a day."

Sudbeck said that energy and good feeling is fleeting.  Then comes 
the addiction, body sores, rotted teeth and  other negative side 
effects. Meth can be lethal.

But Sudbeck said people can recover with help and the  female meth program.

"It does take a long period of time to deal with a  meth-related 
problem, but there is hope," he said.  "People do get well and recover."

Feiler said an inmate's entry into the program must be  timed 
properly so she will be paroled or released  before phase three, the 
phase that involves the women  living in a halfway house outside the prison.

The average prison stay of a female inmate is 18  months.

The female meth program takes about 15 months. That  involves some 
intensive meth treatment within the  prison toward the end of the 
inmate's prison term. That  is followed by additional treatment in a 
halfway house  and, finally, treatment after the inmate has returned home.

Sudbeck said the first phase of the program involves  letting the 
brain begin to recover from meth use before  actual treatment of the 
addiction can begin.

"One of the things we see with meth use is that there  is a lot of 
neurological impairment in regard to what  meth does to the dopamine 
receptors of the brain," he  said.

He said it can take close to 90 days of being off meth  before an 
addict is stabilized and prepared to learn  and go through treatment.

"The brain needs time to heal itself," Sudbeck said.

Phase two allows the inmate to stay in barracks near  the South 
Dakota Women's Prison in Pierre where Feiler  said women live in a 
therapeutic community.

Phase three involves the woman living in a halfway  house. There are 
facilities in Sioux Falls, Mitchell  and Rapid City.

"As much as we can, we place them in the community  they'll be living 
in," Feiler said.

At the end of November 2007, there were 103  participants in some 
phase of the program, and 12 had  successfully completed.

Feiler said 17 people had started the program and were  not able to 
complete it.

"Three failed in phase two because of major  disciplinary programs," she said.

She said there were eight failures in phase three and  six in phase four.

The 12 successful women have not returned to prison.

Feiler said the program is still so new, it is  difficult to judge the success.

"The longest any of them have been out is a few  months," she said. 
"We're just now getting people who  are all the way through the 
15-month program."

Feiler said the program seems to be making a  difference.

The women who are in the third and fourth phases are  tested for 
drugs frequently. Feiler said out of the  more than 1,400 urinalysis 
tests done since the program  began, there have been only nine 
testing positive for  drugs. Those nine positive tests involved only 
seven individuals.

Throughout the phases, the women get chemical  dependency treatment, 
mental health counseling, GED  completion training, life skills and 
lessons in  corrective thinking.

"With substance-abuse problems, there's a way of  criminal thinking 
that needs to be addressed along with  the substance-abuse problem," 
Feiler said.

Feiler said there was a slight drop in the number of  women inmates 
in the past year.

She said, although that fact cannot be attributed  solely to the meth 
treatment program, she thinks it  will make a difference in the long 
run in the number of  women who end up back in the prison system.

So far this year, 38 percent of women coming into the  prison had 
meth problems, which Feiler said is still a  large number but is down 
slightly from the past two  years.

"So something is shifting a little bit," she said.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom