Pubdate: Sun, 27 Feb 2000 Source: Dallas Morning News (TX) Copyright: 2000 The Dallas Morning News Contact: P.O. Box 655237, Dallas, Texas 75265 Fax: (972) 263-0456 Feedback: http://dmnweb.dallasnews.com/letters/ Website: http://www.dallasnews.com/ Forum: http://forums.dallasnews.com:81/webx Author: Ed Housewright, Staff Writer of The Dallas Morning News A PRESCRIPTION FOR BEATING HEROIN Methadone gains credibility as way to end addiction to street drugs or pain-killers Before dawn each day, they start lining up outside Dr. J. Thomas Payte's clinic on the edge of downtown Dallas. When the doors open at 5:30 a.m., the doctor's patients file in for their fix of a narcotic they say they can't live without. Most of these men and women, of all ages, classes and colors, used to be addicted to heroin. Some abused prescription painkillers. They've traded those drugs for a daily dose of methadone, a legal but highly regulated substance that advocates say turns junkies into productive citizens. "For me, it's the answer," said Klyndia Smith, 45, as she waited for the clinic to open. "It enables me to maintain some semblance of a normal life." Methadone, which blocks the addict's craving for heroin and painkillers without producing a high, isn't new. It has been around for more than 35 years and has been criticized by some in the medical mainstream because it's not a true cure. It, too, is addictive, and many patients stay on methadone for years. Some are hooked for life, as hooked as they would be on any street drug, without all the negative side effects. But methadone, long dispensed from nondescript clinics that keep a low profile, is gaining credibility. Prominent government officials and scientific organizations have recently touted it as a safe, effective weapon in the fight against heroin use, which is on the rise nationally. Federal drug czar Barry McCaffrey surprised - and angered - some drug opponents by calling for wider use of methadone. The National Institutes of Health concur, saying methadone "significantly lowers illicit opiate drug use, reduces death and crime and enhances social productivity." In Texas, the number of methadone clinics has increased from 55 to 70 in the past three years, according to the state Health Department, which licenses clinics. "The literature is very, very comprehensive that methadone is an effective treatment," said Dr. Jane Carlisle Maxwell, chief researcher for the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse. "There are an awful lot of people who are using methadone, doing well and maintaining normal, crime-free lives. "We want people to be abstinent, but one of the things we're learning is that. . . for some long-term drug users, their brain chemistry has literally changed. They may never be able to be abstinent because their brain is telling them, 'You've got to provide this chemical to me.' " The increase in methadone use coincides with a spike in heroin-related deaths. In 1998, the most recent year for which figures are available, a record 374 people in Texas died from heroin overdoses, according to the commission on alcohol and drug abuse. In Plano alone, 13 teens have been killed by heroin since 1994. McCaffrey endorses More addicts should be persuaded to shift to methadone, according to the Office of National Drug Control Policy, which Mr. McCaffrey, a former Army general, heads. Currently, at least 810,000 people nationwide chronically use heroin, and 170,000 receive methadone, the office says. "Only a fraction of those addicts who can benefit from methadone treatment do so," said a written statement from the drug office. "There is a substantial body of knowledge and a rare scientific consensus on both the utility of methadone treatment and its appropriateness for many addicts. . . . Methadone treatment must be more widely available to those who need it." To methadone user Tommy Romine, there's no debate on the drug's merits. "It's been fantastic," said Mr. Romine, 37. "It got me off dope. It's really changed my life for the better." He and many other addicts tell painfully similar stories. They turned to crime to support their habit. They lost jobs and families. Their health deteriorated. On methadone, users say, their lives stabilized. A quick swig of the cherry-flavored liquid in the morning is all it takes. No cravings. No withdrawal pains. No shooting up. The nine Dallas-area methadone clinics open early so people can get their fix before work. Their clientele defies stereotypes. "We've got people who live under the bridge, and we've got people who own the bridge," said Rick Bingham, a counselor at D. Gonzalez and Associates, a Garland methadone clinic. On a recent morning at Dr. Payte's modest, white-brick office at Market Center and Turtle Creek boulevards, a plethora of occupations were represented: Realtor. Cook. Architect. Painter. Waitress. Mechanic. Telecommunications manager. An attorney who is a patient wasn't there. Dr. Payte, who opened a methadone clinic in San Antonio 33 years ago, has 275 patients in Dallas. Many say they have tried repeatedly without success to kick heroin on their own. One of the doctor's youngest patients is 19-year-old Veronica Miles of Waxahachie. (To get methadone, a person must be at least 18 and have been addicted to heroin for a year or more.) She visits the clinic with her father, Rodney Miles, also a recovering heroin addict. "I can't function without methadone," said Mr. Miles, 45. "It changed my lifestyle totally. I'm productive now. It turned me into a normal person." The oldest methadone user in Dallas County may be Lee Jackson, 77, who has taken it for 36 years. His health prevents him from visiting a methadone clinic, so a caseworker delivers it to his North Oak Cliff nursing home. "I can't say enough about methadone," he said. "Without it, I'd be dead or in jail somewhere." Use carries stigma Most methadone users want to remain anonymous. They say reliance on the drug, even though it's legal, carries an enormous stigma. A 40-year-old architect, the mother of two young children, hasn't told anyone but her husband. "I'm fearful of what people might think," she said. "If I told my friends, I'm afraid they wouldn't let me around their children." Another methadone patient is a physician who wouldn't give his name or age. He said he became addicted to prescription painkillers four years ago, trying them out of curiosity. "I made a horrible, horrible, horrible decision in my life, and I paid a lot for it," he said. "It's horribly embarrassing to talk about. It's so hard for me to put into words what the term 'powerless' is until you get addicted to a substance. You will do absolutely anything to get it." A man who gets methadone at West Texas Counseling & Rehabilitation in Irving recently built a $250,000 house in a Dallas suburb. He hasn't told his two young sons about his past heroin use or his 18 years on methadone. "Some day they'll find out, but I want them to find out when they're a lot older and they can deal with it," said the 47-year-old. "They see me as a regular dad, seemingly successful." Some disappointments But methadone is no panacea, and it doesn't work for everyone. Brandi Gray is an addict who has been on and off heroin many times. In her third week of methadone treatment not long ago, she said she was determined to succeed. "This time I really am sick of heroin," said Ms. Gray, 21. "Every other time I said I was sick of it, but I really wasn't." However, she acknowledged later that she continued to use heroin sporadically and dropped out of the methadone program. She then checked into a mental hospital to become free of all drugs and has recently started methadone at another clinic. Again, she said she's optimistic she can stay off heroin. Estranged from her parents because of her long history of drug abuse, she'd been living with her grandparents. But they, too, kicked her out after a recent relapse. After that, she was staying in her car. "I screwed up everything - my whole life, my relationship with my family. There's no going back," she said. "I can mend it a little bit, but not all the way." A walking anti-drug ad, she urged others not to get hooked. "The high you get is not worth what you lose," she said. "Heroin is terrible. I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy." Not only does methadone block heroin cravings, it also prevents the excruciating withdrawal symptoms - intense cramps, sweating, nausea and diarrhea. Methadone was developed in Germany during World War II as an alternative painkiller to morphine. It belongs to a class of drugs, called opiods, that includes morphine and heroin. In the early 1960s, two New York researchers discovered that methadone could be used to treat heroin addiction. Some people wean themselves from methadone, but many say they're afraid to even try. They worry that they'll immediately revert to heroin, and their lives will again careen out of control. Advocates maintain that giving methadone to heroin addicts is no different from giving insulin to diabetics. The drug's only known side effect is minor constipation for some people. "I don't want to even talk about" getting off methadone, said another 47-year-old man who asked not to be identified. "I don't think it'll ever happen for me. I will go to my grave being a methadone addict. I've come to realize that I have an addictive personality." That many users can't give up methadone provides ammunition for critics. Even though it's safe and tightly controlled, they say, methadone is still a drug. And users are still addicts. "I think if it's used as a conduit from heroin with the eventual goal of getting off methadone, that's fine," said Ed Cinisomo, vice president of Daytop Inc., a national, abstinence-based drug treatment chain that has a facility in Dallas. "Some people certainly need that. But I know people who are on methadone for a very long time. It becomes a lifestyle. People deserve better than that. You're conditioning them that this is the only way they can survive. "These poor folks are like lemmings showing up at the clinic every day. It's a whole subculture." How it works At most clinics, people receive drug counseling along with methadone. They're encouraged to participate in support groups such as Narcotics Anonymous. Patients usually start on a low dose, 30 milligrams. That's about a quarter-inch in a small disposable cup. After three months of regular visits to a clinic, most patients are allowed to take home four doses a week so that they don't have to come in every day. After three years of good attendance, some users are allowed six take-home doses and visit the clinic only once a week. Patients are given random urine tests. If they continue to fail, they can be kicked out of the program. Methadone isn't cheap. Most clinics charge $50 to $60 a week. Of course, that's a bargain compared with the $300 to $400 a day that some junkies spend on heroin. Heroin users typically need four to six fixes a day. By comparison, one dose of methadone stabilizes a person all day long. Private insurance sometimes covers methadone treatment, but many people don't file claims because they're afraid their employer will find out about their addiction and fire them. Low-income patients receiving public health-care benefits may be able to receive methadone for a nominal charge. One Dallas executive said methadone helped lift him, literally, out of the gutter. Hooked on heroin, he was once homeless and "damned near selling my soul." Now, he owns a company in the medical field. "I have lived a very normal lifestyle for many years," said the 50-year-old man, who wouldn't give his name. "This is something that should be well-accepted. It's got a very big stigma and it's wrong. Methadone is not the root of all evil. "If anything, it has been many people's saving grace. It has for me and my family and numerous associates and friends." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck