| It's Time Brazil Learn Killing Drug Dealers Is Not the Answer |
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| 2010 - November 2010 |
| Written by Edison Bernardo DeSouza |
| Friday, 10 December 2010 21:55 |
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In many cases, the children are initiated at a very young age to make use of drugs, especially in the very poor areas, where many times the parents have to work long hours to be able to survive, and there are no recreational facilities or day care centers available. Many times , drug dealers may even initiate the long road to drug addiction inside schools. His mother had already been abandoned by her husband, Morais's biological father, when he was two years old. The kid's mother got married a second time. Morais had no better luck. His stepfather started abusing him physically at the age of 3 and after 5 years of physical and psychological abuse and even death threats, the stepfather took off with all his mother savings leaving them in misery. He ran away from home at the age of 15, and lived on the beach among many other kids addicted to drugs, fleeing from police. I contacted many institutions in order to find out the cost of a drug addict in São Paulo, Brazil. At Casa de Terapia (Therapy House) in Cotia, interior of São Paulo, for example, Pastor Nelson informed me that it costs 800,00 reais (US$ 469) monthly. They do not offer free treatment. "When I told my family what happened, they'd rather see the devil, than see me again," he said. The second problem is to find a vacancy in a hospital. Although the CAPS in many regions of Brazil do provide assistance and therapy for many cases involving drug dependency, many of them do not provide hospitalization. The third difficulty is the cost. Many of these patients have to pay at least US$ 200,00 per month, a cost that many families in Brazil are unable to pay. There has never been any information indicating that the money recovered from the police regarding drug apprehension profits has been used to help some institutions to provide free treatment. "The demand is high, and we do not have enough units available for free, if you decide to opt for treatment through SUS - Unified Health System, there will be only 5 beds available." In Caxias do Sul, in Brazil's South, there are 5 rehab centers available, none of them offered by the government. DeSouza currently lives in São Paulo where he teaches English as a Second Language for both private English Language Institute and Private High-School. He is currently participating as an actor in two English Musicals in Sao Paulo - Brazil and is pursuing further advancements in his career. He is particularly interested in economics, history, politics and human rights articles. |