Treatment: Handle This Choice With Care : Selecting Rehabilitation Facility Is Matter of Meeting Individual Needs
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Choosing a drug or alcohol rehabilitation facility for a child often is a decision guided more by emotion than reason.
But because of the number of programs from which to choose, state and local authorities who monitor the facilities say selecting the proper treatment center should be made with care. They say the parents must find the exact program for their child, and that each child must be judged as an individual case.
“You must proceed in a methodical fashion, because that is the only way to go,” said Chauncey L. Veatch III, director of the California Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs.
So where do you begin with a multitude of programs ranging from private, state-of-the-art facilities that charge several thousand dollars a week for treatment, to public-run centers that charge a minimal fee depending on a family’s income?
Veatch suggests that parents talk to friends, physicians and state and county agencies that deal with treatment centers before deciding which facility is best for their specific need.
For example, some teen-agers may need inpatient care in which they live at the facility. Others may need a strong outpatient program in which they spend part of the day in treatment but otherwise continue their daily routine.
Dr. Max Schneider, a Santa Ana physician who treats drug and alcohol patients, said there is no magic potion for recovery. An 18-day program may work for one person; another individual may need six months or more.
Schneider said the model facility should be located close to a person’s home so no one in the family has an excuse not to attend counseling sessions. He said it should have certified drug-alcohol abuse counselors, physicians who have shown expertise in the field of chemical dependency, and a psychologist, psychiatrist and recreational therapist available.
The treatment program also should have a strong family treatment plan so that all members of the family will be involved in the therapy.
“We will not take the kid without mom and dad, because we feel if we’re going to restructure the kid’s life, we have to do it with mom and dad there,” said Tim Allen, executive director of Break Through Clinic in Costa Mesa. “And in order to treat anybody, you’ve got to uncover all those family secrets.”
Schneider also said that after-care treatment programs are essential. He said patients must attend group meetings such as Alcoholics Anonymous or Cocaine Anonymous for a long time after they complete their recovery program.
“A 10-day, 21-day or 30-day program is just an artificial arrangement,” Schneider said. “You must go for a period of at least six months (including after-care treatment). Kids will require longer professional involvement than adults.
“It is most important of all once you are hooked on a mind-altering drug. The propensity to get rehooked to that drug or some other drug will be embedded for life.”
Treatment really is a re-education that emphasizes fighting temptations for the rest of their lives, Schneider said.
“I’ve been in the AA program for a few months,” said Deanna de St. Paer of Irvine’s University High School. “Through it, I’ve learned a lot about people’s problems, teen-age alcoholism in general and not to judge people too quickly. I don’t think it’s OK to drink or get stoned because drinking causes more problems than it’s worth.”
Typically, life at a recovery home or hospital is mundane and structured. Patients attend group therapy sessions, lectures on the effects of drugs and alcohol, meditation sessions and AA meetings at night. Those who must first go through detoxification are slowly weaned off the drugs through medication.
At Break Through, an outpatient clinic, therapists spend about 10 1/2 hours a week with the teen-agers and their parents for anywhere from 16 to 20 weeks. They usually attend meetings four times a week. They are given family therapy and group therapy and are tested for drugs. Then they are put into an after-care treatment program such as AA meetings to help assimilate them back into society.
Schneider’s model is one followed by most facilities, state officials said.
But one state official, who asked not to be identified, said about 10% of the private facilities are not up to industry standards. One of the reasons, he suggested, was that private facilities do not have the kind of stringent licensing laws that public-run programs have. The laws vary because government-funded programs often receive more scrutiny, he said.
Bill Edelman, division manager of drug programs for the Orange County Health Care Agency, said his office has heard complaints that as soon as insurance money runs out, patients have been dropped from programs. Other officials stated concerns that some doctors will convince parents that their children need hospitalization when the kids may not.
“Are they all legitimate?” Schneider asked. “I am not sure. Some are better than others. I think this a major national problem: How does a lay person know the criteria to pick a good treatment program?”
Schneider said the American Medical Society is preparing a consumer’s guide due to be released at the end of year.
Since 1982, there has been a 400% increase in drug and alcohol treatment facilities in California, said Veatch. Randall Huyser, a health care analyst from Montgomery Securities of San Francisco, estimated that the industry has had an annual growth rate of 25% for the past three years.
The increase of facilities reflects both the growing problem and the growing market for clinics now that an increasing number of insurance programs are willing to reimburse policy holders for drug detoxification.
Irma Strantz, director of the Los Angeles County Drug Abuse Program, said the rise of private programs such as those run by the Comprehensive Care Corp. has occurred because the cocaine epidemic moved into the upper and middle classes. The addicts were people who could pay for comprehensive treatment with or without insurance. Also, she said a state law change in 1984 allowed hospitals to add treatment programs without losing licenses for areas that they cut back to give attention to drugs and alcohol units.
Hospitals, searching for new sources of revenue because of Medicare funding limits, started delegating beds for substance abusers.
Huyser, the health care analyst, said the publicity of popular athletes committed to rehabilitation programs also has contributed to the industry’s growth.
Despite this increase, the state-subsidized programs in Los Angeles County have waiting lists as long as six months, Strantz said. She said there is not enough funding to accommodate the needs of teen-agers. Orange County, however, usually does not have long waiting lists, said a county social worker.
One solution to the high cost of operating recovery homes would be stronger intervention programs at the schools, Strantz said.
Tom Anthony, principal of Mission Viejo’s Capistrano Valley High School, has set up a system that will involve 30 families this school year and is expected to double next school year.
Anthony, who developed a similar program at Los Alamitos High School five years ago, said he educates teachers to identify students’ behavioral changes. The teachers then alert a core drug committee as to which students may need help.
He said the program at Los Alamitos has been a success, and initially, it is working at Capistrano Valley.
“We’ve met with about 20 families and every one of the teachers has been right on (about identifying problems),” Anthony said.
REHABILITATION CENTERS AVAILABLE TO ADOLESCENTS IN ORANGE COUNTY
AGAPE COUNSELING AND THERAPY SERVICES (Outpatient Services)
Address: 520 N. Brookhurst 104, Anaheim 92801
Fees: Scale begins at $30 an hour
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 999-1161
POSITIVE ALTERNATIVES TO DRUGS-ALCOHOL, ANAHEIM MEMORIAL HOSPITAL (Inpatient)
Address: 1111 West La Palma Ave., Anaheim 92803
Fees: About $345 a day
Length of Program: 8-12 weeks
Phone: 774-1450
BACK IN CONTROL TRAINING CENTER (Outpatient)
Address: 1234 W. Chapman, Orange
Fees: $295
Length of Program: 6 weeks plus follow-up
Phone: 538-2563
BREAK THROUGH (Outpatient)
Address: 151 Kalmus Suite J-2, Costa Mesa 92626
Fees: Maximum $40 an hour, family
Length of Program: Average 10 weeks
Phone: 957-8229
Address: 1661 N. Raymond, 112/114, Anaheim 92801
Fees: Maximum $40 an hour, family
Length of Program: Average 10 weeks
Phone: 870-0337
CAPISTRANO BY THE SEA HOSPITAL AND CLINIC (Psychiatric Inpatient)
Address: 33915 Del Obispo, Dana Point 92629
Fees: About $400 a day
Length of Program: Up to 12 months
Phone: 496-5702
CAREUNIT HOSPITAL OF ORANGE (Inpatient)
Address: 401 S. Tustin Ave., Orange 92666
Fees: About $394 a day
Length of Program: 30-120 days
Phone: 633-9582
CENTER FOR CREATIVE ALTERNATIVES (Outpatient)
Address: 132 E. 18th St. Costa Mesa 92627
Fees: In-school no fee, outpatient scale
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 642-0377
Address: 28261 Marguerite Pkwy, Mission Viejo 92692
Fees: In-school no fee, outpatient scale
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 364-1066
Address: 16541 Gothard, Hunt. Beach (administration)
Fees: NA
Length of Program: NA
Phone: 841-8770
CHARTER GROVE HOSPITAL (Psychiatric Inpatient)
Address: 2005 Kellogg Ave., Corona 91720
Fees: About $600 a day
Length of Program: About 6 weeks
Phone: 735-2910
CONCEPT 7 FAMILY SERVICES (Residential Treatment, Group Home)
Address: 17772 Irvine Blvd. Suite 211, Tustin 92680
Fees: $2,150 a month for Social Services
Length of Program: 9-12 months
Phone: 669-9119
COUNTY OF ORANGE, HEALTH CARE AGENCY/DRUG ABUSE SERVICES (Outpatient)
Address: 1133 Homer St., Anaheim 92801
Fees: Sliding scale
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 991-2334
COUNTY OF ORANGE HEALTH CARE AGENCY/ALCOHOLISM SERVICES (Outpatient)
Address: 3115 Redhill Ave., Costa Mesa 92626
Fees: Sliding scale
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 834-8323
COUNTY OF ORANGE HEALTH CARE AGENCY/ALCOHOLISM SERVICES (Outpatient)
Address: 211 W. Commonwealth, Fullerton
Fees: Sliding scale
Length of Program: Average 9-12 months
Phone: 441-0740
COUNTY OF ORANGE HEALTH CARE AGENCY/DRUG ABUSE SERVICES (Outpatient)
Address: 1725 W. 17th St. Suite 232, Santa Ana
Fees: Sliding scale
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 834-5041
COUNTY OF ORANGE HEALTH CARE AGENCY/ALCOHOLISM SERVICES (Outpatient)
Address: 14120 Beach Blvd. Suite 203, Westminster
Fees: Sliding scale
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 896-7574
DAYBREAK (Aftercare)
Address: 1515 W. North St., Anaheim 92801
Fees: $110/week
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 635-9622
POSITIVE ACTION CENTER, HEALTHCARE MEDICAL CENTER OF TUSTIN (Inpatient)
Address: 14662 Newport Ave., Tustin 92680
Fees: About $393 a day
Length of Program: About 3 months
Phone: 838-9600
JOINED FIRMLY TOGETHER (Assessment)
Address: P.O. Box 4379, Irvine 92716-4379
Fees: $40 an hour
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 786-2730
HOTLINE HELP CENTER (Crisis Services, Youth counseling)
Address: P.O. Box 999, Anaheim 92805
Fees: Donations accepted
Length of Program: Short-term
Phone: 778-1000
MEMORIAL COASTVIEW (Inpatient)
Address: 455 Columbia, Long Beach 90801
Fees: $310 a day
Length of Program: 45-90 days
Phone: 213-426-6619
NEW BEGINNINGS, PLACENTIA-LINDA COMMUNITY HOSPITAL (Inpatient)
Address: 1301 Rose Dr., Placentia 92670
Fees: $330 a day
Length of Program: Average 60 days
Phone: 524-4894
ORANGE COUNTY COMMISSION ON ALCOHOLISM FOR SPANISH SPEAKING (Inpatient)
Address: 9842 W. 13th St., Garden Grove 92644
Fees: Sliding scale adults, no fee children
Length of Program: 90 days
Phone: 531-4624
PALMER DRUG ABUSE PROGRAM (Outpatient)
Address: 9812 Hamilton, Huntington Beach 92646
Fees: Donations accepted
Length of Program: Varies
Phone: 968-2714
PHOENIX HOUSE (Residential program)
Address: 1207 E. Fruit St., Santa Ana
Fees: Sliding scale
Length of Program: 12-18 months
Phone: 953-9373
STRAIGHT AHEAD (Residential program)
Address: 34185 Coast Hwy., Dana Point 92629
Fees: $800 a month or sliding scale
Length of Program: About 6 months
Phone: 831-0360
STRAIGHT TALK CLINIC (Outpatient)
Address: 5712 Camp St., Cypress 90630
Fees: Sliding scale
Length of Program: 6 months
Phone: 828-2000
TEENS LIVING CLEAN, PACIFICA COMMUNITY HOSPITAL (Inpatient)
Address: 18792 Delaware St., Huntington Beach 92648
Fees: $465 a day
Length of Program: 8-10 weeks
Phone: 842-0611
TURNING POINT FAMILY SERVICES PROGRAM (Outpatient)
Address: 12912 Brookhurst Suite 150, Garden Grove 92640
Fees: Sliding scale
Length of Program: 10-12 weekly sessions
Phone: 636-3823
WEST COUNTY COUNSELING CENTER (Outpatient)
Address: 17612 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 92647
Fees: Sliding scale
Length of Program: Minimum 3 months
Phone: 847-3356
Source: National Council on Alcoholism
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