Pubdate: Wed, 12 May 1999 Source: Philadelphia Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 1999 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.phillynews.com/ Forum: http://interactive.phillynews.com/talk-show/ Author: Rusty Pray DORIS LEFFLER, NURSE, 61, HELPED FIGHT ADDICTIONS Doris Leffler, 61, a nurse who wrestled with her own addiction before helping others in their fight, died Sunday of emphysema at Pennsylvania Hospital. Mrs. Leffler, a psychiatric nurse and a recovering alcoholic with 24 years' sobriety, was the director of the Alcoholism Recovery Program at Friends Hospital until late last year, when she became too ill to continue. She had worked at Friends since 1980. She founded the Philadelphia Recovering Nurses Association, a support group for chemically dependent nurses, in 1982. She also was a consultant to Pennsylvania's Impaired Professionals Program, a state organization she helped form. "Nurses think they should never be sick," Mrs. Leffler said in a 1988 Daily News interview. "They are the universal caretakers. The health system does not allow us to really take time to take care of ourselves. So you do the quickest, the easiest thing. And then, if you have the disease already, even though you may not know it, then you're hooked." Mrs. Leffler got hooked on sleeping pills while in nurse's training at the School of Professional Nursing at Beth Israel Medical Center in her native New York. Later, she turned to alcohol. She managed to keep her problem hidden for years while functioning as a wife running a household, a mother raising three children, and a nurse caring for patients. Then one day a fellow nurse, also an alcoholic, committed suicide. The event forced Mrs. Leffler to honestly examine her own life; soon, she went into recovery. From that moment, Mrs. Leffler dedicated her life to helping chemically dependent nurses find recovery. She also worked tirelessly to convince nursing and hospital administrators that addiction was a serious problem in the health-care field, and that it could be handled through recovery programs. "That was what she was all about," said Stanley Leffler, her husband of 41 years. Mrs. Leffler, a Center City resident since 1979, was a certified addictions counselor who often wrote and spoke about addiction at workshops and seminars. She was a member of many nursing associations. In 1991, Hahnemann University Hospital recognized her with its Outstanding Contribution to Nursing award. Besides her husband, Mrs. Leffler is survived by son Jay; daughters Julie and Lisa; and seven grandchildren. A memorial service will be held at 10 a.m. Friday at Friends Hospital, 4641 Roosevelt Boulevard. Burial is private. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea