Pubdate: Sat, 16 Aug 2008 Source: Daily Gleaner (CN NK) Copyright: 2008 Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://dailygleaner.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3857 Note: Cartoon: http://dailygleaner.canadaeast.com/gallery/386529,171277 WAIT TIMES AND CRIME GO HAND-IN-HAND In our view: Combat the lack of addiction help with an attitude change Imagine the enormous decision to finally seek help for your drug addiction. After years of abuse, crime, family estrangement, health problems, poverty and all the other vices that accompany addiction, you take that first floundering step toward recovery. You summon to courage, make that call, spill your heart out, and are told you could wait seven months before getting into a rehab program. That news is enough to send you spiraling back down into the black hole of addiction and crime just because of the sheer enormity of the long road ahead. That's the reality facing drug addicts in Fredericton. Depending on their circumstances, seven months can be the wait time to get into a methadone program here. It's not that addiction workers aren't doing their best - they are - but they can only do so much with the resources at their disposal. A lack of beds, staff and money limits their ability to treat everyone who wants to be treated in a timely fashion. We all have to live with medical wait times. They are an unfortunate fact of life in New Brunswick. But unlike the person on a waiting list for a hip replacement, there is a hefty price to pay when an addict has to wait. Judge Graydon Nicholas sees this price in his court on a regular basis. He's lost count of the number of shoplifting cases linked to drug abuse. He says robberies have increased in recent years, all linked to drugs. And pharmacists are at risk of being held up by those seeking the most direct route to their fix. This is a desperate cry for help from the addicted, but the cry is being put on hold. In the meantime, break-ins, thefts, fraud and robberies will continue. Our community is bound to be impacted as victims of those crimes, while the same old attitude that this is a correctional issue continues. What needs to change before anything else will change is the attitude surrounding the issue: it's a health problem, not a crime problem. The crime that accompanies drug addiction is merely a symptom of the disease. Once we recognize it for what it is, then we can focus on cutting wait times with more resources, and adding more prevention programs to our education system. Until then, hold onto your purses and lock your doors, because it isn't going to get any better. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin