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Military Addiction Treatment Bill Introduced
February 3, 2009

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News Summary

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) has introduced legislation that would make addiction treatment more available to members of the military and provide more privacy protections to service members who seek help for alcohol and other drug problems, Stars and Stripes reported Feb. 2.

The Support for Substance Use Disorders Act is aimed in part at the widespread perception that service members who seek treatment could be punished. "Our men and women in uniform deserve the very best health care available," McCaskill said. "Substance abuse is a medical problem and to think they can't get the help they need, or worse receive punishment instead of treatment, is outrageous."

On the other hand, the legislation acknowledges that commanders need to be aware of the status of their troops and would spell out when and how they would be notified about treatment and recovery related issues.

The measure also would establish a treatment planning process for the military and support treatment research.  

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by lisaf-breakingthecycles on 03 Feb 09 02:33 PM EST
This is wonderful news - especially given the relationship between binge drinking (alcohol abuse) and suicide in light of the increased suicide rates amongst our troops recently reported.

Posted by claire lavin on 04 Feb 09 08:44 AM EST
this is good news. I would hope that there would be more awareness and treatment for our servcemen and women. I would be interested in working with Them.

Posted by Adaiah Gooden, MA BHT CL on 04 Feb 09 09:15 AM EST
This is beautiful! I facilitate mandated DUI groups and this is where I see some of our veterans after they have a problem and must get help. Some say they are waiting to get help from the VA. Doesn't have to be this way.

Posted by Jesus Armenta on 04 Feb 09 09:15 AM EST
Our men and woman serving our country deserve the best health care available nor should they be penalized for seeking treatment associated with alcohol and substance abuse....Semper Fi!!

Posted by Anonymous on 04 Feb 09 01:59 PM EST
The threat of punishment for using cannabis (forget the hard drugs) is the one thing fending off the well-deserved total extermination of the tobacco cigarette industry, which pays taxes to the government to fund militarization as a means of getting the next generation of youngsters hooked on tobacco. a veteran's fear of asking for addiction treatment (any drug) is an unavoidable byproduct (collateral damage) of Big Tobackgo's anti-cannabis scare campaign which keeps the oligarchical imperialism going.

Posted by Steve in VT on 04 Feb 09 08:42 PM EST
This is good news...it would be even better news if they were willing to pay for treatment outside the VA.

Posted by robin souers on 08 Feb 09 12:57 AM EST
Truly a nice idea, but if the bill is intended for active duty soldiers, the Army isn't real open to nice ideas. What they have instead are regulations and their own little shop of horrors. AR 600-85 requires commanders to refer their troops to the ASAP. Period.

Posted by Robert D. Taylor Jr on 09 Mar 09 01:43 PM EDT
I am a Counselor for the Navy. I am a success story for Navy treatment. The quality of treatment is equivalent to "brand name" civilian treatment. Given the choice between civilian tx and SARP, I'd go to SARP. It takes all services and Tricare Prime. For someone who isn't apptropriate for SARP, Tricare does pay for outside treatment. Navy tx should be funded better for sure but it is available. People shouldn't bad mouth things they know absolutely nothing about.

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