Pubdate: 11 Jan 1999 Source: Reuters Copyright: 1999 Reuters Limited. Author: Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent ADULT ABUSES HURT U.S. CHILD WELFARE - REPORT WASHINGTON, Jan 11 (Reuters) - The child welfare system is completely overwhelmed and unable to help children because their parents are not being treated for drug and alcohol problems, a report said on Monday. The number of abused or neglected children has more than doubled, from 1.4 million in 1986 to more than three million in 1997, according to the study, headed by Joseph Califano, a former secretary of Health, Education and Welfare who now heads the Centre on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. "A devastating tornado of substance abuse and addiction is tearing through the nation's child welfare and family court systems, leaving in its path a wreckage of abused and neglected children, turning social welfare agencies and courts on their heads, and uprooting the traditional disposition to keep children with their natural parents," Califano wrote the report. "This report underscores the urgent need for substantial increases in funding for treatment and health care for substance-abusing parents and their children," he told a news conference. Most experts on drug and alcohol addiction agree it is a physical illness that must be treated medically, not a moral shortcoming or crime. Califano said substance abuse causes or worsens seven out of 10 cases of child abuse or neglect, and children whose parents misuse alcohol or drugs are three times more likely to be abused. But while welfare agencies have assigned more time to be spent investigating neglect and abuse, they were only able to investigate a third of all cases in 1997. And the number of families getting in-home services has dropped 58 percent, from 1.2 million in 1977 to 500,000 in 1994. Califano's team said substance abuse by parents cost the country $20 billion a year -- half in direct welfare costs and half in lost productivity, health care, court and social services costs. A survey of more than 900 child welfare professionals found that 80 percent say substance abuse worsens most cases of maltreatment of children and 90 percent say alcohol, alone or with drugs, is the main drug of abuse. Taking children away from their parents does not work, either, Califano said, because only one in four children available for adoption get adopted. Children of abusive parents often grow up to be alienated, aggressive and even violent -- costing society even more, Califano said. "The best hope of a safe haven for these children is to prevent alcohol and drug abuse by their parents," the report read. "We spend more on cosmetic surgery, hairpieces and make-up for men than we do on child-welfare services of substance- abusing parents. In this nation we take better care of condors than of children of substance abusing parents," it added. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski