These are the faces of addiction and recovery in Canada, report says - Action News
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These are the faces of addiction and recovery in Canada, report says

A group of researchers with their own experience recovering from addictions surveyed hundreds of Canadians in recovery to find out how the country needs can tackle the ever-growing problem.

Researchers on first-ever national addiction report say recovery is positive

From left, Marshall Smith, Stacey Petersen, Dr. Ray Baker and Ann Dowsett Johnston share their personal experiences with addiction and findings of a national online survey on the subject in St. John's Thursday. (Meghan McCabe/CBC)

If addictionmakes you think of a lone person in a dark alley injecting drugs into their arm, you're not alone. But a first-ever report on recovery in Canada aims to tell you how wrong that image is.

"Canadians don't see themselves reflected in that imagery, and so it allows them to say, 'that's not me, therefore I don't have a problem' and as a result of that the problem continues to grow," says report author Marshall Smith.

The Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction (CCSA) presented the Life in Recovery from Addiction in Canada report Thursday morning at The Gathering Place in St. John's.

Ann Dowsett Johnston says she was winning awards in her career while her personal life fell apart due to her addiction to alcohol. (Eddy Kennedy/CBC)

"This report gives us our first real window into this country's recovery community," saidAnn Dowsett Johnston, who worked on the report. She saidit's a "call for national action."

Its researchers,members of the National Recovery Advisory Committee, know first-hand what addiction and recovery looks like.

Addiction is a health issue, not a moral one

"I was a highly professional, highly educated woman with an enviable career who self-medicated with alcohol," said Dowsett Johnston.

I was a highly professional, highly educated woman with an enviable career who self-medicated with alcohol.- Ann Dowsett Johnston

The stigma around realizing you have a problem and getting help,along with immediate access to treatment are two of the big barriers to recoverynoted by survey respondents.

"It's a health issue, not a moral issue," said Dowsett Johnston.

The committee said addiction needs to be treated like cancer or diabetes, with everyone from friends and familyto employers and health care professionals offering empathy and support.

Marshall Smith, now in recovery, worked at the legislature in British Columbia before alcohol left him homeless in Vancouver. (CBC)

"If cancer comes back, we don't shame or berate the person for the recurrence. We treat them with love and compassion," said Stacey Petersen, a member of the advisory committee.

The report "celebrates recovery," according to Rita Notarandrea, chief executive officer at CCSA, as it shares the stories of 855 people from different walks of life across the countryall in recovery from addiction to drugs oralcohol, all finding their lives significantly improved.

"We should be hearing more about these stories of recovery, the hope that underlies all of this," saidNotarandrea.

Can't afford to ignore the problem

For the authors, the report is about "transforming" the way addictions and recovery are looked at in Canada and the problems highlighted bygaps in the system exposed by theopioid crisis.

The evidence-based approach to the issue hassupport from provincial and federal levels of government.

The report found the connections between childhood trauma, mental health issues, addictions and homelessness were strong. And that treating addiction doesn't have to be expensive with 91 per cent of survey respondents crediting 12-step mutual support groups like Alcoholics Anonymous with their recovery.

I ended up hanging up my suit and tie, leaving my office at the legislature, and found myself a new resident of the downtown east side of Vancouver where I lived as a homeless addict.- Marshall Smith

Connecting with people early, before losing their jobs, homes, and families, is one of the recommendations of the report's writers.

Marshall Smith, from B.C., knows the importance of that very well, having left a job with the provincial government 14 years ago when his alcoholism progressed.

"I ended up hanging up my suit and tie, leaving my office at the legislature, and found myself a new resident of the downtown east side of Vancouver where I lived as a homeless addict for fiveyears on the streets of Vancouver until I found treatment, until I found recovery," he said.

"Today Ihave a great life."