Pubdate: Mon, 02 Nov 2015 Source: Guardian, The (CN PI) Copyright: 2015 The Guardian, Charlottetown Guardian Group Incorporated Contact: http://www.theguardian.pe.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/174 Author: Jim Day Page: A1 PARENTS BLAME THEMSELVES Mother always wonders what might have saved her son Petra Schulz is always wondering what might have saved her son. "Every day, every day,'' she says. "When a parent loses a child, there is a lot of blame attached because we are supposed to raise them, launch them.'' Much of the search into what could have been done differently, Schulz concedes, is futile. So there needs to be constructive focus. That is what "mumsDO", short for mums united and mandated to saving the lives of Drug Users, tries to do. The mothers, who have lost sons and daughters to overdose and other drugrelated harms, are determined to advance dialogue on harm reduction for substance users. Schulz helped form mumsDO in August in hopes of helping other parents avoid experiencing her crushing loss on April 30, 2014 when her 25-year-old son Danny died after suffering a relapse in recovery from drug addiction. "Nobody can say that we have a secret agenda because we have already suffered the ultimate loss and we have personally nothing to gain other than helping other people,'' she says. "We are an elite club with a high price of admission.'' Schulz joined several panelists recently in Stratford for a presentation on harm reduction sponsored by the Canadian Drug Policy Coalition. She has come to realize that drug addiction is a life long struggle, not an ailment someone simply gets over. "You have to find strategies to deal with it,'' she says. In the case of her son, she wishes now that she and her husband put more focus on continued treatment and harm reduction in an effort to not only help, but to ultimately save, their boy. Parents, she stresses, must be realistic in dealing with a child facing a drug addiction. She urges parents to give good information to their children not only on how to stay away from drugs, but also on how to handle drugs safely if they don't stay away. As mumsDO notes in its literature, a dead substance user will never go to rehab. While the group does not condone the use of illicit drugs and also notes recovery from problematic substance use is their end goal, they do offer the following advice to drug users: - Don't use drugs alone. - - Have a safe observer so there is someone to help if necessary. - - Get drugs from a reliable source. - - Be informed about bad drugs within your community. Schulz would also like to see improvements in harm reduction within the mental health care system. "We need to take the stigma away from mental health ... and make it more widely available where people are,'' she says. "Mental health should be more integrated into primary health care as should addictions treatment.'' She says social anxiety first drove her son towards drugs. Now the death of her son is driving her to work with mumsDO to help others. "Oh, Danny is always with me,'' she says. "When I'm talking, I'm feeling that he is always there. I'm his voice.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Matt