Pubdate: Sun, 05 Mar 2006
Source: Star-News (NC)
Copyright: 2006 Wilmington Morning Star
Contact:  http://www.wilmingtonstar.com
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/500
Author: Si Cantwell
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

WOMEN NEED OWN PROGRAM TO HEAL FROM DRUG ADDICTIONS

Linda Damewood has been smoking crack for 16 years and trying to stop 
for the last eight. She's been in and out of treatment so many times 
she could fool professionals into letting her back onto the streets 
so she could score again.

She's had relapses. But she's clean today, she says with pride. And 
she agrees with Penny Craver, New Hanover County's Drug Treatment 
Court coordinator, that North Carolina needs a 90-day inpatient 
treatment program for women. Twenty-one days just isn't enough.

Damewood has sparkling brown eyes and a ready laugh, but she has seen 
some dark moments in her 48 years. Like the time she left her 
10-year-old daughter to go smoke crack and wasn't home by the time 
the girl awoke. Eventually, the child went to live with her dance instructor.

Or when she lost her job at a drug and alcohol abuse prevention 
center in Maryland because the county commissioners learned she was 
smoking crack. She accidentally overdosed on her mother's Thorazine 
when she was 14. Then it was marijuana, beer, cocaine, crack.

And treatment. Five days in a Maryland inpatient facility. An 
extended stay at Davidson Alcoholic Care of Lexington, then at 
Bethany House in Southern Pines.

Time in a state mental hospital, a recovery house in Chapel Hill, the 
psychiatric ward of a Pinehurst hospital and in a halfway house in Wilmington.

After an arrest for having drug paraphernalia, she was accepted in 
Drug Court. She's married now, painting houses and doing decorative 
work on the side. She's staying clean, day by day.

There are outpatient programs such as those offered by Coastal 
Horizons Center. And Walter B. Jones Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment 
Center in Greenville offers 21- or 28-day women's inpatient treatment.

Doug Marlowe, senior scientist at the University of Pennsylvania's 
Treatment Research Institute, says outpatient therapy is suitable for 
most patients after a 21-day or 28-day stabilization period.

But he said there are some people who need residential, or inpatient, 
treatment. Whether it's inpatient or outpatient, he said 90 days is 
about the minimum treatment length that shows a response. Shorter 
treatment courses are like taking 1 or 2 milligrams of aspirin - it's 
not enough to be effective.

Outside of prisons, the state only operates one facility offering 
90-day inpatient treatment, and that's DART-Cherry in Goldsboro. DART 
stands for drug and alcohol recovery treatment. The Corrections 
Department operates the center in a former Cherry Hospital building.

It offers both 28-day and 90-day regimens. Jim Jackson, manager of 
the 300-bed facility, said the shorter program is educational, with 
lots of videos and classes.

The 90-day program concentrates on getting clients to rethink their 
approach to life, to stop blaming others and start taking 
responsibility for their decisions and actions. Residents can study 
for the GED. In a class of 20 to 40 residents, six to 10 typically 
pass their high-school equivalency exams.

But that's for men only. There's no comparable 90-day program for 
women. There should be.

Given Damewood's history, I figure she knows a thing or two about 
treatment. She says it's harder for a woman to shake off concerns 
about home and family than it is for a man. It may take a week or 
more before a resident begins to think straight. In a three-week 
course, she said, worries about returning home dominate the last week.

"A man has a strong self-identity," she said. "Women so often are a 
reflection of everything else in their lives. She needs to focus on 
herself to get an idea of who she is, so the recovery can be for her."

Jackson said the Corrections Department is considering establishing a 
90-day program for women.

I would urge them to act on it. It's cheaper than sending these women 
to prison for the treatment they need.