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Baseball Star's Story a Home Run for Addiction Treatment
July 22, 2008

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Commentary
by Anthony Papa

Texas Ranger Josh Hamilton is the new golden boy of baseball. Hamilton's record-breaking performance in Major League Baseball's All-Star Home Run Derby at Yankee Stadium on Monday is a living testament to that fact that people who struggled with drugs in the past can change their lives in a positive way.

A few years ago, Hamilton, who developed an addiction to alcohol and drugs -- primarily crack cocaine -- was at a lowest point of his life when he was suspended from baseball for three years.

Instead of giving in to the downward spiral of drug addiction, he made an effort to turn around his life through his love of baseball. After eight stints in rehab, Hamilton was finally able to kick his addiction and return to baseball. While he may not have won the Home Run Derby crown, battling and defeating the monster of addiction makes him a winner.

Hamilton was fortunate that his addiction was not handled as a criminal manner. Instead of having Hamilton deal with his demons behind bars, his addiction was treated as a medical problem, which helped him get his life back on track.

Hamilton's story sends a powerful message to society. Individuals who have drug addictions can become productive citizens, if given the chance.

A realistic way to help those who cycle in and out of addiction is to increase community-based treatment. Studies have shown this to be a cost-effective method of reducing drug abuse. Hamilton was lucky enough to be able to afford treatment and get access right away. Most people cannot afford it. And even if they can, they are usually forced to compete for the available treatment slots.

Recent developments in criminal justice indicate the emergence of a national movement in favor of treating, rather than incarcerating people charged with a nonviolent drug possession offense. These developments include drug courts, local policies which favor treatment, and statewide ballot initiatives that divert nonviolent drug offenders to treatment instead of incarceration.

But instead of following this trend, the federal government continues to turn a blind eye toward this movement and steadfastly sticks to zero-tolerance when it comes to illegal drug use. Witness the get-tough policies of the Office of National Drug Control Policy under the direction of John P. Walters. In fact, the drug office is so hell-bent on controlling the so-called drug plague that their policies have turned from overly intrusive to downright war-like at times.

From suspicionless student drug testing to mandatory minimum sentencing laws that dish out extraordinarily long sentences for small amounts of drugs, the drug war continues [to] be the government's national moral obsession. It is one thing to try to shield society from the harms associated with the drugs, but another when its solutions become worse than the original problems.

We need to implement sensible drug policies that uphold the sovereignty of individuals over their minds and bodies, and are grounded in science, compassion, health and human rights. Maybe then we can give people like Josh Hamilton another chance to make good on their potential.


Anthony Papa is a communications specialist for the Drug Policy Alliance.

Join Together publishes selected commentary relevant to alcohol and drug policy, prevention and treatment. The views expressed are solely those of the author.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:
(Comments now appear first to last)

Posted by Dr. Daniel Hart, Msc.D. on 23 Jul 08 10:22 AM EDT
Ultimately, I believe strong & effective self-help treatment, well-publicized, will be the core of national recovery from addictive lifestyles. My "Yogoda Self-Help" 8-part formula is one such guidance available, included in U.S. Dept. of Justice references.

Posted by nina on 23 Jul 08 11:21 AM EDT
How lucky to get eight tries at treatment. The average person is lucky to get one good one. This shows the social and economic few get more support and more chances at getting and staying sober. This is an injustice. anon

Posted by Mr. Z on 23 Jul 08 11:31 AM EDT
"give people...another chance." Josh wasn't given another chance, he was given 8 chances. Rather than thinking in terms of chances, we could be thinking what will work for this individual situation. If some one has cancer and the first treatment doesn't work, do we say we will give you another chance, or maybe a 3rd chance. If you have valuable skills for society, will we give you a 4th or 5th chance? This still wasn't enough for Josh. Like cancer, we can kept trying different treatments until something works. They still have the disease, but it is under control. If we think of chances we can get into endless debate of how many chances some one should get. Are little chances the same as big chances? Is giving some one another chance for being late to treatment the same as another chance for relapsing on alcohol, and is that the same as another chance for some one in a full blown active use lifestyle? I think it would be benifical if the idea of chances be abandoned, and we focus on what is a resonable way of dealing with this personal and social problem. With our present state of knowledge, I would think that one of the alternatives would also have to be confinement.

Posted by John from Oceanside on 23 Jul 08 12:22 PM EDT
Shame on Drug Policy Alliance using Josh Hamilton and his success to futher their propaganda. In California their new prop five will distroy Drug Courts most effective tool, the ability to flash incarcerate. The State of California had passed a funding bill that would have made Prop 36 more effective by including flash incarceration which treatment professionals wanted. But the Drug Policy Alliance went to court and got an injunction to block the funding from going through. Then they came up with Prop 5 which has no accountability, the individual does not have to show up for treatment and buried in the middle of the prop it pretty much legalizes posession of marijuana. Please on the surface Drug Poilicy Alliance stuff looks good until you take a good look then you find out what it really is no accountability and drug legalization.

Posted by Slugger Lou on 23 Jul 08 05:43 PM EDT
Josh is a Slugger, all right. In more ways than one. SLUGS.....not drugs, is the answer.

Posted by Jeffrey C Smith on 28 Jul 08 10:56 AM EDT
The event that caused Josh Hamilton to seek treatment, was his suspension from Baseball caused by a positive drug test. So the author's opposition to drug testing is non-sensical and contradictory. Were it not for drug testing there would be no detection of Hamilton's crack use, and detection had to come before the subsequent suspension and treatment that turned out so positively.

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