News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: Editorial: Drug Abuse a Threat to Many |
Title: | CN ON: Editorial: Drug Abuse a Threat to Many |
Published On: | 2007-08-01 |
Source: | Observer, The (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 00:52:19 |
DRUG ABUSE A THREAT TO MANY
Sarnia police issued a missing person's report yesterday for a woman
named Shelley Mathieu-Read, described as a 45-year-old drug addict
missing since May.
Her disappearance is a another reminder that Sarnia has a large
hard-drug subculture, one that's the subject of a two-part series
concluding today in The Observer.
Most residents have little direct contact with drug addicts and thus
assume the world of needle exchanges and crystal meth labs has little
to do with their lives.
But as the special report by reporter Jack Poirier demonstrates,
addiction and its human and financial cost is clawing at the very
fabric of our community.
According to one leading expert, 40 per cent of all hospital
admissions are in some way related to substance abuse, and hospital
staff are ill-equipped to deal with it.
Incredibly, up to 75 per cent of all thefts and break-ins the crimes
that leave victims feeling violated and vulnerable are fueled by drug
needs, a Sarnia drug squad officer estimates. Indeed, break-in
statistics rise and fall in lockstep with the arrest and detention of
known addicts.
Sarnia's courts are filled with individuals whose mistakes turned on
drug and alcohol abuse. Indeed, this newspaper would have little to
report from the courthouse if addiction was somehow removed from the
equation.
The special report on pages B4 and B5 today focuses on the personal
battle of resident Jeff Christie to break free from crystal
methamphetamine.
By telling his story and completing rehab, Mr. Christie hopes to leave
a troubled life behind. We wish him the best.
But until Sarnia comes to grips with its addiction problem, stories
like his will be all too familiar.
Sarnia police issued a missing person's report yesterday for a woman
named Shelley Mathieu-Read, described as a 45-year-old drug addict
missing since May.
Her disappearance is a another reminder that Sarnia has a large
hard-drug subculture, one that's the subject of a two-part series
concluding today in The Observer.
Most residents have little direct contact with drug addicts and thus
assume the world of needle exchanges and crystal meth labs has little
to do with their lives.
But as the special report by reporter Jack Poirier demonstrates,
addiction and its human and financial cost is clawing at the very
fabric of our community.
According to one leading expert, 40 per cent of all hospital
admissions are in some way related to substance abuse, and hospital
staff are ill-equipped to deal with it.
Incredibly, up to 75 per cent of all thefts and break-ins the crimes
that leave victims feeling violated and vulnerable are fueled by drug
needs, a Sarnia drug squad officer estimates. Indeed, break-in
statistics rise and fall in lockstep with the arrest and detention of
known addicts.
Sarnia's courts are filled with individuals whose mistakes turned on
drug and alcohol abuse. Indeed, this newspaper would have little to
report from the courthouse if addiction was somehow removed from the
equation.
The special report on pages B4 and B5 today focuses on the personal
battle of resident Jeff Christie to break free from crystal
methamphetamine.
By telling his story and completing rehab, Mr. Christie hopes to leave
a troubled life behind. We wish him the best.
But until Sarnia comes to grips with its addiction problem, stories
like his will be all too familiar.
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