Pubdate: Tue, 06 May 2014 Source: Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (WI) Copyright: 2014 Journal Sentinel Inc. Contact: http://www.jsonline.com/general/30627794.html Website: http://www.jsonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/265 Author: Ashley Luthern THOSE TOUCHED BY ADDICTION RAPPEL DOWN HOTEL TO SUPPORT SHATTERPROOF Wearing a helmet and clipped onto rappelling lines, 22-year-old Alina Maki-Guzlecki teetered on the edge of a high-rise hotel in downtown Milwaukee. She turned her back to the ground and inched to the edge before rappelling down 20 stories to the base of the Hyatt Regency Milwaukee on Kilbourn Ave. "Exhaustion, I'm not going to lie," she said of how she felt reaching the bottom. "It was pretty nerve-wracking, but it was exciting." She joined more than 50 people on Tuesday who rappelled down the hotel's exterior. The event was a fundraiser for Shatterproof, a national nonprofit organization that advocates for addiction treatment and tries to end the stigma of addiction. Maki-Guzlecki is a recovering heroin addict and recently returned to Milwaukee after receiving treatment at a halfway house in Arizona. She had been using heroin for the past two years and abusing prescription pills before that. "You can't do it on your own," she said of recovery. "Everyone needs a solid support system, people who keep you wanting to be sober." Many of those who rappelled had personal stories of how addiction affected them. Kelsey Barnowsky, 25, of Manitowoc, who rappelled with her friend, Keeley Wright, 29 of Fox Point, recalled how a high school classmate died of a heroin overdose just days before her 21st birthday. "I think raising awareness is so important," Barnowsky said. Heightened awareness was a key goal of Tuesday's event, one of 20 that will take place around the country this year, Shatterproof's founder Gary Mendell said. Mendell founded HEI Hotels and Resorts where he oversaw a portfolio of 42 hotels valued at $2.8 billion. He walked away from that to found Shatterproof, originally known as Brian's Wish, with a personal commitment of $5 million. Mendell's son Brian Mendell was in and out of treatment for marijuana, prescription drug and heroin addictions over seven years. His son died October 2011 at the age of 25 after being sober for 13 months. "Most tragically he didn't die specifically to an overdose, he took his life," Mendell said Tuesday. "He took his life because of what he felt every morning, the shame he had when he opened his eyes and felt like an outcast and a burden to society." Shatterproof aims to be for addiction what the American Cancer Society is for cancer, said Mendell, a member of the Clinton Health Matters Initiative. Shatterproof is undertaking four initiatives this year: The Shatterproof Challenge, a series of rappelling events including the one Tuesday in Milwaukee, to raise awareness and funding for the organization. Shatterproof also will launch the first phase of a comprehensive resource center about addiction prevention, treatment and recovery at its website on Oct. 1. It is advocating in states for an addiction screening and intervention program for teens that is reimbursed by health insurance. Shatterproof also is working to reduce deaths related to opiate overdoses by advocating for good Samaritan laws, educating the public about those law and increasing access to naloxone, a drug that can reverse the effects of an opiate overdose. Last month, Gov. Scott Walker signed a package of bills, dubbed Heroin Opiate Prevention and Education, or HOPE, that included some of those provisions. Among the measures was a law that gives people immunity from criminal prosecution for drug possession if they bring a fellow drug user to an emergency room or call 911 because they believe the person is suffering from an overdose. Another law also allowed any first responder to administer naloxone, also known by its brand name Narcan, if they are trained. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom