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Treatment troubles

By GINNIE GRAHAM & CURTIS KILLMAN World Staff Writers on Mar 18, 2012, at 2:22 AM  Updated on 3/18/12 at 11:08 AM


Lindsey Arias sorts through pictures and mementos as she moves out of one room at 12&12 Inc. and into a new room and a new program at the same facility in Tulsa on Feb. 28. JOHN CLANTON / Tulsa World


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CONTACT THE REPORTER

Ginnie Graham

918-581-8376
Email

Curtis Killman

918-581-8471
Email

Recent slashes in publicly funded treatment centers meant that few beds were available when Lindsey Arias finally worked up the courage to seek help for her addiction.

Arias is one of thousands of Oklahomans with little or no health insurance asking for an intervention in her prescription painkiller addiction but finding few options.

"Addiction is a two-way street," she said. "People don't know what to do or how to get out of it. We need to get access to a program to know how to make our own choices again."

The 34-year-old mother of three found a spot at a government-funded bed at Tulsa's 12&12 Inc. center and has graduated into a grant-funded transitional living program.

"Who would want to be this way?" Arias said. "I saw this as my last shot to get it right. I'm halfway there. This has helped me make the right decision, regain control of my choices."

As Oklahoma tops the nation in nonmedical use of prescription painkillers and remains high in meth and alcohol addiction, the state agency charged with addressing those problems has had to deal with severe budget cuts.

When residents without health insurance ask for help, many are forced to wait nearly six months, leading to dire results.



"When someone comes to ask for treatment, we need it at that time," said Terri White, director of the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services.

"By the time there is a bed available, we often call and can't find the person because they have moved on, the person has committed a crime and is sitting in jail or worse - losing them to an overdose or suicide."

Since 2009, funding to the agency has been cut by 11 percent - from $326.3 million to $289.8 million.

State and federal appropriations for substance abuse programs have decreased 21 percent - from $87.6 million to $69.5 million.

This has reduced funds to at least 70 private providers by more than $3.5 million, forced the merger of a Norman substance abuse treatment center with a children's recovery center, and closed several programs, including a co-occurring unit at the Tulsa Center for Behavior Health, an enhanced residential treatment unit at Central Oklahoma CMHC and a unit at Griffin Memorial Hospital. A total of 95 treatment beds were lost.

Cuts last year added at least 1,200 Oklahomans to the nearly 1,000 already on the waiting list for treatment.

Oklahoma's mental health and substance abuse agency served 16,865 adults during fiscal year 2011 in substance abuse and alcohol treatment programs - including detox and transitional living. Of those, 80 percent were in outpatient care.

Patients qualifying for government services have incomes within 200 percent of the poverty line and are not eligible for Medicaid.

"Our system is to help the most vulnerable - those with no means to pay, those working but without insurance and cannot afford services," White said. "But we are only able to serve about one-third of them."

'We can't do anything'

After being offered a Lortab - prescription hydrocodone used to treat pain - by a co-worker on a construction work site, a Tulsa man started craving the energy it gave and ramped up his usage.

Justin now spends $300 a week for at least 70 opiate pills. He has a full-time job as a machinist, has custody of his elementary-aged son and has been waiting five months for a spot in a government-funded bed for detox and treatment.

"There's a euphoric feeling with it, but now there is absolutely no euphoria," he said. "Now, it just levels me out to function."

Justin's identity is being withheld because of his fears of losing custody or his job because of drug abuse.

He is not alone in his wait.

Officials say that between 600 to 900 residents a day are on the waiting list, which they say is a conservative number. On Thursday, 1,730 Oklahomans were waiting to enter a treatment program. That number includes duplicates, or individuals waiting on several lists.

About 1 in 10 on the list are adolescents.

Federal guidelines require pregnant women and intravenous drug users to get priority in government treatment beds.

"It is a terrible way to get health services," White said. "The idea of what we are doing is pushing the consequences to other, more expensive parts of our system. Can you imagine what would happen if this was our system for treating heart disease?"

Of the 10 people who supply Justin with the prescription pills, at least seven are elderly women. The women are aunts or grandmothers of friends who sell their medications, usually covered by Medicare.

For help, he went to the nonprofit Counseling and Recovery Services of Oklahoma, 7010 S. Yale Ave. Although he works at least 40 hours a week, he has no insurance and does not qualify for Medicaid.

"What's available to him? Nothing," said Tom Boone, substance abuse services program director at the nonprofit.

"I wish I could solve all the problems on an outpatient level, but until we get him into detox, we can't do anything."

Opiate detox is considered one of the most painful - 10 times worse than the worst flu. The length of time for detox depends on the drug. For prescription painkillers, it takes about a week.

Justin said he has tried to quit on his own at least 25 times. The longest he has gone without a pill is a little more than one week, but the time lapse before pain sets in is about a day.

"It's like every muscle cramps up, and my eyes water so bad I can't see," he said. "My legs feel like they weigh 300 pounds. I end up using again. Within 20 minutes of taking a pill, the pain goes away."

Some family members know about his addiction, but he keeps it hidden from his son and everyone else. His ex-wife is also addicted to prescription painkillers.

"I know I have a problem," he said. "I can't go on spending this kind of money. I've bought pills instead of buying groceries."

Justin checks in with the nonprofit agency periodically to see about any openings.

"I really believe one day I will quit," Justin said. "I need the right kind of help. I want to be the best person I can be, and I'm at 50 percent of that now. I feel like I've been wasting time, and my son deserves better than that."

'A crisis so important'

Detox is the initial stage of the treatment process, and the state helped 1,970 people receive that service in fiscal year 2011.

Medical detox programs help people avoid health problems such as organ failure and ease the pain of withdrawal symptoms.

Two facilities in the state offer government-funded medical detox - 12&12 in Tulsa and The Referral Center in Oklahoma City. Between them, the state pays for about 42 detox beds.

"For most of the people we serve, detox is a huge part of the need," White said. "But in the last four years, we've had basically a stand-still budget. We need to develop ambulatory detox, which is in the range between medical detox and self-detox."

After getting someone clean of drugs and alcohol, the question is what to do next.

Outpatient treatment is most available - with 13,579 adults served for all substances in 2011, according to the state's data.

Taxpayer-funded residential treatment served 2,685 adults Oklahomans last year, followed by 369 adults who graduated to a halfway house program, according to data from the state mental health and substance abuse agency.

Some individuals may have participated in more than one program last year.

To be admitted into detox and residential treatment, programs require the patient be an active user, giving them no incentive to stop using.

"People don't go to any treatment unless there is a crisis so important to them they know they have to get help," Boone said.

Boone said outpatient treatment is not always the best course for addicts who may require detox or inpatient treatment.

"With outpatient, it is not a level of care that is going to work with many people," Boone said. "It takes about an 18-month period at different levels of treatment to get the most successful outcomes."

A pilot program of four women at the nonprofit features a new drug that allows for an outpatient detox from opiates but requires a team of support overseeing the patient.

"We've got to find different ways to shore up the problem," Boone said. "Financially, the state cannot afford to build more facilities, and we have got to find a way to overcome this opiate problem."

'An anemic response'

Tulsa's nonprofit 12&12 program offers a full range of treatment, from detox to transitional living. About 35 percent of its revenue comes from the state, with the rest coming from sources such as grants, insurance contracts and contracts with groups including American Indian tribes and veteran's organizations.

Executive Director Bryan Day said the nonprofit could serve more people in its residential treatment if it had more money. Reimbursement rates have not increased in more than a decade.

"We are prolonging an individual's suffering by not engaging people in treatment as soon as possible," Day said. "With the current levels of funding, we are providing an anemic response."

Nearly 60 percent of the nonprofit's patients have alcohol addictions. Many patients have co-occurring disorders, which means they have an addiction and mental illness. About 20 percent have opiate addictions, and about 8 percent are methamphetamine addicts, Day said.

"Treatment is no longer a one-size-fits-all approach," Day said. "That is not acceptable. Providers like 12&12 have to collaborate at various stages in the process, including with the medical and psychiatric community."

The nonprofit recently had more than $100,000 in state funding cuts from its transitional living program.

"The trickle-down from those cuts is happening," Day said. "It means individuals who go into treatment and need up to four months of additional services don't have money there for that. We hope they are ready after residential care. But if they have no family, no money, no housing and no options for continuing service care, unless we help them engage in the community, their success rate at staying clean and sober go down."

The 12&12 center developed a program, the Sober Living Program, which is a continuation of services that requires patients to pay for room and board.

"That's only covering those with the ability to pay," Day said. "Many individuals utilizing state resources do not have that capacity."

Alcohol and drug abuse

The number of adults provided with substance abuse services by the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services is a fraction of the total in need.

A 2011 federal study found that 9.3 percent of the state population ages 12 and older, or 275,106 Oklahomans, were dependent on or abused illicit drugs or alcohol in the past year.

The study was based on surveys conducted in 2008 and 2009.

The National Survey on Drug Use and Health also determined that 10 percent, or 302,736 people ages 12 and older, said they had used marijuana in the past year.

The study also ranked Oklahoma No. 1 in the nation among states in the nonmedical use of pain relievers.

The survey found that an estimated 241,535 people indicated they had used pain relievers for nonmedical purposes.

When it comes to treatment needs, Oklahoma ranks No. 8 among states in the percentage of the population age 26 and older who were in need of receiving treatment for illicit drug use but had not received it.

An estimated 1.83 percent of those 26 and older had not received needed treatment for illicit drug use in the state, according to the survey.

Among those age 12 and older, Oklahoma ranks 15th in the nation among states for those needing treatment for illicit drug use but not receiving it.

An estimated 81,403 Oklahomans age 12 and older needed treatment for illicit drug use, according to the federal survey.

- CURTIS KILLMAN, World Staff Writer



HOW TO GET HELP

The state Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services Department maintains a reach-out hotline for people seeking assistance with substance abuse problems. Call 800-522-9054 or go to tulsaworld.com/mhsas

By the numbers

State-funded substance and alcohol abuse treatment

16,865: Number of adults provided a treatment service

41.7: Average age of adult receiving a service

58: Percent males

74: Percent white

Source: ODMHSAS data, fiscal year 2011



This is the seventh part of a series exploring drug addiction in Oklahoma.

It is produced by the staffs of the Tulsa World, The Oklahoman, Oklahoma Watch, State Impact Oklahoma, OETA, and Griffin Communications.

The project reporting on addiction seeks to uncover reasons leading to Oklahoma's top ranking in prescription drug abuse and high use of other substances, current efforts to address the problem and possible solutions.




Previously in the series: Read stories at tulsaworld.com/addiction

March 10: Drug addiction costs the state of Oklahoma $7.2 billion a year, a figure that tops the state government's entire budget of $6.7 billion.

March 11: Read about the other addicts, the middle-aged and middle-class Oklahomans who start taking pain pills for bad backs and other injuries and tumble into addiction and even death by overdose.

Monday: Discover the science and research behind what is making some people addicted to drugs and alcohol and read stories of how some addicts are seeking help.

Tuesday: Read about how much drug abuse is costing businesses in the state and what the head of the mental health and substance abuse agency says needs to be spent on an effective prevention and treatment system.

Wednesday: Find out how Drug Court saved a grandmother addicted to prescription drugs and about the growing programs backed by faith-based groups.

Saturday: Find out about how many criminal charges filed in one day involve the use of alcohol or drugs.
Ginnie Graham 918-581-83760
ginnie.graham@tulsaworld.com

Curtis Killman 918-581-8471
curtis.killman@tulsaworld.com

RELATED ITEMS
Related Stories:

Treatment helps addict regain life

Paying for private treatment often difficult

Local

New bee species found in northwestern Oklahoma

The bee belongs to a group of solitary bees commonly known as "wool carder bees" because their cotton-like brood cells are made of plant hairs.

Faculty from Vietnam visiting Oklahoma State

The group is the fourth delegation of visiting faculty from the university to visit OSU.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

Ginnie Graham

918-581-8376
Email

Curtis Killman

918-581-8471
Email

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