Pubdate: Fri, 02 Jun 2000 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2000, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: #250, 4990-92 Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta, T6B 3A1 Canada Fax: (780) 468-0139 Website: http://www.canoe.ca/EdmontonSun/ Forum: http://www.canoe.ca/Chat/home.html Author: Doug Beazley CODEINE POSSIBLE LIFELINE FOR HEROIN ADDICTS For John, getting off heroin the first time was heavy lifting. But the cure hurt worse than the disease. John started shooting up in his teens, running with a lowlife crowd on the West Coast and stealing eight-track players to feed the habit (it was the 1970s, after all). "Maybe it was peer pressure," he says now. "Being on heroin is like being in a car in neutral. Apart from the drug and the jails, nothing ever happens to you." More than 10 years ago, hoping to quit the spike for good, he joined a government-funded methadone program. Methadone is a narcotic pain reliever used to take the edge off heroin withdrawal. Some addicts who go through the treatment manage to quit both heroin and methadone for good. Most, like John, fall short. "It was horrible," he says. "Devastating. Going from heroin to methadone was nothing. Going off methadone was painful. Shakes, aching in all my joints. "It took me four or five years to get off methadone. I started back on heroin six years ago." Now John's ready to try again. But not with methadone. This time, he's hoping a novel drug-replacement program running in Edmonton can help him get clean for good. Dr. Peter Akai is an internal medicine specialist practising at the non-profit Boyle-McCauley clinic. In 1997, he started prescribing codeine in an effort to treat the large number of street addicts piling up at his door. "About 60% of our patients are drug addicts. Maybe half of those are on opiates, heroin included," he says. Akai's method operates on the same principle as a methadone program: substitute one drug for another. Unlike most methadone programs, however, Akai's program aims at weaning the user off the drug for good. "Methadone is a maintenance program," he says. "The idea is to switch the user from a dangerous street drug to a safer (licensed) drug." Akai prescribes codeine tablets in very short prescriptions and very high doses. Codeine has an opiate effect like heroin. An addict might consume a quarter-gram a day of heroin, equal to 6,000 milligrams of codeine or about 200 pills. "Obviously I'm not going to start them with 200 pills," he says. "An addict here might start with 30 pills daily, which would be enough to kill you or me. "In 10 days I'll drop that patient down to 27 pills, then to 24 in another 10 days. In a few months he'll be down to zero." Akai takes precautions. The prescription durations are short, to keep the pills from being re-sold on the street - a common problem with any drug-replacement program. The codeine program is even being used to treat people with codeine addictions. Sam, one of Akai's patients, got hooked on prescription T-4s (codeine-laced painkillers) after a hospital operation on her uterus seven years ago. "I didn't even know they were addictive," she says. "I kicked cold turkey on a trip to Vegas a year ago, but it made me really sick. I couldn't do that again. "The codeine program lets me down slow. I can feel myself getting better. My head's getting clearer, I can think straight. I can plan. "Next step is to get right down to zero drugs and get back to work, maybe go to the States." What's missing from Akai's program so far is hard evidence that it works. He doesn't do the urine-testing mandatory in methadone programs, so he depends on voluntary reporting from his clients to determine who's clean and who isn't. "About 100 people have gone through the program so far," he says. "Thirty-two have left as of December. "Of the 32, 14 say they're completely off drugs. Six switched to methadone, and 12 dropped out completely." Since codeine-detox is still a fairly rare form of treatment, there are no studies comparing its results to methadone programs. Recently, Akai received a $20,000 provincial grant to study the costs and benefits of the program over the next year and a half. "We may end up doing drug tests to verify the results," he says. "If we can prove it works, I'd like to see it implemented across the province." That's Akai's long term. John's long term involves hard years of white-knuckle abstinence. He knows it won't be easy, no matter what pills he takes. "But I'm motivated," he says. "Once you know what the bottom of the bottom looks like, you get motivated." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea