Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jan 2009 Source: Trail-Rossland News (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Trail-Rossland News Contact: http://www.trailrosslandnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4398 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) BREAKING THE CYCLE OF ADDICTION After a full day's work at Teck, Eric Chobanuk would go home and make all the preparations to start a renovation on his Pass Creek house. Then, he'd set up all the tools he needed to fix his car. Then, he'd go to bed. Lots of preparation, no real progress - that was Chobanuk's life as he stagnated under a marijuana addiction that peaked at 20 joints a day. While he never took his habit to work, Chobanuk's addiction was so bad he'd sometimes wake up three times a night to feed it. "I'd meet people for coffee and then wouldn't remember who they were two weeks later. It seemed logical at the time, but there was no logic in the end," Chobanuk said. Now 59 years old, Chobanuk started smoking marijuana in his teens. He said loneliness drove him to the drug, but the drug was never a solution. While he managed to quit a number of times over the last 16 years, the addiction always sucked him back in, growing worse each time. Chobanuk has retired and hasn't smoked in two years. During that time, however, his struggles to mend the chaos his addiction wrought over so many years remained, and he never really addressed the root causes of that addiction. He now feels he has turned a page thanks to Interior Health's new regional Addictions Day Treatment Program, which started operating out of the Castlegar Health Centre in September. "What I got out of this program was a lot of deep self-respect for me. I respect myself now totally for who I am. When I left the program, I felt at peace," said Chobanuk, one of the first Kootenay Boundary residents to graduate from the program. The goal of the Day Treatment Program is to create accessible, effective day programming for adults living in the Kootenay Boundary area. It builds on supportive counselling and treatment options currently available in each community. Although adults requiring treatment for addictions were able to access individual and group counselling at their community mental health and addictions offices, an intensive treatment option in the Kootenay Boundary was lacking prior to this program, and clients had to travel to the Okanagan for detox facilities and residential treatment. "What's nice about this program is that people with addictions sometimes want to find excuses that there's no help around the Kootenays, but now there is," Chobanuk said. "People are not alone and they need to ask for help, because help is there - all you need to do is ask." The Addictions Day Treatment Program is built upon previous work undertaken by the Ministry of Health and other evidence-proven methods of treatment for addiction issues. Alan Friend, co-facilitator of the program, said intensive day treatment benefits people with addictions by increasing supportive treatment hours, bringing treatment options closer to home and increasing the spectrum of individuals who can attend treatment and who would otherwise have barriers such as child care. It also supports the development of peer and other support networks near home. "When clients leave their communities for residential or detox treatment, they are in an artificial environment," Friend said. "While those traditional residential programs still address addictions issues, having a program in the local area allows clients to practice and evaluate the effectiveness of the skills they are learning in their real-life environment throughout their treatment." Adults eligible for the program have made a commitment to make change and have the willingness to attend group counselling. They are free of any acute withdrawal symptoms, psychiatrically stable and have a mental health and addictions case manager to be appropriate for the program. For eight weeks, clients attend the program at the Castlegar and District Community Health Centre three days a week for six hours a day and are expected to attend a fourth day of relapse prevention session at the mental health and addictions office in their home community. Clients must continue to access support in their communities during the program and will be expected to attend follow-up appointments when they complete it. Chobanuk said his addiction will never fully disappear, but he now feels he has the confidence and skills to make sure he doesn't give in to it again. He has also learned that he can't go it alone, and plans to continue to take advantage of the supports that are available. In addition to cleaning up the chaos of previous years, Chobanuk is now a volunteer driver for other mental health and addictions clients and has offered his support to others who are participating in the day treatment program. "I'm not the same person that I was and I'm not the same person that I thought I was. Who I'm going to be.I'm not certain." For more information and access to Interior Health's new Addictions Day Treatment Program, please contact your local mental health and addictions office. Boundary: 250-442-0330; Castlegar: 250-304-1846; Nelson: 250-505-7248; Trail: 250-364-6262. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom