A National Directory of Drug Treatment Centers and Alcohol Treatment Centers, Therapists and Specialists. A free, simple directory providing assistance and guidance for those seeking help regarding alcohol addiction, drug addiction, dependency and many other conditions that affect the mind, body and soul.
Call 888-647-0579 to speak with an alcohol or drug abuse counselor.

Who Answers?

Getting drunk shouldn't be normal

We have such a great place to live. We have great schools, good jobs and beautiful lakes and natural resources to enjoy. There’s another distinction, though, we shouldn’t be so proud of: our cultural acceptance of the overconsumption of alcohol. We drink just to get drunk.

As a result, we see so much human misery and face enormous public safety, health and economic costs because of this misuse of alcohol.

It’s tough to pick up the newspaper or turn on the news and not see stories about people being arrested for their third, fourth, fifth, sixth and even 13th drunk driving offense.

We’re so used to these kinds of stories that we think this behavior is normal. It’s not.

Wisconsin has the absolute worst rate of binge and chronic heavy drinkers in the nation. We have the worst rate of underage drinking in the country. We’re also worst in the country for fatal car crashes caused by alcohol.

In Dane County, more than 40% of the fatal car crashes last year involved alcohol. Three times as many people are killed in alcohol-related traffic crashes than are murdered in Dane County each year. Three thousand people are booked on drunk-driving charges in this county each year.

Alcohol is a major factor in many other crimes too, like sexual assault. Nearly 40% of offenders and almost two-thirds of victims are under the influence at the time of a sexual assault. Alcohol is a factor in nearly one in three of the physical assaults in our state.

UW-Madison police issued more than 1,000 underage drinking tickets in 2006. That figure doesn’t include the tickets written by other law enforcement agencies downtown. Campus police report finding students unresponsive in their own beds and in bathroom stalls lying in their own vomit. Students have fallen off their bikes, down flights of stairs and even worse. All while drunk.

Do we want our deputies and police officers spending their shifts hauling drunks to detox instead of patrolling our neighborhoods?

As taxpayers, we spend about $60 million each year to run the county jail. Nearly half of the sentenced inmates are in jail for alcohol-related offenses. We spend an additional $8 million in hard-earned county tax dollars on court programs to help those addicted to alcohol and drugs.

That’s a major commitment, and we’ve seen great results. Treating the consequences of alcohol abuse and treating those who suffer from it is important work that we should do as efficiently and humanely as we can. But the real question remains: Can’t we do more to prevent this problem?

Alcohol misuse is the third leading cause of preventable diseases. Seventeen thousand people were so impaired in this state last year they had to be hospitalized.

Our state has the highest number of women of child-bearing age who binge drink. One in three women ages 19-44 report drinking alcohol during their pregnancies. That increases dangerous risk factors jeopardizing the well-being of the baby.

It’s estimated nearly 25,000 Dane County kids go home to parents who are intoxicated, either passed out on the couch or, worse yet, verbally and physically abusive. This is real human misery.

With all the greatness of our community, why do we put up with this?

We can be different. We all need to look inside ourselves and think twice about what we’re willing to accept as appropriate. Whether it’s looking in the mirror or talking with a co-worker, friend or family member, we all can be part of the solution.

We need to do more for our young people who right now grow up in a culture thinking the only things to do on Thursday, Friday or Saturday nights involve a bottle-opener, can or keg.

That’s why I’ve spent the past several months studying, reading, listening and reviewing the options for how we can best move forward to address our problem with alcohol. This fall, I’ll produce a set of steps I think we need to take.

This isn’t about stopping drinking to celebrate. It’s about stopping the celebration of drinking.
____________
source: Isthmus, http://www.thedailypage.com

More Treatment & Detox Articles

Mom. Businesswoman. Alcoholic.

A mother climbs out of the depths of addiction She stood on the sidelines amid the blankets and camp chairs, a petite, brown-haired woman in a monogrammed polo shirt, cheering as her 7-year-old son sprinted down the soccer field. At halftime, she stepped up with a water bottle and pep talk. And after the game….

Continue reading

Campaign aims to steer kids off booze

Thousands of children are being admitted to the region’s hospitals with alcohol-related illnesses. Statistics show more than 3,000 under-18s end up in hospital in North East England each year due to excessive drinking, 149 of those in South Tyneside hospitals. The Department for Children, Schools and Families launched an advertising campaign to get parents to….

Continue reading

FTC, Florida Attorney General Charge Promoters of Bogus Alcohol Cure

alcohol addiction treatment

The Federal Trade Commission is suing a company that touted a phony cure for alcoholism, charging that it tricked hundreds of problem drinkers into paying hundreds or thousands of dollars for a service prescribing ineffective concoctions of natural supplements, and then threatened to reveal the drinkers’ alcohol problems if they canceled their memberships. Filed jointly….

Continue reading

Symptoms of ADHD in children

“Attention deficit hyperactivity disorders” is commonly known as the “ADHD”. This disorder is commonly seen in children and can turn into a chronic mental disorder. Since, this is a mental condition; ADHD largely affects the child’s progress at school and on social front. In a survey, it was found that boys are more prone to….

Continue reading

Professional ex-s´

I have found really interesting article in Journal of Contemporary Ethnography from 1991. The author, J. David Brown, is Assistant professor of sociology at Northern Illinois University who had struggled for 13 years with substance abuse problems, then he went to rehab and after then, he started to be a counselor himself. He uses the….

Continue reading

Calls to the general helpline will be answered by a paid advertiser. By calling the helpline you agree to our terms of use.

I NEED TO TALK TO SOMEONE NOWI NEED TO TALK TO SOMEONE NOW 888-647-0579Response time about 1 min | Response rate 100%
Who Answers?