Pubdate: Wed, 19 Jul 2000 Source: Journal Gazette (IN) Copyright: 2000 Journal Gazette Contact: 600 W. Main Street, Ft. Wayne, IN. 46802 Fax: (219) 461-8648 Feedback: http://www.jg.net/jg/emailform2.htm Website: http://www.jg.net/jg/ METHADONE CLINIC DOESN'T FIT STEREOTYPE Wells Street Merchants And Bloomingdale Neighborhood Residents Take Note: Street junkies won't visit the medical clinic that just moved to Wells Street around the clock looking for free, easy highs from methadone. First, most of the patients, according to the clinic's co-owner, are not addicted to street drugs such as heroin. Most are people from all incomes and walks of life seeking treatment for addiction to legally prescribed pain medication. Second, the clinic opens early in the morning and closes at 12:30 p.m. Most of the 50 or so patients who visit each day are there and gone before 9 a.m. Third, methadone is not dispensed for nothing. Treatment - which includes counseling as well as methadone - costs $49 a week, and patients tend to be motivated to kick their habits. Finally, methadone does not give users a "high." Proper doses of methadone do not give the patient a euphoric or sedative feeling. Dr. Jay Fawver, a local psychiatrist, says comparing heroin to methadone is akin to comparing cocaine to a cigarette. Some neighbors expressed concern when Center for Behavioral Health Indiana Inc. announced plans to move into the vacant storefront at 1414 Wells St., wedged between a pawn shop and convenience store. They fear the patients that the clinic will bring and worry about its proximity to Bloomingdale Elementary School. But for the past 21U2 years, the clinic was situated just two blocks from Lakeside Middle School without complaints. A neighboring doctor in the Park Lake Medical Building, the clinic's home until Monday, said he knew of no incidents involving clinic patients. The clinic was forced to leave because its lease was up, the building had new owners and a new tenant outbid the clinic for the space, according to Brant Massman, co-owner of the Center for Behavioral Health Indiana. The Wells Street location was chosen because it is centrally located for its patients. Granted, the location is not ideal for a medical clinic because its storefront location is out in the open, making it hard for patients to discreetly slip in and out. A medical setting would seem to be the preferred location. The clinic informed patients of the move in advance, though, and those concerned about privacy can schedule pre-rush hour appointments. The clinic is much like a physician's office. Indeed, a staff physician evaluates patients, and methadone is given only with his prescription. The clinic employs two full-time nurses as well. Medical students in their second and third years of residency visit the clinic. State and federal agencies regulate and inspect it. Neighborhood residents and merchants should not be criticized for their trepidation about the clinic. They understandably want to try to keep unsavory people from their neighborhood, already home to several bars, some with a rough reputation. But like those at other clinics, the patients of the Center for Behavioral Health are simply seeking medical help to address a physical ailment. Hells Angels don't meet weekly at the Harley Davidson repair and apparel store across the street from the clinic. That stereotype has long been shattered - Harley owners are as likely to be well-paid professionals in their 50s and 60s. Bloomingdale residents should likewise reject the stereotypical image of the methadone clinic and judge whether it really affects the neighborhood. If problems arise and are documented, the clinic should voluntarily move. If not, just as the motorcycle store and pawn shop have become part of the neighborhood, the clinic can as well. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager