Pubdate: Fri, 13 Mar 2009
Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist
Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481
Author: Jody Paterson
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment)

A DETOX SUCCESS, AMID TOUGH CHALLENGES

Speaking up for the rights of one group invariably means stepping on 
those of another, as I was reminded following my recent column on the 
no-smoking policy at the new detox.

An old acquaintance of mine -- I'll call her Shelly -- phoned after 
the column appeared to tell me I was wrong to be critical of 
Vancouver Island Health Authority staff for prohibiting smoking at the detox.

She'd arrived for a stay at the new unit last month prepared to hate 
the prohibition, too, but instead quit smoking -- for the first time 
in more than 40 years.

She was proudly 28 days nicotine-free when I met up with her last 
week at the Pembroke Street stabilization unit, which is where people 
fresh from detox ideally get to stay for a month while they work out 
the details of a life without drugs. Shelly had gone to detox 
primarily to get off heroin, valium, alcohol and cocaine, but was 
delighted to have gotten out from under her cigarette habit at the same time.

"I brought a carton with me when I came, because the word on the 
street was that you could smoke in the bathroom," says Shelly, the 
fourth patient through the new detox after it opened in early 
February. "Then they told me no. I thought, God, I'm never going to 
be able to do this. I was asking for the [nicotine] patch within a 
couple hours. But then I did fine."

My concerns with the no-smoking policy continue -- and indeed, Shelly 
saw a fellow patient get kicked out of detox after being caught 
smoking. How crazy is it to deny people urgently needed health care 
just to make a point about the eventual dangers of cigarette smoking?

There's also a gap a mile wide in the system for adults addicted to 
cocaine or crystal meth, who for the most part are not accepted at the detox.

That said, far be it from me to deny Shelly the very positive 
experience she had at the detox, partly as a result of not being 
allowed to smoke. Being in a stable, smoke-free environment -- lots 
of support, lots of nicotine patches -- was really beneficial for 
Shelly, who looks happier and healthier than I've seen her look in years.

A solution, then: A medical detox, smoke-free, for people like Shelly 
- -- people whose primary drugs are opiates or alcohol and who need the 
more intense medical care the new detox provides. And a different 
kind of detox somewhere else, one where people can get help 
regardless of the drug they're addicted to and not have to give up 
smoking at the same time. Nothing expensive or fancy -- just a 
practical, safe place.

Shelly's latest journey into recovery has been an exemplary one and 
is worth detailing for what it says about all the things that have to 
come together to help those overwhelmed by addiction.

It starts with Shelly, of course, because she was the one who went 
looking for change.

But then she had the good fortune of connecting with outreach workers 
from the Umbrella Society, a savvy little peer-led non-profit that 
helps people with addictions and mental-health issues. Shelly had the 
will, but it was the Umbrella Society that showed her the way.

"Gordon Harper is a large person in my life right now," says Shelly 
of the society's executive director. "I told him that he was going to 
have to decide where my next move was, because I didn't have any 
brains anymore.

"So he set me up with this -- detox, stabilization, a recovery home 
for at least three months, then to Aurora [treatment centre], then 
back to a recovery home. I'm expecting it will take me a year to do 
it, but that's OK, seeing as I've wasted eight years using drugs."

Other things went right as well. Shelly got a rare 18-day stretch in 
the new detox, almost three times as long as most get. Then she got a 
bed immediately in the stabilization unit, also not typical.

With Harper on her side, she just might make it through the forms, 
wait lists, phone calls, intake processes, hard work, meltdowns and 
meetings that await those trying to get help with their addictions.

Shelly says the help is there for those who reach out for it. But I 
know too many others lost in the fractured system to see her story as 
the norm. I can't imagine why we make it so hard.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom