MIDVALE The state's newest addiction-treatment center has opened in an effort to attack the state's newest drug problem: moms on methamphetamine.
"It is rare nowadays that any woman who is referred for treatment doesn't list meth as her primary drug of choice," said Pat Fleming, director of the Salt Lake County Division of Substance Abuse. "They and their children are the fallout from all those lab busts we used to hear about on the news.
"The operators are in prison, but the women like those who come here are dealing with an addiction that is ruining their lives. This center helps them pick up the pieces."
Meth addiction ruined Jodi Gelino's life for a while. She became a daily user of the drug, first to get high and later just to get through the day.
"It got so I couldn't get out of bed without it," Gelino said. "It does all these neat things for you at first, but then you realize you can't live or function without it."
In March 2001 the state took her 8-month-old daughter into custody. Gelino was enrolled in treatment and civil drug court, had one relapse in 16 months and says that "today I am a person of worth and I have a happy life and I wouldn't trade that."
Gelino says treatment is the only option for meth users who are losing control. "I haven't seen any beautiful things happen on their own to someone who is addicted to drugs. Things will only get more out of control."
In the past fiscal year, 1,243 meth-addicted mothers of dependent
children entered treatment. In Utah, meth is the only illegal drug that women use more than men do, and more than 67 percent of women in treatment for meth are mothers, according to new state substance-abuse data.
That means any treatment must include child care, which wasn't available to Gelino but will be available now at the live-in Valley Mental Health Cottonwood Family Treatment Center. The center, which opened Wednesday, is an effort by a variety of agencies to break mothers of their drug habits without breaking up their families.
Susan Mitchell, coordinator of Valley Mental Health's substance-abuse services for women, said meth-using mothers live in unstable conditions and tend to have marginal vocational skills and severe drug-related cognitive impairment that requires more treatment.
The center will improve all those aspects of their lives in a stable residential setting that includes their children. "We find often that women are a lot more likely to seek treatment if they know they won't have to be apart from their children," Mitchell said.
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