Pubdate: Thu, 27 Dec 2007
Source: Tundra Drums, The (AK)
Copyright: 2007 Tundra Drums, a publication of Alaska Newspapers, Inc.
Contact:  http://thetundradrums.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4661
Author: Anna Sappah, For The Tundra Drums
Note: Anna Sappah serves on the Governor's Advisory Board on Alcohol 
and Drug Abuse. She is executive director of the Substance Abuse 
Directors Association of Alaska Inc. and a tobacco policy specialist 
for Akeela Inc.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

I KNOW FROM EXPERIENCE: DRUG TREATMENT DOES WORK

As a person in recovery from addiction, I can speak to the 
devastation addiction brings.

By the time I was in junior high, I was using drugs daily. This 
continued until I was in my mid-30s.

By then I had given up custody of one of my two children. I had given 
up a promising career and given up hope of being in a healthy 
relationship. I had nearly given up on life several times.

By 1994 I was addicted to heroin. I remember feeling that my 
addiction was not out of control because I had a roof over my head 
and I had retained custody of my other child.

I was not willing to see that I was in an abusive relationship and 
nearly destitute. I made good money working construction but ate from 
the food bank for almost half the year.

I reached out for help in late 1994. When I called to get into 
treatment, I was given an assessment and told that the waiting list 
was about six weeks long. I began treatment just before Christmas 
that year. I was fortunate.

Today in Alaska, there are fewer treatment programs, fewer available 
beds or treatment slots. It is not uncommon for addicts to reach out 
for help only to be told that the waiting list can be three to six months.

Detoxification programs are nearly nonexistent. They are only a part 
of a continuum of care that needs to provide appropriate levels of 
care for treatment to be successful.

After 15 years of flat funding or decreases, our programs are barely 
able to meet the increased need for services. Nearly 54,000 Alaskans, 
or 11.2 percent of the population of the state, was addicted to 
alcohol or other drugs according to a 2005 study by the McDowell Group.

The fallout from these addictions can be seen in our courts, jails, 
hospitals and foster care system. Families are torn by violence, 
death and disease associated with addiction to alcohol and other drugs.

There are effective solutions to these problems and our state needs 
to take an honest look at where we are and where we are going if we 
don't support the programs that can provide those solutions.

Due to the stigma attached to the recovery and treatment community, 
society at large does not hear the success stories. I am here to 
testify that treatment saved my life. It provided me with the ability 
to stop using long enough to take an honest look at my life and learn 
the skills needed to live and enjoy my life without drugs, including alcohol.

Treatment programs have helped thousands in our state go on to live 
as productive members of their communities. For this to be available, 
our state and local communities need to support treatment programs 
and recognize them as assets rather than liabilities.

Money to fund treatment programs is a wise investment. Even though 
some people relapse, it should not be used as a measure of success or 
failure of a program.

People can return to communities as productive persons. Families can 
be reunited. Court systems and prisons can be relieved of some of the 
burden as people cease criminal behavior. For me, after treatment I 
was able to return to work, learn a new trade, rebuild my family and 
become active in the recovery community.

I went from being nearly unemployable to holding down two positions 
as well as being a full-time college student. Because of the help I 
received in treatment, I found support in my community to continue my recovery.

I no longer need to self-medicate to navigate my life. Now, I am 
physically and emotionally available and an asset to my family and 
community. A treatment program saved my life, just as treatment has 
for many Alaskans. We need to ensure that programs are available when 
people reach out for help.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake