current newsletter

Transcription

current newsletter
Board of Directors
Caroline Stewart, LCSW
President
John Wead
Vice President
Lisa Overton
Secretary
Chuck Ries
Treasurer
Anita Fisher
Seth Groff
Mary Jo Grubbs
Philip Liburd
Rev. Dennis Malone
Julia Negron (LA Chapter)
Anita Simons
Susan Thornton-Zetino
Teen Ambassadors:
Maria Overton
Caitlin Burns
Advisory Board
Dr. David Bergman
Psychiatrist
Dr. Claudio Cabrejos
Psychiatrist
Ken Cilch
Pres. CRASH Inc.
Judge Robert Coates
San Diego Superior Court
Margaret Dooley Sammuli
ACLU San Diego
Steven E. Feldman
Attorney at Law
Dr. Ken Khoury
Psychiatrist
Valerie Lemke
P.R.Consultant
Sylvia Liwerant
PATH Co-Founder
Mick Meagher
Attorney at Law
John de Miranda, Ed.M.
FAVOR Reg. Bd. Member
Dr. Rodrigo Munoz
Psychiatrist
Dr. Bruce Pevney
Addiction Medicine
Dr. Jerry Rand
Retired
Executive Director
Gretchen Burns Bergman
A New PATH
A
New
PATH
Parents for Addiction Treatment and Healing
Vol XXXXVIIII February 2013
Executive Director’s Message
by Gretchen Burns Bergman
Postcard from the President
by Caroline Stewart
Dear PATH family,
It seems that it has been a long while since I last
checked in with you. I trust that your holidays
were enjoyable with little drama. It was great
to see so many of you at the Bergman PATH
Holiday Party. Thanks to Gretchen and Dave for
their abiding support of PATH and their warm
welcome to all of us in their beautiful home….I
hope that many of you participated in the Moms
United Empty Chair Photo project. I know that
the holidays are often painful for us at our home
because our son with addictive illness does not
sit down at the holiday table with our extended
family. However, it was a treasure to have him
spend the night at our own home for Christmas
Eve…..Following the holidays, PATH held its
annual advisory board dinner and meeting where
we were so proud to review our many successes
of 2012 with our partner advisory friends. Thank
you to Drs. Khoury, Bergman, Rand and Pevney
for sharing your clinical wisdom with the board
as to how we might improve the PATH mission.
Thank you Valerie Lemke for helping us with
our public relations effort…..2013 promises to
be another awesome year for PATH: Only a few
days into 2013 and John Wead, Gretchen and I
were attending the annual Nonprofit Governance Conference at the University of San Diego Joan
Kroc Center for Peace Studies. We appreciate
the Alliance Healthcare Foundation for sponsoring us to attend. It was a treat for all of us to reconnect with non-­profit friends from a variety of sectors. I ran into Jim Hay, MD, board president
of CPPPH (California for Public Protection and
Physician Health) which I also call home. Please
read my article in this newsletter about how
California physicians are tragically deprived
of the clinical services they need (with horrific challenges to their ability to practice medicine)
when they suffer from addictive illness and
co-occurring disorders…Mark your calendars
for February 4th and hop on Freeway 5 to LA to
join PATH for the film screening of Raw Opium at the California Endowment offices. This is a very important Moms United to End the War
on Drugs joint effort with LA PATH and Drug
Policy Alliance, featuring a film that captures the horror of the war on drugs….This Spring,
on Friday April 26th, PATH will celebrate our
14th birthday with twin celebratory events: an
afternoon panel discussing the importance of art
and music therapy in the treatment of persons
with addictive illness followed in the evening by
a concert featuring the folksinger Charles Imes
and various local artists, as well as the Southwestern Community College Concert Choir.
Continued on page 3
Breaking Through the Shackles of Shame
Coming into 2013, I’m filled with a sense of anxious excitement and cautious optimism. The
results of our failed punitive prohibitionist policies of the last 40 years are so disastrous that
I feel we’ve arrived at some kind of a tipping
point. When the devastation, the loss of lives
and liberties, and the collateral damage of the
war on drugs is heaped so high, this mountain
of lies and injustice must come crashing down.
Then, through the rubble, we will acknowledge
the undeniable need for change, and find the strength and honesty to create life-­affirming, restorative policies.
There have been many indications in the past
few years to support the thinking that the time
has come for a new direction. Several Latin
American leaders are now joining forces to
speak out for an end to drug prohibition that has
so decimated their people, due to the violence
and corruption promoted by the illegal drug
market. They are speaking out for decriminalization. President Otto Perez Molina of Guatemala began last year by calling for a debate on
alternatives to the war on drugs. Many other
leaders gave their support, including the presidents of Costa Rica, Ecuador and Columbia.
Uruguay has submitted a proposal to legalize
marijuana under government-controlled regulation and sale.
In Mexico over 60,000 people have died
due to drug war violence in the past 5 years,
and drug cartels make 60% of their profits from marijuana alone. Last summer PATH and our
Moms United campaign participated in the
Caravan for Peace with Justice & Dignity, a
group of families from Mexico that traveled
from Tijuana to Washington D.C. to call for
a change in bi-national drug war policies. As
parents we were able to connect and share our
struggles, outrage and grief, as this war has torn
apart families on both sides of the border. Mothers joining together throughout the world could
be a strong force in leading us out of the chaos,
in order to protect and preserve our families.
The concept that it is always darkest before
the dawn can be applied to the epidemic of accidental overdose deaths that we are witnessing.
Overdose deaths are now the second leading
cause of accidental deaths in the nation. California just became the 10th state to enact a 911
Good Samaritan law, protecting a person from
arrest or prosecution if they witness an overdose
and call for help, which is a necessary response
to an overwhelmingly tragic problem.
1
Continued on page 3
February 2013
A New PATH 2013 Committees
Please help us move forward with our goals by
joining one of our committees:
¨ Executive (President, Vice President, Secretary,
Treasurer)
¨ Finance and Fundraising
¨ Membership
¨ PR/Publicity
¨ Education & Recovery
¨ Legislative & Prison Reform
Contact us at 619-670-1184 or anewpath@cox.net
to join a committee.
PATH Welcomes Your Involvement!
PATH holds semi-annual educational speaker meetings
and seminars. We invite you to attend and to get more
involved in our many projects to reduce the stigma of the
disease of addiction and to increase substance abuse
treatment options.
Our Board of Directors meets monthly on the second
Wednesday of each month at 6pm. Please let us know if
you are interested in attending or if you would like to serve
as a member of the Board of Directors or PATH Ambassadors: 619-670-1184 or anewpath@cox.net.
Resource Information:
SUPPORT A NEW PATH BY
PURCHASING AD SPACE
A New PATH: 619-670-1184
AA Hotline: 619-265-8762
Alanon, Alateen: 619-296-2666
Naranon: 858-492-8720
NA Hotline: 619-584-1007
Central Public Defender: 619-338-4700
Juvenile Hall: 858-694-4500
Las Colinas Jail (women): 619-258-3176
Mental Health Assoc.: 619-543-0412
Probation: 619-515-8202
SD County Jail (men): 619-615-2808
SD Superior Court Central: 619-531-4420
Teen Drug Screen, Palmerado E.D., 858-694-8497
SD County Alcohol & Drug Service Info. & Referral:
619-692-5727
A New PATH appreciates your support! We continue
to expand and our newsletter now goes out to over 3600
people! Consider purchasing an ad for our January edition.
$60 - business card
$250 - 1/2 page
Our next printing deadline is May 24,2013. Make checks
payable to: A New PATH, 2527 Doubletree Road, Spring Valley,
CA 91978. Phone/Fax: 619-670-1184, Email:
anewpath@cox.net. Thanks for all of your support!
A New PATH newsletter is published quarterly by the
Parents for Addiction Treatment and Healing nonprofit organization. PARENT SURVIVAL KITS AVAILABLE IN
ENGLISH WITH SPANISH TRANSLATIONS
Who do you turn to for help when a loved one has a
substance abuse problem? Where do you go for information when your substance abusing family member gets
arrested? We have created, a brochure of information
to help parents navigate the criminal justice system. It
includes information on when to intervene, warning signs of
relapse, court related phone numbers, and the judicial process. If you would like a copy, please send $1 for mailing.
Gretchen Burns Bergman - Managing Editor
Kathy Rezaiy-­ Editor
A New PATH
2527 Doubletree Road
Spring Valley, CA 91978
Phone (619) 670-1184
E-mail gretanewpath@cox.net
Check our website at www.anewpathsite.org
© 2013 A New PATH. No portion of this newsletter
may be reprinted without the written consent of A
New PATH.
PATH is endorsed by
Þ San Diego Psychiatric Society
Þ Mental Health America in San Diego County
Þ NAMI San Diego
Þ Jewish Family Services
Þ Families to Amend California’s Three-Strikes
Þ The San Diego District Attorney’s Office
Þ Join Together/Demand Treatment
Þ Drug Policy Alliance Network
A
Newlterna
s S tive
our
ces
www.facesandvoicesof
recovery.org
Help A New PATH reduce Stigma and
Celebrate Recovery!
In order to celebrate the “silver lining” of sobriety, and to
show your support of loved ones in recovery, or your pride in
your own recovery, we invite you to join us in wearing “PATH
to RECOVERY” silver cause bracelets Order them through
the PATH office by emailing: anewpath@cox.net and we will
mail them to you right away. Please purchase 3 for $10, so
that you can wear one and give the others to friends in recovery, or you can purchase one for $5. Wear these bracelets
so that others can appreciate the growing number of people
taking pride in recovery!
www.anewpathsite.org
www.jointogether.org
www.narconews.com
www.drcnet.org
www.reconsider.org
www.drugpolicy.org
www.sdchip.org
www.centerforce.org
You can help support A New PATH when you shop!
Please register your Ralphs club card online at
Help us to Celebrate Recovery by ordering your PATH to Recovery magnetic “R”
ribbons and placing them on your cars and
refrigerators, or anywhere visible to help
to reduce the stigma and show the world
that you support Recovery from addictive
illness.
They are Available through the PATH office for $2 each or 3 for $5.
A New PATH
$125 - 1/4 page
$500 - full page
www.ralphs.com/ Using A New PATH and NPO # “90278”
and every time you shop and swipe your card/ PATH will
automatically earn a rebate.
You can also contribute to New PATH through Food 4 Less:
www.food4less.net
2
Please call the PATH office if you need helphelp in setting this up at: 619-670-1184.
thank you for your ongoing support !
February 2013
Continued from page 1
Postcard from the Prez
Please join us at Liberty Station for both of these wonderful
events. If you have any art items to donate for a silent auction for
this event, please contact me. Gretchen and the Moms United
crew are off to New York City this Spring to continue to promote
PATH’s most fervent belief that the drug war is a threat to our
families and communities. Please read Gretchen’s article about
the Moms United efforts in this newsletter. I look forward to seeing many of you in the following months as we work side by side
to promote therapeutic justice for persons with addictive illness.
Happy New Year.
Caroline
NY Times Welcomes Lower Recidivism Among
Parolees.
A New York Times (12/29/12, A18, Subscription Publication)
editorial welcomed efforts by several states that "have cut recidivism by giving newly released inmates access to drug treatment
or mental health care, focusing parole supervision on the riskiest
offenders, and developing a system of community-based sanctions that sends only troubled or repeat offenders back to prison."
Data from the Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics
"suggest that the reforms are already cutting the numbers of parolees who are bounced back to prison for minor infractions." The
Times continued, "States that are serious about reducing recidivism need to do away with the thousands of laws and regulations
that punish ex-­offenders by making it difficult for them to find jobs, homes and basic work credentials like driver's and occupational licenses."
Now Receive Your Quarterly Newsletter Electronically
You can now opt-in to receive the A New PATH Newsletter via
your email. If you enjoy reading our Newsletter on paper DO
NOTHING. However, if you wish to receive the Newsletter electronically, simply send us an email [ANewPATH@cox.net]. Type
“OPT-IN Newsletter” in the Subject Line. Current and all previous
PATH Newsletters can be read on our website:
http://www.anewpathsite.org/newsletters1.html Thank you!
Ask your friends to donate to PATH for your birthday!
Go to http://www.causes.com/ click on “find a cause.”
at the top of the page. Type in “a new path” then click on the
magnifying glass. You will be taken to a new screen where A New
PATH is at the top of the list. Be careful to click on A New PATH.
Once on the New PATH screen, you can donate, or join the cause.
There are links to set up a birthday wish so your friends can donate
to A New PATH on your birthday other holidays. You can click on
“members” to see who some (or all) of the 539 members are. There
is also a place where you can leave a comment. Joining the Cause
is separate from being a group member or liking A New PATH’s
page on Facebook. You can do one, 2 or all 3 of these.
But to donate money, the Cause is the way!
Lisa Overton
Please help Support our cause
by Purchasing:
- 2013 Faces of Recovery Calendar now on sale for $5!
-”Givin’ Somethin’ Back” CDS by Rap Artist
Pierre Alexander ($10)
- Decade of Dedication CD of Southwestern Choir $10
- The Best of Chuck Negron or Holiday CD - $10
- Silver “PATH to Recovery” cause bracelets - 3 for $10
- Strut for Sobriety T-Shirts $15 (Men’L,Women’s Med.
- An Inch from the Heart books of Found Poetry available
for $20 each.
-”R”PATH to Recovery magnetic car stickers:3 for $5.
- A New PATH white T-shirts & tanks with emerald studs &
stone designed by Kathy Rezaiy: $20
- Children of Drug War paper back with chapter authored by
Gretchen Burns Bergman: $30
- Signed Paperback Book: One- Way Ticket, by
Rita Lowenthal: $10
- Signed paperback book: Discovering Me, Discovering
Joy, by Vivian Eisencher: $10
- Gourmet coffee - order at PATH.cupgives.com
Order through PATH office: 619-­670-­1184 or email: anewpath@cox.net. If you would like us to mail any
of these items, please add $5
The views of the authors of this newsletter do not necessarily
reflect those of A New PATH
A New PATH
Continued from page 1
Executive Director’s Message
The probable reason that this crisis is at a tipping point is that
it doesn’t just happen in families that grapple with addictive
illness, but it is happening across the spectrum with seniors
mixing prescription drugs, teens going into parents medicine
cabinets to experiment, college students partying, and people
behind bars using drugs in a desperate attempt to deal with
being caged due to drug problems.
In California we finally passed a bill to reform our draconian 3-strikes law that ensnared so many non-violent drug
offenders in prison for decades. And, the big news in drug
reform last year came with Colorado and Washington state
legalizing marijuana. This change is a long time in coming
and follows our efforts to pass Prop 19 in California. But, the
greatest forward momentum is that people, media and politicians, are actually talking about legalizing marijuana without
snickering and judgment.
None of these changes would have occurred without
breaking through the layers of ignorance and the shackles of
stigma. Much of the work of A New PATH is to speak out
honestly about our personal stories of pain and addiction in
our families in order to challenge untruths, reject shame and
blame, and illustrate the true nature of addictive illness. We
shine a ray of light through the maze of anger and prejudice
that leads toward compassionate understanding and healthoriented solutions.
PATH will turn 14 this April, and over these years we have
been a constant and growing voice calling for therapeutic
justice. Through our national Moms United to End the War
on Drugs campaign, we have gained strength in numbers,
and mothers are rising up, reclaiming their inherent rights to
nurture, and demanding change. We now have Moms United
representatives in 17 states, and we are uniting with “Cops,
Clergy, Students & Docs” to lead the way toward new,
non-judgmental, science-based approaches to dealing with
society’s problems with drug use and addiction. Together we
will end the violence, mass incarceration and overdose deaths
that are a result of pointless prohibitionist policies.
What will life look like if we achieve our goals?
I believe that without policies that promote prejudice, and
over-reliance on criminal justice to solve our public health
problems, we will be able to significantly reduce the harms associated with drug use. We will be freed to see people who
are trapped in the vicious cycle of addiction as we would our
own sons and daughters, who deserve help in overcoming their
demons of drug dependence, and in reducing their significant roadblocks to recovery.
To see past the scare tactics of the prison industrial complex
about how our world would disintegrate into widespread drug
use and depravity, we have only to look at the experience of
Portugal, a country that decriminalized drugs in 2001. Studies show that teen drug use and HIV infections decreased, and
adult drug use remained consistent with other European countries. Furthermore, other crime rates did not rise, and the prison
population and its associated costs decreased.
Recently I spoke to a woman who had worked in the drug
courts 13 years ago when PATH was young and advocating for
mandated treatment in lieu of incarceration. She said that at
the time we were viewed as being pretty radical in our thinking, but that now history has proven us to be right. Now people
from all walks of life are coming to the same viewpoint. She
validated our work as being visionary.
I’m very proud, not just that we created A New PATH, but
that we had the courage and fortitude to continue this journey
and this urgent calling. The tide may be turning, but now is not
a time to relax or retreat. It takes resolve and determination to
break through all of the shackles of stigma. They are bound
tightly, creating powerlessness and exquisite pain. We must
remain vigilant and strong in our actions and advocacy in order
to bring to reality the kind of tolerance and tomorrows we
envision for all of our children.
3
February 2013
Why I am working with California Public Protection
and Physician Health
Just as the repeal of alcohol Prohibition began in the late 1920s
with individual states repealing their own prohibition laws, and
ultimately culminated with repeal of federal Prohibition, so
Washington and Colorado have initiated a political process that
will resonate nationally.
The transformation in public opinion over the past six years,
not just in these two states but nationwide, has been nothing
short of remarkable. As recently as 2006, Gallup's polling
found 36% of Americans in favor of legalizing marijuana use
and 60% opposed. By late 2011, that 36% in favor had jumped
to 50% and the opposition has fallen to 46%. What Washington and Colorado did tonight, other states are sure to replicate
in years to come. Not all will succeed, as Oregon apparently
did not tonight, but the dominoes of marijuana prohibition are
poised to topple.
It would be a mistake to describe these victories as "propot." Millions of Americans who have no particular affinity for marijuana have decided that it makes no sense to keep
spending billions of dollars trying to enforce an unenforceable
prohibition when state and local governments could be taking
in comparable amounts by taxing and regulating marijuana.
They know that legalizing marijuana will deprive criminal
organizations in Mexico and this country of profits and power, and enable police and prosecutors to focus resources on serious
crimes. They are convinced that arresting 750,000 people each
year for possessing a small amount of marijuana is costly, cruel
and unjust. And they rightfully believe that young people will
fare better with responsible regulations rather than ineffective
prohibitions.
To put this in global perspective, even as the federal government persists with its failed drug war strategy, the United
States has now emerged as the global leader in promoting more
sensible policies with respect to marijuana.
Ethan Nadelmann is the executive director of the Drug Policy
Alliance.
Caroline Ridout Stewart, MA, MSW, LCSW - November 2012 –
as seen in CPPPH Communications
I am a woman who wears many hats. I am first and foremost a dedicated mother with an adult son who suffers from a co-occurring disorder. I am, secondly, president of the board of a small
non-­profit (A New PATH: Parents for Addiction Treatment and Healing) that advocates for legislative policies promoting harm
reduction and for more treatment dollars to be made available
for individuals who suffer from addictive illness. I am a busy
full-time psychotherapist who works all day long in a busy urban
psychiatric clinic as part of a team training psychiatry residents.
I am also a member of the board of California Public Protection
and Physician Health (CPPPH), a non-­profit working tirelessly to create a medically-­informed, confidential program for physicians who suffer from addictive illness, psychiatric illness or loss
of cognitive functioning. Finally, I am a patient who wants to be
able to depend upon the good judgment and wisdom of my own
doctors.
One year ago, I was asked by James Hay, MD, then President of the California Medical Association, to join the CPPPH
board. As one viscerally aware of the impact of addictive and
psychiatric illness on the patients themselves, on their families
and certainly on the communities in which they live and work,
I knew the importance of this work. But even so, why would
such a busy lady want to join another board?
My motivation comes from my own personal experience.
Our California doctors suffering from addictive or psychiatric
illness are not so different from my own son who has on many
occasions been literally “kicked to the curb.” My “relapsing” son
has been put out on the street from his residential drug and alcohol program with his prescriptive black garbage bags in homage
to his despicable character. He has been given no recourse, no
discharge plan, no transitional shepherding towards recovery. The same holds for our docs. We do not want them to be
stripped of their medical licenses and put out on the street.. But
that can happen. And it is more likely to happen in states where
there is no organized, structured physician health program.
When I share this information with my friends and colleagues
(even those in the trenches of hospital medicine), they are almost
always shocked and even a little argumentative. “No,” they say.
“This cannot be. Doctors have as much right as anyone else to
get sick.”
The bottom line is that physicians are simply human beings
with the same biological vulnerability to mental health and addiction problems as anyone else. I imagine that my own beloved
physicians may have suffered from a variety of ailments over the
years (perhaps arthritis or heart disease) and have, as have their
own patients, occasionally required time home on the mend or
even in hospital for aggressive care. As a patient and as a community member, I would never want my own medical providers
to be denied the help needed to recover from a disease or worse
to be forced to go underground with a disease for fear of loss of
their profession.
So that is why I see it as a huge honor to stand up and fight for our California physicians and for the same humane, clinically-informed treatment for addictive and psychiatric illness that
they would demand for their own patients. We on the CPPPH
board will never give up advocating for those who have spent
their whole lives devoted to the health and well-being of others.
We hold to the admonition: before all else, do no harm. Certainly
our beloved physicians are worthy of this same respect and care.
Screening of Documentary “Raw Opium”
On Monday Feb. 4, 2013 The LA Chapter of A New PATH,
The Drug Policy Alliance & A New PATH’s Mom’s United to
End the War on Drugs Campaign sponsored an afternoon of
Documentary Film viewing along with a panel discussion on the
40 years of failed drug policy at the California Endowment, LA.
“Raw Opium” chronicles a commodity that has tremendous
power - both to ease pain and destroy lives. The opium poppy is
the raw material for heroin, fueling a vast criminal trade larger
than the economies of many countries. We saw how a flower plays a pivotal role not just in the lives of people who grow,
manufacture and use it, but also in the political instability of
an increasingly interconnected and turbulent world. The film explores the history, science and politics of the opium trade by
following opium's voyage around the world, including the disparate worlds of an opium master in Southeast Asia, a UN drug
enforcement officer on the border of Afghanistan hunting down the smugglers of central Asia, a former Indian government drug
czar who encounters the opium farmers of northern India, and a
Vancouver heroin user struggling to kick the habit.
Washington State and Colorado will lead the way
towards sensible drug laws.
By Ethan Nadelmann – USA today - 11/7/2012
Washington State and Colorado made history tonight by
becoming the first states in the United States -­ to approve the legal regulation of marijuana.
These victories likely represent the beginning of the end of
marijuana prohibition in this country and many others as well.
A New PATH
After the screening, a panel discussion was moderated by PATH
LA Director John Whitaker with panelists: Dr. David B. Bergman, Hanna Dershowitz, Diane Goldstein, Caroline Stewart,
L.C.S.W., and Meghan Ralston.
4
February 2013
Letter to Editor Submission to U-T S.D. – 1/10/12
By Lisa E. Overton
Gov. Brown's challenge of prison oversight by the Federal
government reminds me of a street hustler shuffling cards. (Brown challenges court oversight of Calif. Prisons, Jan. 8)
Moving inmates from the state to the county, or worse yet, out
of state, doesn't reduce the prison population at all. A redistribution of the population is not a reduction of the population,
regardless of the accounting procedure used.
Why doesn't the governor work on measures to actually
reduce the prison population? Solutions to prison overcrowding include releasing elderly prisoners: Many studies show
that people over the age of 50 rarely commit new crimes.
We need sentencing reform, such as removing mandatory
minimums from sentences, increasing good time credits and
releasing the inmates who are eligible under Prop. 36, the
3-strikes reform bill.
Instead of building more jails, why not spend the money
on educating and offering mental illness and substance abuse
treatment to inmates? Teach people parenting and job-seeking
skills. Offer classes in how to handle stress and problems,
instead of adding stress and problems to people who have
already made at least one serious error in judgment to get
locked up in the first place.
No, Governor, overcrowding and inadequate health care
are not a “distant memory” in California’s prisons. Simply
moving the problem from one building to another does not fix the problem.
Lisa Overton Calvert
Congratulations to our PATH Board Secretary Lisa Overton,
who married John Calvert, on Jan. 14, 2013. We wish them
much happiness!
EL RINCON DE CLAUDIO
EL ESTRES Y EL USO DEL ALCOHOL Y DROGAS
Escuchamos frequentemente la palabra “estres”. Por estres,
justificamos muchas de nuestras acciones, es frequente escuchar alguien que usa drogas y alcohol decir que las uso porque “tenia
mucho estres”. Pero, que es el estres? Es una palabra dificil de definir, la misma situacion o actividad que puede significar estres para un individuo puede que no lo sea para otro. Definimos estres en forma general a cualquier situacion que produzca un
cambio fisico y/o mental en el individuo. Los cambios fisicos son los denominados cambios de “lucha o huida”, en referencia
a que nos preparamos fisicamente para afrontar la nueva situacion como si vamos a pelear o salir huyendo de esta, tales como
aumento de la frequencia cardiaca, aumento de la circulacion
y presion sanguinea, aumento de la frequencia respiratoria,
sudoracion, pupilas dilatadas, el flujo de sangre se concentra en los musculos, etc. Los cambios mentales pueden ser inconcientes
o concientes. Los inconcientes se denominan “ mecanismos
de defensa” tales como negacion, repression, proyeccion, etc;
estos nos ayudan en forma inconciente a manejar periodos de
estres. Los concientes incluyen prepararnos para el estres, como
planificacion, entrenamiento, dedicar mas tiempo a la nueva actividad, etc. Consecuencias negativas del estres incluyen ansiedad, depression y otros. Es normal sentirse un poco ansioso con
una situacion nueva, pero esta ansiedad no nos debe inmovilizar
sino mas bien motivarnos de una manera adequada, si progresa
se podria convertir en un desorden de ansiedad o en una Depresion mayor. Como controlamos el estres? El uso del alcohol y
drogas solo produce mas dano fisico y mental, y no controlamos el estres mas bien tiene consecuencias catastroficas al no estar en un estado fisco y mental balanceado. Ejercicio, dieta balanceada, Yoga, meditacion, periodos de descanso, hobbies y actividades
de placer son algunas de las actividades que nos ayudan a controlar el estres.
CLAUDIO CABREJOS MD MPH
AMERICAN BOARD OF ADDICTION PSYCHIATRY
Faces of Recovery Calendar
There is nothing more beautiful than
a person in recovery…the light of life
shining in their eyes and beaming hope
for a fulfilling future.
A New PATH
Our Tenth edition features 12 people who
have shared their life stories in order to
help others to understand and experience
both the devastation of the disease and
the miraculous reality of recovery.
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February 2013
us one evening, then kick him to the curb the next day with no
warning or transitional care for any of us. We were simply a
peripheral adjunct in our son’s life, requiring no support and
left to cope as best we could. Where was the therapeutic plan?
The new path?
Again, we cannot have it both ways. If we pride ourselves in
our medically-informed approach to people who misuse drugs
and alcohol, how can we with good conscience embrace
archaic philosophies of needing to hit bottom to recover? It
seems there are a few reasons why programs throw our children out. They need the bed for healthier patients who have a
better chance of recovery. (Oh, the irony: the precious bed is
reserved for the healthier client, not the sickest). They need to
give the bed to a better-funded client. They need to extract the
malignant patient because he or she might contaminate others.
They need the patient to ‘learn a lesson,’ ‘hit bottom’ or ‘come
back when you’re ready.’
We do not throw dogs onto the street if they are ill or behave
badly. What’s clear to me is that for many of our addicted
children, no moral lessons are learned, there is no coming back
when they are motivated, nothing is gained from hitting bottom. Many simply go away and die, relieving programs of any
medical obligation to save lives.
If I waved my magic wand, residential programs would have
“step up” and “step down” units like Neonatal Intensive Care
Units. Leaving the protective environment of a program would
not be permitted unless the person left against medical advice.
Currently, there is no medical advice not to leave because
so-­called providers want difficult patients to go if they aren’t improving. Providers have succumbed to their counter-transference yearnings for compliant, validating patients who get better
quickly and gratify them with long-term sobriety.
In the best of all worlds, my son’s residential program
would have put him in an intensive, wrap-around program following his relapse. They would have invited his father and me
to join in a clinical meeting to explore ways to re-integrate him
into the residential community or place him in more restrictive care. Every residential program would offer this. Relapse
would not be viewed as a moral failing or another bed coming
open for a worthier client. It is sad that even the most informed
clinical providers have ambivalence and intrusive doubt as to
whether addiction really is a disease or a moral failing.
It’s time for the high-minded medical rhetoric to stop. We and
our vulnerable children can’t take the seduction any longer. We
are worn thin with the do-gooder stance.
Still Crazy After All These Years: A Mother’s View of
Harm Reduction
By Caroline Ridout Stewart, LCSW – 10/30/12
Permit me to set the record straight.
For more than 15 years, my son has suffered from addictive illness. He uses a variety of street drugs and has been in
residential treatment numerous times. To put it mildly, he’s not
a saint.
Yet, when he’s sober, he is kind to dogs, loves growing
flowers and watching “Forest Gump” over and over. He has the capacity for humor and the ability to walk in another man’s
shoes. That’s called empathy.
When using, he stands, a lost soul, at the precipice of hell.
He suffers chronic anxiety and self-loathing. He has vicious
scabs on his arms, cannot sleep, and noticeably shakes. He
lies and sometimes steals. He has no survival instinct. He is
tortured.
Recently, well into a six-month residential treatment program, my son was evicted onto the street by his “treatment”
providers. He had arrived back late to his program after a
long day at the dentist’s where he had two teeth extracted. He
appeared about 6 p.m. and was promptly drug tested. He was
evicted several days later, the test results revealing he had
taken Vicodin (given by the dental clinic) and methamphetamine, which he acknowledged using. What remains unclear
is whether program staff knew he was having major dental
work. Staff made no arrangements to escort him since he had
achieved a higher level of freedom as a model citizen during
his two months with them. As my husband so aptly and painfully put it, “They gave him just enough rope to hang himself.”
Sadly, it is not an uncommon scenario. Sending my son to
a dental appointment unescorted was an important test, one he
failed. Per program rules, he was evicted from his therapeutic
community, a bad person who chose to self destruct. He was
literally cast into the gutter to provide a bed for a more deserving soul, one who makes healthy choices.
Here is the real “WTF.” Please help me understand. Is my
son’s “condition” an illness or isn’t it?
We all play this both ways. It’s an illness when we need
insurance funding and recognition of our evidence-based therapeutic practices. It is an illness when our clients need medication to help stabilize their mood and be more emotionally
resilient and cooperative. It’s an illness when we write papers
about heritability and genetic markers.
However, addiction becomes a moral failing and a choice
when we become bored with our clients and tired of their bad
behavior. It is a choice when our clients are dirty and unattractive. It is a choice when our clients need shepherding that
we don’t have the time, money or inclination for. It is a choice
when we have no state mandate to hold someone against their
will even when they are dying.
Why waste brain power mulling this over? It may be because I am the queen of codependency. Perhaps harm reduction
is simply a fiction in the minds of neurotic, anxious mothers with attachment disorders. We are fools to believe our children
are ill. This belief in addiction as disease is just one more feminist conspiracy to relieve mothers of their guilt. We enculturated our children to be weak, antisocial and self destructive.
We are blinded by memories of their toddler innocence just as
we are blind to the fact our addicted children choose to remain
addicted. We are incapable of accepting that our children are
simply bad, character-disordered people.
Before our son was evicted from treatment, my husband
made many frantic calls to the program director. His calls were
not returned. We had even attended a family therapy meeting
at the facility the night before the eviction and no staff member alerted us to the pending family crisis. And it was a family
crisis. We desperately needed their clinical advice and advocacy on how to help our son as well as grieve this new setback.
If our son’s treatment providers knew what was coming, they
gave us no inkling. How callous and cruel of them to embrace
A New PATH
6
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LifeHouse Recovery Connnection
Although in existence for less than a year the San Diego-based
recovery community organization is busy opening a recovery
center/sober living facility on Hancock Street. Last Saturday a
fundraising dinner brought together almost 100 recovery advocates. Executive Director Karen Hayes cited the outpouring of
volunteer effort from the LHRC board of directors and allies
as further proof of the need for a strong, organized recovery
community in San Diego.
Continued on page 9
February 2013
A New PATH wishes to Thank These Generous Sponsors:
Emerald Level ($15,000+) - Virginia Napierskie, Drug Policy Alliance, Alliance Healthcare Foundation
Diamond Level ($10,000+) - Gretchen Burns Bergman
Sapphire Level ($5,000+) - Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians, Theodore Bergman, Sylvia & Jaime Liwerant, Anonymous,
Ute City Charitable Trust, Gretchen Productions
Amethyst Level ($2,500+) – Linda Marteeny, Barbara Brown, Beth Herman, Matthew G. L. Perlatti Memorial Fund,
Priscilla & Keith Webb
Opal Level ($1,000+) - Dr. David Bergman, The Liwerant Family Fund of the Jewish Community Foundation,
Neil Hadfield & Margaret Jackson, Alvarado Parkway Institute, Pam Jackson, Peggy Matthews, Anna Curren, Barbie Spinazzola
Topaz Level ($500+) – CC Interiors, SOS Printing, Caroline Stewart & Associates, VROM, Rory Devine, Harlan Levy,
Connie Conard, Caroline & Donald Stewart, The Gold Diggers, Scripps Mercy Behavioral Health Services, Sharp
McDonald Center, Bay Recovery, MorganStanley SmithBarney, Suboxone - Reckitt Benckiser, On The Border, Soroptimist
International of S.D., Marilyn McCloskey, Sue K. Edwards, Carole Rosenstock-Goldfeder, Ron & Claudia Little, Tom &
Tanya O’Donnell, Paul & Nelly Dean, Sylmar Company, Steven B. Dillaway
PATH Partners ($200+) - Laurie Anne & David Beck Brown, Henry Austin, Mary Jo Grubbs, Centaur University, Dr.
Bruce & Barbara Pevney, Cecil & Sally Hawkins, Eve & Mike Hudgins, David J. Williamson, George & Kate Willis, John
and Nancy Walters, Rick Morey, Crown Point Catering, Inc., Dawn & Dutch Dershem, Jacqueline Keene, Practical
Recovery, Art & Lana Salyer, Steve Verdugo, Barry Lessin
We invite you to join us!
Return with payment to: New PATH, 2527 Doubletree Road, Spring Valley, CA 91978
Website: www.anewpathsite.org
E-mail: anewpath@cox.net
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A New PATH
7
February 2013
Watch for News
on Strut for Sobriety! in September 2013
Date & Location to be determined...
10:00 boutique & silent auction
v
12:00 luncheon, awards ceremony & fashion show
2012 Co-Chairs: Colleen Ruis Ince & Liz Crocker
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To reserve: 619-670-1184 or email anewpath@cox.net
A New PATH
8
February 2013
Why People Who Hate Drugs Should Want to End
the Drug War
By Tony Newman (Huffington Post 1/17/2013) http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tony-­newman/why-­people-­
who-hate-drugs_b_2497780.html
Many people hate drugs. It is easy to see why. Most
families have had a loved one with a problematic relationship
to alcohol or other drugs. People who struggle with drug problems can cause incredible pain to themselves and their loved
ones. Broken marriages, loss of jobs, incarceration and even
dying from an overdose are all possible tragic consequences
of serious drug problems. While it might be counterintuitive,
people who hate drugs should be at the forefront of ending
our nation's failed drug war. The drug war makes all of the
problems I mentioned above much worse.
Drug War = Mass Incarceration and Lack of Treatment
Let’s start with people struggling with drug misuse or addiction. Our drug war doesn’t keep drugs out of the hands of
people who want drugs; drugs are as plentiful as ever. But getting caught with drugs can land someone in a cage for many
years. Spending time behind bars is not the way to help someone who has drug problem and most likely will make that
person more traumatized. The sad fact is that we spend 50,000
dollars a year incarcerating someone for a drug offense, yet at
the same time there is not enough money to offer treatment to
people who want it.
Drug War = More Overdose and More Dying
People who have lost a loved one to an overdose feel an
unimaginable pain and often want to wipe drugs off the face
of the earth. Tragically, the drug war leads to many such
deaths. Despite 40-plus years trying to eliminate drug use,
there is an overdose crisis in this country right now. Overdose
is now almost neck-and-neck with car accidents as the leading
cause of accidental death in the country. Most people who
experience an overdose are with friends when it happens and
would survive if someone called 911. But because of our drug
war, people often don’t call 911 because they are too afraid
that the police will show up and arrest them. It is outrageous
that we discourage people from calling 911 to save a life
because of laws that pit their interest to help someone who is
ODing against their motivation to not be arrested.
Another way to potentially save people who are overdosing on an opioid is to provide them with an antidote called
naloxone, which can reverse the effects and restore normal
breathing in two to three minutes if administered following
an opioid overdose. Unfortunately our society does not come
close to doing enough to make naloxone available to people
who use drugs and their friends and families.
Drug War = Unsafe Neighborhoods
People who live in neighborhoods with drug dealing out in
the open and with violence associated with the drug trade are
some of the most vocal supporters of the drug war. Of course
people want and need to feel safe in their neighborhoods. But
most “drug-related” violence stems not from drug use, but
from drug prohibition. That was true in Chicago under alcohol
kingpin Al Capone, and it is true now. The killings and violence in many U.S. cities are not from marijuana or other drug
use, but because prohibition makes the plants worth more than
gold, and people are willing to kill each other over the profits to be made.
Drug War = More Danger for Our Children
Many people may know the drug war is a failure but are
afraid of change course because they worry about their children and want to keep them safe. Ironically, the drug war is a
complete failure when it comes to keeping young people from
using drugs.
Despite decades of DARE programs with the simplistic
“Just Say No” message, 44 percent of teenagers will try marijuana before they graduate and nearly 75 percent will drink
alcohol. Young people often claim it is easier for them to get
marijuana than alcohol because drug dealers don’t check IDs.
Young people also feel the brunt of marijuana enforcement
and make up many (and in some places most) of the arrests
for marijuana offenses. Arresting young people will often
cause more damage than drug use itself. Teenagers need honest drug education to help them make responsible decisions.
Safety should be the number one priority. We have dramatically reduced teen smoking without tobacco prohibition and
without a single arrest.
A New PATH
Drug Abuse Is Bad. The Drug War Is Worse
There is no doubt that drugs have ruined a lot of people's
lives. It is understandable why many people hate drugs and
want to protect their families. But when you looks at the greatest harms from drugs, the drug war and prohibition almost always make the problem much worse -- and make our families
and communities much less safe. We need the people who hate
drugs to actively join the movement to end the war on drugs.
Because the war on drugs is a war on all of us.
Tony Newman is the director of media relations at the Drug
Policy Alliance (www.drugpolicy.org)
Documentaries on the War on Drugs
Several excellent documentaries have come out recently. These
can in be viewed as trailers or in their entirety at:
www.momsunited.net:
The House I Live In, by Eugene Jarecki, is a brutal attack on
the racist drug war. The film won the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival. It has the support of celebrities like
Brad Pitt, Danny Glover, Russell Simmons and John Legend. It
has generated a great deal of media attention. The documentary
explores the risks that prohibition poses to freedom, and the
tragedy of addicts being treated as criminals. Jarecki reveals
that a solution is possible if we can just find it in ourselves to be compassionate, and see past the decades of paranoia and
propaganda
Breaking the Taboo, is a film narrated by Morgan Freeman, and produced by Richard Branson's son Sam, which takes a critical look at the global war on drugs and how it has failed. It is
being offered for free through Google and You Tube. It follows
the Global Commission on Drug Policy on a mission to break
the political taboo over the United States' led War on Drugs and
expose what it calls the biggest failure of global policy in the
last 40 years.
Raw Opium, as described by director Peter Findlay is a “feature
length documentary about a commodity that has tremendous
power to ease pain, and to destroy lives. The opium poppy is the
raw material for heroin, fueling a vast criminal trade larger than
the economies of many countries.” The film is a journey around the world from an opium master in southeast Asia to a UN drug
enforcement officer on the border of Afghanistan hunting down the smugglers of central Asia; from a former Indian government
Drug Czar and opium farmer to a crusading Vancouver doctor
and Portuguese street worker who daily confront the realities of
drug addiction. This flower has played a pivotal role -­ not just in the lives of people who grow, manufacture and use it - but also
in the increasingly tense sphere of international relations.
Code of the West, At a time when the world is rethinking its
drug policies large and small, one state rises to the forefront.
Once a pioneer in legalizing medical marijuana, the state of
Montana may now become the first to repeal its medical marijuana law. Set against the sweeping vistas of the Rockies, the
steamy lamplight of marijuana grow houses, and the bustling
halls of the State Capitol, CODE OF THE WEST follows the
political process of marijuana policy reform – and the recent
federal crackdown on medical marijuana growers across the
country. This is the story of what happens when politics fail,
emotions run high and communities pay the price.
Cocaine Unwrapped. Moving from country to country in South
America, reporting from across the drugs frontline and interviewing top-­level international politicians this film exposes the human cost of one of the most popular drugs on the London
streets. Combining reportage from the drugs front line and
interviews with those top-level international politicians who are
campaigning to get us in the West to take real responsibility for
our drugs problem, Cocaine Unwrapped presents prohibition in
a wholly new light.
Legalize It, is an inspiring documentary that captures the powerful and moving story of the 2010 campaign to legalize cannabis
in California. It is a sensitive and humorous behind-the scenes
look at a colorful campaign, the people running it, and the
groups who opposed or endorsed it. LEAP & Moms United to
End the War on Drugs were active advocates for it.
9
February 2013
Gov. Brown Backslides on Corrections Budget, Plans
More Rat Holes
Excerpt from Californians United for a Responsible Budget
Release 1/10/13
Gov. Brown's 2013-14 budget, released this morning,
echoes comments earlier this week that the administration has
deserted plans to shrink California's over-sized prison population, ignoring clear messages from voters. The proposed
budget increases prison spending $250 million including a
$52 million General Fund increase, bringing the total Corrections budget over $11 billion. Despite the passage of Prop. 36
and continuing realignment. It also projects an increase in the
prison population by 2,262 people over the 2012 Budget Act
projections. "If the Governor believes that 'we can't pour more
and more dollars down the rat hole of incarceration' then why
is he increasing spending on Corrections, planning for more
prisoners rather than fewer and defying the demands of the
Federal Court and the voters to further shrink the prison system?" asked Diana Zuñiga, Field Organizer for Californians
United for a Responsible Budget.
The $11 billion prison budget comes just days after the
Brown administration declared the California prison crisis
over. Contrary to claims that the prison system is no longer
crowded, Central California Women's Facility is at 184.4%
capacity, well over the court's 137.5% target, and the entire
system is currently at 146% capacity.
The Los Angeles Times has endorsed former Gov. George
Deukmejian's call that the state's prison population be reduced
at least to 110,000, more than 20,000 fewer than are in the
system this week. Realignment and other reforms are, as the
Times notes, "only a beginning."…
California Votes to Reform Draconian "Three
Strikes” Mandatory Minimum Law
The Moms United to End the War on Drugs
“Empty Chair at the Holiday Table” 2012 photo
campaign.
A New PATH and moms from around the country shared their
stories of loss during the holidays to speak out for an end to the
war on drugs, which has been so disastrous to our families. Many
of the moms leading this campaign have been personally impacted by the war on drugs, including having a child who suffers
from addictive illness and has been repeatedly incarcerated, a
child who has died from preventable drug overdoses, and a child
who has died due to drug war violence.
We requested photos containing 3 elements: a chair with a picture
of a lost or missing loved one and a sign with one of these statements: incarceration, accidental overdose, drug war violence,
stigma. Over 50 photos were collected on the Moms United
facebook page in the Empty Chair album. They have become
a part of a growing collage of personal stories of loss. We also
requested that people set an empty chair and place setting at their
holiday family gathering to bring focus to drug war damage.
Californians voted overwhelmingly to reform their state’s
harsh “three strikes” law last November. Prop 36, closed a
controversial loophole in the law so that life sentences can
only be imposed when the new felony conviction is “serious
or violent.” PATH has partnered with FACTS and other organizations for years to reform this draconian law. While the
law required the first and second strike to be either violent or serious, any infraction could trigger a third strike and the life
sentence that goes with it. Therefore, petty offenses led to life
imprisonment for thousands of people. More than 40 % of the
total third-strike population in California is serving life for a
third strike that was neither violent nor serious. Proposition
36 ensures that no more people are sentenced to life in prison
for minor and nonviolent drug law violations.
“I weep for the countless families who have been torn apart by
discriminatory and destructive drug policies that lock up fathers
and remove children from their mothers in the name of the
war on drugs, which is really a war waged against families and
communities.” Gretchen Burns Bergman
“I wait for those with substance use disorders to be served by
our health care system rather than languishing in prison. Until
that wait is over, there will always be an extra place setting at
my holiday table for those who are locked up, thrown away or
left out.” Kathie Kane-Willis
“The empty chair at the table is a powerful metaphor for the
incredible void that permeates my life during the holidays and
all year long because my son lost his life to drug prohibition
violence.” Joy Strickland
The Moms United campaign mission is to “end the violence,
mass incarceration and overdose deaths that are a result of current punitive and discriminatory drug policies. We are building a
movement to stop the stigmatization and criminalization of people who use drugs or who are addicted to drugs. We are calling
for health-oriented strategies and widespread drug policy reform
in order to stop the irresponsible waste of dollars and resources,
and the devastating loss of lives and liberty.” Moms United is
a project of PATH. Become a fan and follow the campaign on
Facebook, Moms United to End the War on Drugs.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/125162887532951/?fref=ts
and visit: www.momsunited.net
A New PATH
10
February 2013
Unsung Hero
We thank David Beck Brown for all of his artistic
contributions to A New PATH. Recently he created
an illustration for our 2012 Virtual PATH to recovery 13th
birthday fundraiser (above), and he has drawn cartoons for
his articles on prison reform for our newsletters for over
a decade. He designed our Faces of Recovery Calendar
cover, and our PATH logo.We are grateful for his talent and
generosity. His art is truly a part of our history, and he is a
true friend to the mission of A New PATH!
DPA Released a Report on Veterans and the War on
Drugs 11/9/12
More Than 200,000 Veterans Behind Bars; One in Five
Current Conflict Veterans in VA Care Diagnosed With Substance Abuse Disorder
Report Calls for Alternatives to Incarceration; Increased
Access to Overdose Prevention Programs and MedicationAssisted Therapy; and Medical Marijuana and MDMA for
PTSD
The Drug Policy Alliance, the nation's leading organization
advocating alternatives to the drug war, has released an updated and revised edition of their seminal 2009 report, “Healing a
Broken System.” The report examines the plight of returning
veterans who struggle with incarceration and psychological
wounds of war such as addiction and post-traumatic stress
disorder – and suggests reforms that could improve the health
and preserve the freedom of American soldiers returning from
war zones and transitioning back to civilian life.
The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have created new challenges in providing care for our returning veterans. Roughly 30
percent of veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan report symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), traumatic brain
injury, depression, mental illness or other cognitive disability.
Left untreated, these medical conditions often contribute to
substance misuse and addiction, fatal overdose, homelessness
and suicide, as well as violations of the law, particularly non
violent drug offenses. For these reasons, veterans are increasingly falling victim to the country’s longest war: the war on
drugs.
The current generation of veterans joins the larger population of Vietnam-era veterans who have struggled with many of
these same problems for decades. Research shows that
A New PATH
the single greatest predictive factor for the incarceration
of veterans is substance misuse and addiction. Evidence
also shows that preventable overdose is claiming an unacceptable number of current conflict veterans – nearly as many as suicides. Experts predict the number of veterans
facing these severe problems will only increase as more
veterans return from Iraq and Afghanistan, unless urgent
policy changes recommended in the report are adopted.
“U.S. servicemen and women have been asked to bear an
unthinkable burden in the past decade -- and the military has
prescribed them whatever drugs they need to keep fighting. But it's a different story when veterans come home,” said Daniel
Robelo, research coordinator for the Drug Policy Alliance. “We
arrest too many veterans for drug law violations and incarcerate them for too long, leaving them with criminal records that
make it all but impossible to get a job, housing, education, and
other services – often creating a vicious cycle of addiction and
incarceration. We fail to take simple measures to prevent fatal
overdoses, we deny proven treatments for addiction and dependence, and we allow the drug war to stand in the way of new
and promising treatments for PTSD and other service-related
conditions.”
The report includes new sections on promising research
evaluating the medical safety and efficacy of marijuana and MDMA-assisted psychotherapy in treating veterans suffering
from PTSD, addiction and other mental health conditions. In
particular, the report focuses on New Mexico, where earlier
this week the state’s Medical Cannabis Program’s Medical
Advisory Board unanimously recommended to the Acting
Secretary of Health to keep PTSD as qualifying condition and
to deny a petition to remove PTSD from the list of eligible
medical conditions for enrollment in the program. Today, more
than 3,000 New Mexican residents with PTSD are actively
enrolled in the state’s Medical Cannabis Program – and many
of them are military veterans. The report is available at: http://
www.drugpolicy.org/resource/healing-broken-system-veteransand-war-drugs
Recommendations for Improving Care of Returning U.S.
Veterans:
• Changes in state and federal statutes to focus on providing community-based treatment instead of incarceration for veterans who commit nonviolent drug-related offenses – and on
reaching veterans before they enter the criminal justice system.
• Adoption by government agencies of overdose prevention programs and policies targeting veterans who misuse substances or take prescription medications.
• Significantly expanded access for veterans to medication-­
assisted therapies such as methadone and buprenorphine to
treat opioid dependence.
• Expansion of research and access to innovative treatments for PTSD and other psychological and physical wounds of war,
including treatment modalities involving Schedule I substances
such as MDMA and marijuana.
Key Facts: Substance Abuse and Mental Illness Among
U.S. Veterans
• Two and a half million men and women have served in the Iraq or Afghanistan wars.
• Approximately 50 % of Iraq and Afghanistan War veterans receiving VA care have been diagnosed with PTSD or another
mental health condition.
• 19 % of current conflict veterans who have received VA care have been diagnosed with substance abuse or dependence.
• 75% of Vietnam combat veterans with PTSD met criteria for substance abuse or dependence in a national study.
• Veterans do not qualify for substance abuse disability benefits unless they also have PTSD. • Military personnel and combat veterans have higher rates of problematic substance use than their age peers in the general
population.
February 2013
11
Mission Statement
To reduce the stigma associated with addictive illness through
education and compassionate support
and to advocate for therapeutic rather
than punitive drug policies.
History
PATH grew out of a series of preSubstance Abuse Summit meetings
with parents, Superior Court Judges
and Officers of the criminal justice system in the Spring of 1999.
Founding members are Gretchen
Burns Bergman, Sylvia Liwerant and
Tom O’Donnell.
Our Proposals for
Therapeutic Justice
1) Long-term mandatory rehabilitation in a structured therapeutic
community-based recovery environment for non-violent drug offenders.
WHO WE ARE
A non-­profit advocacy organiza2) If the nature of the crime does not
tion of parents, concerned citizens, indiallow for this alternative, sentencing
viduals in recovery, healthcare profesPATH WOULD LIKE TO THANK: should include immediate placement
sionals and community leaders working
in a rehabilitation and recovery protogether to educate the public, media and Alliance Healthcare Foundation
gram within the prison system.
decision makers about the true nature
The California Endowment
of addiction, and to expand access to
3) Upon release from prison
Drug Policy Alliance
treatment services. We advocate to end Join Together / Demand Treatment
or structured recovery homes,
discriminatory drug policies that serve as Las Patronas
individuals with substance-related
roadblocks to recovery.
San Diego County Superivsor Ron
disorders should be mandated to
Our goal is to reduce prison recidi- Roberts
transitional programs such as sober
vism, save lives, heal families,and move Sempra Energy
living environments, to prepare them
Faces & Voices of Recovery
towards a healthier society.
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
to re enter society.
Attention PATH Members ...
Price Galinson Collaborative Fund
For immediate and up-to-date
Matthew G. L. Perlatti Memorial
information, please send us your e-mail
Fund
address and we can inform you elecFor their generous grants and support!
tronically! Our e-mail address at PATH
is anewpath@cox.net
www.anewpathsite.org
www.momsunited.net
Return Service Requested
Spring Valley, CA 91978
2527 Doubletree Road
(Parents for Addiction Treatment & Healing)
A New PATH
Permit No 212
El Cajon, CA
US Postage Paid
Non Profit Org