Pubdate: Wed, 5 Aug 2009 Source: Times Herald-Record (Middletown, NY) Contact: http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?Category=READER08 Copyright: 2009 Hudson Valley Media Group Website: http://www.recordonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2544 Author: Bob Gaydos Note: Bob Gaydos of Scotchtown is a freelance writer. OUR SUBSTANCE ABUSE POLICY DOESN'T ADD UP I don't usually like to throw a bunch of numbers at readers because their eyes tend to glaze over and their attention wanders, but in this case the numbers are striking and important. So bear with me. . In 2005 (all numbers are from 2005), federal, state and local governments spent a total of $468 billion on substance abuse and addiction. That broke down thusly: federal, $238 billion; state, $136 billion; local, $94 billion. . Of every one of those dollars, 95.6 cents went to "shoveling up the wreckage of illness, crime, homelessness and other social ills," says Joseph A. Califano Jr., former U.S. secretary of health and current chairman of the Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. Califano regards these numbers as "a searing indictment of the policies of government at every level, governments that spend virtually all the funds in this area to shovel up the human and economic wreckage of substance abuse and addiction and little or nothing to prevent and treat it." He is correct, not that anyone seems to be listening. Califano presented the results of CASA's latest report at a press conference in Washington, D.C., on May 28. I stumbled across live TV coverage of that press conference on C-SPAN. When Califano finished his presentation, he asked the smattering of reporters if there were any questions. After a few uncomfortable moments of silence, he thanked them for their time (if not their attention to their professional responsibilities) and left. Well, if the national press corps is oblivious to the massive misspending of public money, should it be any surprise that the politicians who decide how to spend those dollars are also clueless? In one sense, the CASA report isn't new. We already knew that substance abuse imposed a heavy financial burden on American society and, in rare moments of honesty, some have even admitted that the "war on drugs" had been lost. But CASA went further in estimating the cost of the "war" by looking at items buried in government budgets, things such as health care, incarceration, child welfare, criminal, juvenile and family courts, domestic violence, child abuse, homelessness, mental illness and developmental disabilities. Professionals who work in those fields know the profound impact of the abuse of alcohol, tobacco and drugs on their work. In 2006, Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, urged more treatment of addicts to cut the crime rate. She noted numerous studies that showed treatment cut drug abuse significantly and reduced criminal activity "by as much as 80 percent." As anyone who has dealt with addicts knows, lectures and jail time don't necessarily change the working of the addict's brain. Comprehensive treatment can. The problem remains society's refusal to treat addiction as the disease it has been labeled by the medical and scientific community. Cost is a factor, but as Volkow said, "Some reject the concept of addiction as a disease on the grounds that it removes responsibility from the addict. But in fact, it gives the addicted person the responsibility for seeking and maintaining treatment for the disease, just as is the case for other diseases." That's true. And in true recovery, the addict is expected to assume responsibility for his behavior -- past, present and future. But addiction can't be conquered by the addict alone. Society has a major stake in helping out. In New York, there may be signs of that happening. Following up on repeal of the notorious Rockefeller Drug Laws, which filled state prisons with thousands of low-level drug users, Gov. David Paterson in April created a collaborative of state, nonprofit and private sector agencies to find "new ways" to look at how addictions impact public systems. It looks as if CASA may have saved the collaborative a lot of work. The collaborative is supposed to also come up with more efficient ways to organize resources and strategies to "treat the entire range of problems, not just the addiction," as Karen M. Carpenter, commissioner of the Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse, put it. Sounds good. But when this study is done, the public needs to pay attention to it. Make sure it's not just a bureaucratic reshuffling of money to the same old strategies. Insist that politicians understand the true economic and social costs of this health issue and that they start dealing with it that way. If we treat addiction as a health issue, not a moral issue, we stand a much better chance of lessening its grip. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake