Facing Cape Cod’s drug addiction crisis
| By K.C. Myers, Cape Cod Times, Hyannis, Mass. | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
For more than 10 years her son, Paul, 29, has suffered from opiate addiction. He's done three prison sentences as a result of actions related his addiction, she said. Two years ago, the
Yet for many other people who attended "An Evening of Solutions: Part 2" to hear about remedies for drug addiction, hope came from the sheer numbers of people in the room: nearly 100 attended. And from the politicians who spoke of helpful legislation; as well as from the stories of treatment professionals, who as of this school year have been invited into schools to offer nearly full-time counseling to students and families.
The event, held at
Since
The high death toll may finally have brought attention to the prescription drug problem specifically and the disease of addiction in general.
"We're happy to have the public outcry that is long overdue," said
"It's one of the most under-treated and misunderstood illnesses in our society."
"We've never had the political will to want to do something before," he added.
The forum was hosted by state Rep.
Hunt is trying to garner legislative support for a bill that increases access to treatment for addicts in trouble with the law.
Hunt said
State Rep.
Malia voiced support for Hunt's bill, called the ASSIST Act.
"We know some of the things we can do to address this. But we need to kick this up from a one-alarm fire to a five- or six-alarm fire," Malia said.
If there were a shooting in
"The question we need to ask now is: Where did the medication come from?" Malia continued.
"Heroin is a street drug. ... But the fact is that so many young people and so many of us got addicted from a prescription. That's the key."
Apart from the current opiate crisis, addiction in general needs to be addressed at its roots.
In the fall,
This happened after former Boston Celtics player
The counselors in local school will try to help problem students, but also change the culture of schools, and work with families.
Tamasi has also placed mental health counselors in primary care doctors' offices so that people, who would otherwise be ashamed or afraid to call
The point is to "normalize" addiction so that it is treated like other chronic illnesses. Like any diseases, catching it early makes it so much easier to manage, Tamasi said.
Vivitrol has been used voluntarily by inmates upon release from jail. The early results are promising, Cummings said.
Since the program began in 2012, 82 inmates received the drug, and more than 50 percent remain in treatment outside of jail, Cummings said.
That compares with a relapse rate from opiates that is as high as 80 percent, Cummings added.
Only nine percent of the Vivitrol patients have been reincarcerated, he said.
After listening to the presentations, Voelxen said her son has never received treatment in prison. He currently is being held at the
"He's a beautiful blonde-haired, blue-eyed guy," she said. "We have two sons, Paul our son and the drug addict. How does he get to those wonderful programs?"
Cummings said the
Cummings said
In order to use any of these programs, however, Voelxen must be sentenced, Cummings said.
Malia said the fact the treatment isn't widely done in jails, where the majority of inmates have drug or alcohol issues, "is absolutely beyond comprehension to me."
Ultimately, Hunt said, the state needs to "get rid of the queue" so inmates and noncriminal addicts get treatment when they need it, rather than waiting critical days, weeks or months for a treatment bed or a program.
Also, he said, treatment programs need to have standards and benchmarks for success.
"If we have standards we can have conversations with insurance companies about what is effective to get a person on the right road," Hunt said.
___
(c)2014 Cape Cod Times (Hyannis, Mass.)
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