Pubdate: Mon, 17 Apr 2000 Source: Times Argus (VT) Copyright: 2000 Times Argus Address: P.O. Box 707, Barre VT 05641 Fax: (802) 479-4032 Feedback: http://timesargus.nybor.com/Opinion/Letters/ Website: http://www.timesargus.com/ GIVE METHADONE A CHANCE As the House Health and Welfare Committee considers a bill allowing methadone treatment for heroin addiction, Gov. Howard Dean has continued his firm opposition. Dean's objections are worth a careful hearing, but they don't necessarily add up to a case for defeating the bill. Methadone is a synthetic substitute for heroin that in all but eight states is administered to addicts, freeing them from their craving for heroin and allowing them to live relatively normal lives. The methadone bill already has passed the Senate. In opposing it, Dean has offered the testimony of addicts who describe the failure of methadone to help them kick heroin and other drugs and who say the only way they could free themselves of drugs was to go cold turkey with the help of counseling and a 12-step program. Certainly, that is a course of treatment that ought to be encouraged. But methadone is used all across the country because so many addicts are unable to follow that course. Dean criticizes the recidivism of those who use methadone. The committee ought to consider the recidivism of those in programs that lack methadone. Dean also worries that the use of methadone and the creation of methadone clinics will draw addicts to Vermont and create magnets for crime. Since methadone is available elsewhere, it's hard to see why addicts would suddenly flock to Vermont. Without methadone treatment in Vermont, some addicts may stay away. But with methadone treatment, Vermonters addicted to heroin are more likely to bring their habit under control. Thus, any crime that might be encouraged by the presence of methadone clinics would probably be more than offset by the reduction of crime resulting from the elimination of the heroin addict's desperate need. And by siting the state's methadone clinics inside existing hospitals, a recent suggestion, the Legislature would take a useful step in transforming the treatment of drug addiction into a medical rather than a criminal problem. Siting the clinics in hospitals would also diminish the likelihood that the clinics would serve as hotbeds for illicit trade in methadone or heroin. Dean argues that a drug called buprenorphine, now being tested at the University of Vermont, works better than methadone. If it does, and if it eventually wins approval, there is no reason the state couldn't use it instead of methadone. But in the meantime, methadone is a widely used treatment that could help Vermonters tame the scourge of heroin addiction. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck