News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: PUB LTE: Addiction Ignorance Making Things Worse |
Title: | CN BC: PUB LTE: Addiction Ignorance Making Things Worse |
Published On: | 2010-01-23 |
Source: | Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2011-03-09 19:26:04 |
ADDICTION IGNORANCE MAKING THINGS WORSE
It has always been amazing to me that so many people consider drug
addiction to be a chosen attitude. I can remember the wife of a U.S.
president cheerfully commenting, "just say no."
Drug addiction is a health issue. For some people who are
particularly vulnerable, it only takes one incident ("Aw, c'mon, once
won't hurt you") to become addicted. For others, it becomes an
addiction after longer use, but nevertheless by then it is indeed a
health issue in all aspects -- mental, physical and emotional.
Why does our society treat such health issues with dismissal or
downright nastiness? Are we afraid of something? If so, what -- that
the whole community will become addicts? Our society would be better
off if such believers took a good, hard look into the whys and
wherefores of addiction.
Becoming "unaddicted" is a long and difficult journey. Having worked
one afternoon a week, some years ago at a local pharmacy, with those
who were working hard to release themselves from drug addiction, I
began to understand just how huge and demanding such a journey really was.
I also learned that my being "too soft" was not helpful to those who
were doing their best to change their lives; those who had decided
(often for the second or 20th time) to get off drugs may do well with
a "tough love" attitude from their therapist or physician.
On the other hand, those who are not ready to undertake that journey
need all the help that they can get in order to just get by, day by day.
Stephen Harper needs to take a good, hard second look. In essence, he
is just making everything more difficult.
Marlene E. Hunter, MD
Victoria
It has always been amazing to me that so many people consider drug
addiction to be a chosen attitude. I can remember the wife of a U.S.
president cheerfully commenting, "just say no."
Drug addiction is a health issue. For some people who are
particularly vulnerable, it only takes one incident ("Aw, c'mon, once
won't hurt you") to become addicted. For others, it becomes an
addiction after longer use, but nevertheless by then it is indeed a
health issue in all aspects -- mental, physical and emotional.
Why does our society treat such health issues with dismissal or
downright nastiness? Are we afraid of something? If so, what -- that
the whole community will become addicts? Our society would be better
off if such believers took a good, hard look into the whys and
wherefores of addiction.
Becoming "unaddicted" is a long and difficult journey. Having worked
one afternoon a week, some years ago at a local pharmacy, with those
who were working hard to release themselves from drug addiction, I
began to understand just how huge and demanding such a journey really was.
I also learned that my being "too soft" was not helpful to those who
were doing their best to change their lives; those who had decided
(often for the second or 20th time) to get off drugs may do well with
a "tough love" attitude from their therapist or physician.
On the other hand, those who are not ready to undertake that journey
need all the help that they can get in order to just get by, day by day.
Stephen Harper needs to take a good, hard second look. In essence, he
is just making everything more difficult.
Marlene E. Hunter, MD
Victoria
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