| SUBSCRIBER LOGIN |
|---|
| News Briefs | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
||||||||||
| Polls |
|---|
| Special Offer |
|---|
|
|
| Faith Communities Have Powerful Influence In Confronting Addictions |
| Columns - Opinion | ||||||||
| Monday, 30 September 2002 | ||||||||
|
Communities of faith must overcome mistaken stigmas that drug and alcohol dependency results from moral failure and willful misconduct. Churches, synagogues, temples, mosques, native spiritualities, among other faith systems must step up to the plate in preventing and treating addictive behaviors.Combining “the power of God, religion, and spirituality with the power of science and professional medicine to prevent and treat substance abuse and addiction,” is the remedy of Joseph A. Califano, Jr., president of the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University, gleaning from its two-year study, So Help Me God: Substance Abuse, Religion and Spirituality: Why Priests and Psychiatrists Should Get Their Acts Together.Stigma has been identified as “the most entrenched obstacle for faith communities or spiritualities to overcome,” concludes P. Riccio in Prevention Pipeline, (7/8 '96, Breaking Down the Walls: Connecting Faith With Communities), published by the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention of Rockville, MD.
Initial use of drugs or alcohol may be voluntary, however, consensus
of addiction specialists today agree that use may all too readily lead to
addiction, which is now defined as a chronic, relapsing disease that can be
successfully treated. Heart disease and diabetes patients, conditions which may
result from years of smoking or poor dietary choices, are encouraged and
supported in their efforts to secure treatment, yet, drug and alcohol-dependent
persons suffer in isolation daily, despite the good news that addictions are as
successfully treated as other chronic diseases, such as asthma, diabetes, and
hypertension, reports the National Institute of Health, National Institute on
Drug Abuse in Bethesda, MD (Oct., '99).
• For 6 out of 10 Americans, religious faith is the most important influence
in their lives, and for 8 out of 10, religious beliefs provide comfort and
support;
Powered by !JoomlaComment 3.25
3.25 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved." |
||||||||
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|


















