|
| Home | Rehab Blog | Ask the Rehab Expert | Rehab Archive | Rehab RSS Feeds | Advertise | Sitemap |
Drug Rehab Is In Short Supply For Native Americans |
|
contribute to this site?
Rehab Menu |
Drug Rehab Is In Short Supply For Native AmericansBy Rod Mactaggart There were 5,170 Indian patients on the waiting list for elective surgeries last year in Montana and Wyoming. Local officials said Indian Health Service (IHS) doctors are overworked, and a budget crisis within the IHS means patients wait months or even years for surgeries. To tide them over, doctors prescribe painkillers that are feeding the epidemic. A worker at a drug and alcohol treatment center in Montanas Indian Country said when patients come to the hospital they are offered more pain pills rather than drug rehab. The fact that there is no charge for prescriptions at IHS clinics helps fuel the sale of contraband pills - for example, a methadone tablet that was obtained free sells for up to $20 on the Blackfeet Reservation. This leads to a widespread prescription drug trade and more addicts than ever. Poverty also plays a role - investigators have found elderly people selling their prescriptions to make ends meet. In remote communities like Heart Butte, a wind-battered village on the Blackfeet Reservation, residents point out 'pill houses' where addicts can buy addictive painkillers like OxyContin, Vicodin and morphine patches that were originally prescribed by the IHS. Drug rehab counselors at the Fort Peck Reservation say addicts have been known to deliberately injure themselves to get more prescriptions. The manager of a drug rehab and alcohol treatment center run by the Blackfeet tribe and partially funded by the IHS said there has been an upswing of prescription opiate addicts. She said her staff could use more training on treating prescription drug addictions, because opiate addicts require more attention, may need up to six months of treatment, and the center has to leave beds empty despite a waiting list. The center takes addicts from as far away as Washington state because there are so few accredited, in-patient successful drug rehabdrug rehab treatment centers for Native Americans. About the Author: Rod MacTaggart is a Florida-based freelance writer who contributes articles on health. Contact: info@drugrehabreferral.com
http://www.drugrehabreferral.com/content/drug_rehab
|
| Home | Rehab Blog | Ask the Rehab Expert | Rehab Archive | Rehab RSS Feeds | Advertise | Sitemap |