Summer 2016 | Page 18

The Trouble with Lawyers Addiction and Behavior Health Issues Challenge the Profession By John M. Olson In a recent comprehensive national study conducted by the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation in conjunction with the American Bar Association (ABA) Commission on Lawyers Assistance Programs (LAPs), new insight was gained into the addiction and mental health problems plaguing American lawyers. The study was printed in the February 2016 issue of the Journal of Addiction Medicine. A survey questionnaire was sent to approximately 15,000 lawyers in 19 states, with approximately 13,000 responses. What were a few key revelations learned from the responses? • 21 percent of licensed, employed lawyers qualify as problem drinkers; • 28 percent struggle with some level of depression; and • 19 percent demonstrate symptoms of anxiety. The study further found when the focus is solely on the volume and frequency of alcohol consumed, at least one in three practicing attorneys are problem drinkers. Additional findings reveal problem drinking and higher levels of depression are significantly higher among men, although women were found to have higher incidents of anxiety. Contrary to earlier beliefs that longer serving lawyers were more apt to demonstrate such problems, it is the younger lawyers, in the first 10 years of practice, that statistics show have the highest numbers suffering from these problems. Finally, an alarming percentage of addiction and mental health issues exist in growing numbers prior to law school, 25 percent according to the survey. Unaddressed, these concerns only get worse with the stress and strain of the educational demands imposed on students. Quoted in a recent ABA news clip on the survey, the study’s authors, Patrick R. Krill, director of the Legal Professional Program at the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation, and Linda Albert, representative of the ABA Commission on LAPs, expanded on their conclusions. Recognizing it may be difficult to determine when a lawyer needs help, there are signs and symptoms to watch for, according to Albert: • A person’s behavior changes, they start coming in late to the office or leaving early; • Their work product changes, they have decreased production or the quality of their work suffers; • They isolate, stop attend