News (Media Awareness Project) - US NY: Column: Why Is Mom in Rehab? |
Title: | US NY: Column: Why Is Mom in Rehab? |
Published On: | 2008-06-14 |
Source: | New York Times (NY) |
Fetched On: | 2008-06-14 16:35:10 |
WHY IS MOM IN REHAB?
The actress Tatum O'Neal was arrested recently on charges of buying
crack cocaine from a man on the street near her New York City home.
She is a 44-year-old mother of three. She has spent years in and out
of drug abuse treatment (which she chronicled in her 2004 memoir),
and according to her publicist she will continue to "attend meetings"
for drug and alcohol abuse.
Ms. O'Neal illustrates a disturbing trend among those being admitted
to substance abuse treatment services: a growing percentage of older
women are being treated for harder drugs.
Data from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration revealed that the total number of admissions to
treatment services from 1996 to 2005 (the last year for which
detailed data are available) stayed about the same among people under
40, but jumped 52 percent among those 40 and older. Of the 40 and
older group, the rise in admissions among men was 44 percent. Among
women, it was 82 percent.
(During the same span, the population in the United States age 40 and
older grew by only 19 percent.)
Of these women, admissions for nonsmoked cocaine have doubled;
admissions for crack cocaine have tripled; admissions for opiates
other than heroin have nearly quadrupled; and admissions for
methamphetamines have increased sevenfold.
These trends could grow stronger. A 2006 report by the National
Institute on Drug Abuse focused on drug use among baby boomers, all
of whom were 41 to 59 years old in 2005. It concluded that "the large
size of this cohort, coupled with greater lifetime rates of drug use
than previous generations, might result in unprecedented high numbers
of older drug users in the next 15 to 20 years."
There was a time when we thought that the biggest substance abuse
threat to older women was alcoholism and abuse of prescription drugs.
Ten years ago this month, Betty Ford and the National Center on
Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University issued a report
called "Under the Rug: Substance Abuse and the Mature Woman." At the
time, Joseph Califano, president of the center said: "Abuse and
addiction to alcohol and psychoactive drugs and tobacco by women 60
and older is an inexcusable area of neglect."
But since boomers can't seem to shake their street-drug demons, the
focus needs to shift.
The actress Tatum O'Neal was arrested recently on charges of buying
crack cocaine from a man on the street near her New York City home.
She is a 44-year-old mother of three. She has spent years in and out
of drug abuse treatment (which she chronicled in her 2004 memoir),
and according to her publicist she will continue to "attend meetings"
for drug and alcohol abuse.
Ms. O'Neal illustrates a disturbing trend among those being admitted
to substance abuse treatment services: a growing percentage of older
women are being treated for harder drugs.
Data from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration revealed that the total number of admissions to
treatment services from 1996 to 2005 (the last year for which
detailed data are available) stayed about the same among people under
40, but jumped 52 percent among those 40 and older. Of the 40 and
older group, the rise in admissions among men was 44 percent. Among
women, it was 82 percent.
(During the same span, the population in the United States age 40 and
older grew by only 19 percent.)
Of these women, admissions for nonsmoked cocaine have doubled;
admissions for crack cocaine have tripled; admissions for opiates
other than heroin have nearly quadrupled; and admissions for
methamphetamines have increased sevenfold.
These trends could grow stronger. A 2006 report by the National
Institute on Drug Abuse focused on drug use among baby boomers, all
of whom were 41 to 59 years old in 2005. It concluded that "the large
size of this cohort, coupled with greater lifetime rates of drug use
than previous generations, might result in unprecedented high numbers
of older drug users in the next 15 to 20 years."
There was a time when we thought that the biggest substance abuse
threat to older women was alcoholism and abuse of prescription drugs.
Ten years ago this month, Betty Ford and the National Center on
Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University issued a report
called "Under the Rug: Substance Abuse and the Mature Woman." At the
time, Joseph Califano, president of the center said: "Abuse and
addiction to alcohol and psychoactive drugs and tobacco by women 60
and older is an inexcusable area of neglect."
But since boomers can't seem to shake their street-drug demons, the
focus needs to shift.
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