Pubdate: Fri, 11 Dec 2009 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Isabel Teotonio, Staff Writer MORE CARE FOR ADDICTS BADLY NEEDED Clients would have a better chance of overcoming drug and alcohol addictions if residential treatment centres offered longer programs, says the executive director of Hope Place Centres. Ideally, the treatment cycle would run from 35 to 90 days, says Jacqie Shartier, who oversees Hope Place Women's Treatment Centre. It offers a 24-day abstinence-based program for women. "Women are very depleted by the time they come to treatment. Their road to recovery is longer, and many don't have as much family support because of the stigma attached to addiction when mothering," says Shartier, adding that 90 per cent of clients ask to stay longer. In January, the Star met five women at Hope Place and followed their recovery throughout the year. When they left rehab, all said they wished the program had been longer. When we visited them recently, only one had not relapsed. A cycle of up to 90 days would mimic the men's program Shartier oversees at Halton Recovery House, where 45 per cent of the clients who started there in January went six months without relapsing. A year-end survey on how the men are doing now is in the works. However, the province only funds 21-day residential programs, which it says is an established best practice. Centres such as Hope Place provide longer programs thanks to fundraising and charging private fees for some beds. "Funding has not kept pace in terms of the kind of clinicians we need, the length of the program needed and the content of program needed," says Norma Medulun, president of Addictions Ontario. "We can't meet our current obligations." The health ministry says it has raised funding on substance abuse and problem gambling programs over the last six years by 36.7 per cent, to $163 million from $119 million. The ministry is developing a 10-year mental health and addiction strategy that will improve services, said spokesperson David Jensen. Part of the problem with treating addicts is the difficulty in measuring success and even deciding how to measure success. Some experts consider any return to drugs or alcohol a failure. But others believe harm reduction should be the goal, believing that a heroin addict who stays off heroin but continues to use marijuana is nonetheless headed in the right direction. "Success cannot be measured by being totally abstinent," says Shartier. "It's about the level of functioning of the person, compared to when they were at the height of their substance dependency. "Recovery is a journey, not a destination." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr