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For every $1 states spend dollar sign on substance misuse and addiction, 94 cents go to shovel up the consequences instead of for treatment and prevention. TELL YOUR LEGISLATORS

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States Waste Billions Dealing with Consequences of Addiction, CASA Study Says
May 28, 2009

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News Summary

The vast majority of the estimated $467.7 billion in substance-abuse related spending by governments on substance-abuse problems went to deal with the consequences of alcohol, tobacco and other drug use, not treatment and prevention, according to a new report from the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University.

The report, titled, "Shoveling Up II: The Impact of Substance Abuse on Federal, State and Local Budgets," found that 95 percent of the $373.9 billion spent by the federal government and states went to paying for the societal and personal damage caused by alcohol and other drug use; the calculation included crime, health care costs, child abuse, domestic violence, homelessness and other consequences of tobacco, alcohol and illegal and prescription drug abuse and addiction.

Just 1.9 percent went to treatment and prevention, while 0.4 percent was spent on research, 1.4 percent went towards taxation and regulation, and 0.7 percent went to interdiction.

"Such upside-down-cake public policy is unconscionable," said Joseph A. Califano, Jr., CASA's founder and chairman. "It's past time for this fiscal and human waste to end."

CASA estimated that the federal government spent $238.2 billion on substance-abuse related issues in 2005, while states spent $135.8 billion and local governments spent $93.8 billion. The report said that 58 percent of spending was for health care and 13.1 percent on justice systems.

Researchers estimated that 11.2 percent of all federal and state government spending went towards alcohol, tobacco and other drug abuse and addictions and its consequences. The report said that Connecticut spent the most proportionately on prevention, treatment and research -- $10.39 of every $100 spent on addiction issues -- while New Hampshire spent the least -- 22 cents.

Learn more and get the report

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by YTH corrections on 29 May 09 01:47 PM EDT
I have to disagree with the inclusion of criminal Justice in this study/report; at least speaking for youth corrections. As a coordinator of Mental health and AOD treatment services for a youth corrections facility the money spent IS GOING TO TREATMENT i.e. education (GED or Diploma’s), level III AOD treatment, Offense specific TX, SO TX, mental health TX. As a licensed professional I along with colleagues personally over see empirically based treatments with impressive results i.e. 30% recidivism over the past 5 years. Please who ever did this study has some skewed stats. I can't speak to the other state agencies and programs or even Adult corrections but with out criminal justice, domestic violence, and health care agencies the anti-social and addiction mindset is left to run wild a 'research based/back statement.' It is true treatment (community based I believe is the voice) needs funding too but a balanced approach is needed. It takes a team. But don't throw fellow team mates under the bus to save your self/TX program.

Posted by Jimbjneal@aol.com on 30 May 09 08:34 AM EDT
To limit government spending to just the population that fits some diagnosis for addiction is a step backward in public policy. The consequnces of substance use are broad and failure to recongize that most of the problems caused by use are not caused by those addicted is to take a narrow view of treatment and prevention.This article perhaps does not do justice to the study. For example, I would like to know if the researchers thought the objectives in Healthy People; 2010 for substance abuse were proper areas for government spending.

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