Free booze benefits homeless alcoholics
Free booze benefits homeless alcoholics
January 5, 2006
TORONTO, Ontario (Reuters) -- Giving homeless alcoholics a regular supply of booze may improve
their health and their behavior, the Canadian Medical Association Journal said in a study published
on Tuesday.
Seventeen homeless adults, all with long and chronic histories of alcohol abuse, were allowed
up to 15 glasses of wine or sherry a day -- a glass an hour from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. -- in the
Ottawa-based program, which started in 2002 and is continuing.
After an average of 16 months, the number of times participants got in trouble with the law
had fallen 51 percent from the three years before they joined the program, and hospital emergency
room visits were down 36 percent.
"Once we give a 'small amount' of alcohol and stabilize the addiction, we are able to provide
health services that lead to a reduction in the unnecessary health services they were getting
before," said Dr. Jeff Turnbull, one of the authors of the report.
"The alcohol gets them in, builds the trust and then we have the opportunity to treat other
medical diseases... It's about improving the quality of life."
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rewritten, or redistributed.
Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/americas/01/05/toronto.booze.reut/index.html
Canadian Medical Association Journal article
See commentary at
See letter at http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/eletters/174/1/50#3416
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