Pubdate: Fri, 16 Mar 2001 Source: Delaware County Daily Times (PA) Copyright: 2001 The Daily Times Contact: http://www.delcotimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1284 Author: M. H. Myers PRISON DRUG REHAB WOULD REAP REWARDS To the Times: After reading the letter published in your March 1 issue stating that drug addiction has reached epidemic proportions, I recalled some facts from "The O'Reilly Factor," by Bill O'Reilly. In Alabama, all prisoners are tested for drugs when booked. If they test positive, as most do, they are given a choice: "Forced drug rehab in a prison facility or a longer sentence with the general prison population." Those in the program receive counseling, schooling and job training. When released, the individual must undergo frequent mandatory drug testing. If he doesn't - or if he fails - it's back to prison. In Alabama, twice as many criminals who have completed the forced rehab stay off drugs than do those who haven't gone through the program. Every day, I read in this paper about physical abuse of children, sexually transmitted diseases, murders, accidental deaths, suicides, parties where teens use illegal drugs and alcohol, and the deaths of far too many teenagers who were using drugs. If a patient suffers from heart disease, he will be given treatment including more than one artery bypass if it is needed. That patient can stop his exercise program, go off the prescribed diet and he will still receive treatment paid for by his medical insurance. Addiction, too, is a disease. In the middle '80s six weeks at rehab was the usual length of treatment, often followed by three or more months at a halfway house. Today, 28 days of rehab treatment is more common, with many addicts receiving less. If treatment continues to be difficult or impossible to obtain, the crime rate will go up, more and more addicts will be arrested, the prison population will soar, and millions of our tax dollars will be spent cleaning up the mess caused by addiction. Let's spend some of the tobacco settlement money on prison rehabs so more addicts will become productive members of society. M. H. MYERS, Glen Mills - --- MAP posted-by: Derek