News (Media Awareness Project) - US PA: Editorial: A Call For More Treatment Options For Drug |
Title: | US PA: Editorial: A Call For More Treatment Options For Drug |
Published On: | 2006-08-20 |
Source: | Times Leader (Wilkes-Barre, PA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-13 05:23:21 |
A CALL FOR MORE TREATMENT OPTIONS FOR DRUG ABUSERS
ONE BABY LIVED and one baby died. They were related not by blood but
by circumstances.
They were victims of their mothers' heroin addiction.
And both illustrate the need for more addiction treatment in our area
and the understanding that anyone's son or daughter, no matter how
good the family or upbringing, can become a drug user.
We first met little Kayla Leo in a story published in March. Before
Kayla's birth, her mother had been a heroin addict for about eight
years. Roslyn Leo put her parents through hell. At one point, the
former Wyoming Area cheerleader and overachiever lived in a car in
Philadelphia and used water from public toilets to inject heroin.
Her parents never knew from where or when she might call. But the day
came when her father hung up on her. That bit of tough love seemed to
be a turning point that led Leo to the Choices Recovery methadone
clinic in Plains Township. The treatment, her family and her baby's
father became her lifeline.
The horrible consequences of drug abuse continue, with a pregnant
woman, Cari L. Chapman, killed in Franklin Township last month and an
Old Forge man charged with killing two people in Avoca last weekend
in a drug deal gone bad.
A New York City medical school professor in 2002 called this area's
overdose deaths an "epidemic."
Choices fought its own battle against neighbors and municipalities
who made a "not in my backyard" argument before the clinic opened in
April 2004. The clinic had to appeal Plain Township's denial in
county court to win approval to open.
Government and law enforcement officials quashed an Allentown-based
methadone clinic's attempts to enter the Wyoming Valley and Old Forge
in Lackawanna County in 1999. The Choices Recovery Program waiting
list was a testament to the area's need for methadone treatment.
Those local physicians who offer another treatment for certain opiate
addicts, buprenorphine, have been swamped with patients and have long
waiting lists.
Chapman was a mother-to-be with a drug problem who was killed last
month. The coroner said she was less than 16 weeks pregnant when she
was shot and killed along a creek in Franklin Township. She had
gotten out of a vehicle to find a place to go to the bathroom. And
police said she told a friend that she wanted "to find some water to
ingest heroin."
The 22-year-old was shot three times, twice in the abdomen and once
in the chest. Authorities have charged Patricia Lee Stark with
killing Chapman and her baby.
No one can undo the pain, suffering and violence that drug abuse
spawns. For every addict, there are plenty of innocent victims. But
with more treatment, there can be a little more hope.
ONE BABY LIVED and one baby died. They were related not by blood but
by circumstances.
They were victims of their mothers' heroin addiction.
And both illustrate the need for more addiction treatment in our area
and the understanding that anyone's son or daughter, no matter how
good the family or upbringing, can become a drug user.
We first met little Kayla Leo in a story published in March. Before
Kayla's birth, her mother had been a heroin addict for about eight
years. Roslyn Leo put her parents through hell. At one point, the
former Wyoming Area cheerleader and overachiever lived in a car in
Philadelphia and used water from public toilets to inject heroin.
Her parents never knew from where or when she might call. But the day
came when her father hung up on her. That bit of tough love seemed to
be a turning point that led Leo to the Choices Recovery methadone
clinic in Plains Township. The treatment, her family and her baby's
father became her lifeline.
The horrible consequences of drug abuse continue, with a pregnant
woman, Cari L. Chapman, killed in Franklin Township last month and an
Old Forge man charged with killing two people in Avoca last weekend
in a drug deal gone bad.
A New York City medical school professor in 2002 called this area's
overdose deaths an "epidemic."
Choices fought its own battle against neighbors and municipalities
who made a "not in my backyard" argument before the clinic opened in
April 2004. The clinic had to appeal Plain Township's denial in
county court to win approval to open.
Government and law enforcement officials quashed an Allentown-based
methadone clinic's attempts to enter the Wyoming Valley and Old Forge
in Lackawanna County in 1999. The Choices Recovery Program waiting
list was a testament to the area's need for methadone treatment.
Those local physicians who offer another treatment for certain opiate
addicts, buprenorphine, have been swamped with patients and have long
waiting lists.
Chapman was a mother-to-be with a drug problem who was killed last
month. The coroner said she was less than 16 weeks pregnant when she
was shot and killed along a creek in Franklin Township. She had
gotten out of a vehicle to find a place to go to the bathroom. And
police said she told a friend that she wanted "to find some water to
ingest heroin."
The 22-year-old was shot three times, twice in the abdomen and once
in the chest. Authorities have charged Patricia Lee Stark with
killing Chapman and her baby.
No one can undo the pain, suffering and violence that drug abuse
spawns. For every addict, there are plenty of innocent victims. But
with more treatment, there can be a little more hope.
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