Pubdate: Thu, 02 Jul 2009 Source: Tri-City News (Port Coquitlam, CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Tri-City News Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/3X3xlf9Y Website: http://www.tricitynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1239 Author: Terry O'Neill, Journalist, Writer TREATING ADDICTION AS A DISEASE ENABLES ADDICTS It's been said that half the truth is often a whole lie. So it is with the prevailing notion that addiction is a disease. On the surface, this interpretation seems to be at least half right, in that addicts appear to be afflicted by a disorder over which they have no control. However, this half truth distorts the reality that, unlike cancer, addiction can be cured by a choice that is at once simple and profound - - an exercise of free will and resolve that is not available to sufferers of actual diseases. The issue has been on my mind since April, when an Ontario court ruled that a provincial law, which denied alcoholics and drug addicts the right to receive long-term disability payments, violated the province's human rights code. Essentially, the court agreed that boozers and junkies had a disability. Henceforth, the court ruled, social assistance to addicts should increase by about 80 percent, to almost a thousand dollars a month. But the simple and whole truth is that, while drugs such as alcohol and heroin may, indeed, exert a powerful hold over people's lives - and destroy their health in the process - addictions are not at all like other diseases because the sufferer, through determination sparked by a "bottoming out," counseling, or a commitment to a recovery program, can cure themselves. This is impossible with cancer. It's evident to me that our society's determination to treat addiction as a disease ends up enabling addicts, be it through generous welfare cheques as in Ontario or so-called safe-injection sites in Vancouver. I am not alone in this belief. In his new book, "Addiction: A Disorder of Choice," psychologist Gene Heyman argues that addiction takes hold of a person by way of a series of bad choices made by that person - choices that value short-term pleasure over long-term consequences. Just as clearly, though, the evidence shows that an addicted person can make a series of good choices to end that addiction. My colleague opposite believes addiction is a disease of the body, mind and soul. Put that way, I'd almost agree with her. But I'd add that, if this is so, it's also a disease of a society that has lost the concept of personal responsibility. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr