Pubdate: Wed, 02 Aug 2000 Source: Southwest Times-Record (AR) Copyright: 2000 The Donrey Media Group Contact: http://www.swtimes.com/ Author: S. Nelson METH MADNESS MUST STOP I am writing on the methamphetamine epidemic in our area. I've worked in the drug and alcohol treatment field for more than 10 years. During that time, I've seen fewer dollars available for treatment and a tenfold increase in the problem of meth. As we look at the problem, keep in mind that interdiction of all drugs has been deemed to be a failure by many experts in the field. This is not to say that law enforcement hasn't put forth a mighty effort to address the problem. The problem is just too big and too complex to solve with just one tool. We need to remember that addiction is what drives the drug trade, and that the real way to stop this is to provide quality treatment and prevention programs. With this in mind, I find it to be a tragedy that the treatment program that I worked for closed this last year. Nationally, hundreds of good treatment programs that have helped thousands have closed as well. The main reason: In the age of managed care, the treatment industry has been a big casualty. This was because treatment centers could no longer survive and depend on insurance and private pay; that pay was cut, benefits were denied and services evaporated. Some private sector treatment centers have survived the onslaught. The center where I worked did for several years, until after being cut down to its last leg it no longer was viable financially to keep it open. Employers and employees have suffered from this, too. You see, most persons addicted to alcohol and other drugs are in fact employed persons with insurance. Often what their benefit handbook says and what actually gets paid for are two different things (not only with treatment, by the way). This leaves the publically funded treatment centers to be taking the majority of the load of providing treatment. Most of these centers are overloaded and have waiting lists that get longer each year. Most provide quality care. Most are horribly underfunded. The counselors there work under difficult conditions. Keeping qualified counselors working there after they work long enough to be certified is a difficult task because of the stress of large caseloads and low wages. We like to build jails in this country. It seems with jails being so overcrowded, society needs to look at the fact that jails are full of addicts who could be productive members of society if given treatment. Instead, they are sadly in a jail costing taxpayers more money and not addressing their problems. The likely outcome is recidivism, or doing the same thing over and over again. The insanity of this is society does the same thing repeatedly by locking them up and expecting different results. S. Nelson, Fort Smith - --- MAP posted-by: Derek