If you've never been addicted, this may surprise you: Getting into treatment for an alcohol, drug or gambling addiction is often a frightening experience.
You're afraid of change, scared to live without your habit, questioning whether you deserve success because people have beaten you down about your failings.
Not only that, but people also often get into treatment as a result of a crisis — a brush with the law, loss of children to state custody or an ultimatum from a boss or spouse.
Nobody can make treatment easy, but Oregon is going to make it a better experience.
I remember the story of a homeless heroin addict. She wound up in the hospital after being hit by a Mack truck while wandering on a highway shoulder. The last time I saw this woman, though, she was in recovery from her addiction and enrolled in a master's program on an Oregon university campus.
What changed? For the first time in years, someone — it was her parole officer — told her she was a worthwhile person.
Science tells us addiction is a disease, yet addicts trying to get well may be treated more negatively than the chronically ill person with heart disease, diabetes or cancer.
An addict who relapses while in treatment is often discharged from the program. But that is like denying treatment to the cancer patient who misses a chemo appointment or the diabetic who eats a box of doughnuts.
We are telling state-financed treatment providers to stress people's strengths and resilience, not their symptoms and illness. You talk to a cancer patient about hope for recovery; we should be talking to addicts that way, too.
Recovery is an issue of not only personal quality of life, but also reduced medical, judicial and other expense to the public.
To be successful, treatment should be supported by families who are engaged, by peer-to-peer counseling, by alcohol- and drug-free housing and by other continuing supports that promote recovery.
People who want to get into treatment and recovery or who want to help a loved one should keep these phone numbers handy: Oregon Partnership, 1-800-923-4357, to learn about alcohol and other drug treatment. Or call your local county mental health office (see the government pages of your phone book) for details.
Gambling helpline: 1-877-278-6766, for information about free, lottery-financed treatment.
If you qualify based on income (such as enrollment in the Oregon Health Plan or food stamps), treatment is free. If not, the cost is based on a sliding scale.
No matter how long you have been addicted, we believe you have strengths to overcome your disease. We believe in your recovery.
Karen Wheeler is addictions policy manager in the Oregon Department of Human Services.