Pubdate: Sat, 29 Apr 2000 Source: Bangor Daily News (ME) Copyright: 2000, Bangor Daily News Inc. Contact: http://www.bangornews.com/ Author: Claude P.M. O’Donnell is chairman of the board of directors at Acadia Hospital. METHADONE CLINIC TO BUILD BETTER LIVES The op-ed commentary by U. S. Attorney Jay McCloskey about the metha-done clinic proposed for Bangor (BDN, April 13) causes me to respond. First, it is important to acknowledge that we are fortunate to have law enforcement officials in our community who are vigilant and concerned about the ever-increasing problems of illegal drug use. Acadia Hospital has always been supportive of efforts by law enforcement to reduce illegal drug use in our community. As U.S. Attorney McCloskey re-minded us recently, four heroin-related deaths in Bangor have occurred since 1998. What is important to know is that there are many more people being routinely treated for drug overdose in the emergency rooms of our local hospitals. He is correct in asserting that illegal drug use and addiction are thriving in our city. For that reason it is constructive to consider methadone as a treatment option for those who desperately seek recovery from the life-threatening effects of opiate drug addiction. The state of Maine has asked Acadia Hospital to be the clinical service provider of the proposed methadone maintenance treatment program for this region. >From the early development stages of this program, Acadia planned to participate in a broader community discussion about the use of methadone. Its intention is to achieve consensus for multiple responses to opiate addition. Several months ago, the Bangor Daily News ran a feature story on the growing problem of opiate addiction in northern Maine, with particular emphasis on the increasing use of heroin. The article served as an important wakeup call for northern and eastern Maine. Law enforcement, medical clinicians, educators, clergy and state and city public officials must collectively respond to this multidimensional problem. People addicted to drugs are often those we would not necessarily imagine. We tend to have a picture of the "typical addict" in our mind’s eye and for most of us it is a very limited view. We take some comfort in knowing that we, or our children, won’t come in contact with drug addiction because we think we know which people to avoid. Unfortunately, it is not that easy. Illegal drug use includes people from all segments of our society. "They" live with and among us. Their addiction may be the result of legal or illegal use of drugs, and that distinction is important to remember. Addiction, illegal or otherwise, is still a debilitating disease for the person afflicted. It is expensive, too. Available research estimates the cost of heroin for a user at $80,000 to $100,000 a year. To support this habit, users typically engage in criminal activity, committing thefts or engaging in various forms of sexual prostitution in exchange for cash or drugs. Criminal behavior motivated by addiction results in significant direct and indirect costs to victims and communities. The availability of a methadone treatment service in Bangor will not, by itself, curb the illegal use of drugs. It does, however, provide the recovering person with an alternative lifestyle, free of addiction and crime. Many communities have seen a de-crease in crime when this service is offered. Economically speaking, when methadone is provided to patients on a daily basis, the average cost is approximately $80 a week. This results is an annual cost of approximately $4,200, including detoxification, rehabilitation therapy and family support programs. Patients in a methadone treatment program can and often do return to normal lives, fulfilling their parenting roles and contributing as productive members of the community. It is true that this form of treatment, just like law enforcement interdiction, is not always 100 percent effective. But the combination of all appropriate resources will likely produce the best result. The broad acceptance of methadone treatment for opiate addiction is supported by the national experience. The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy estimates that there are 810,000 heroin addicts in the United States. Only 138,000 to 170,000 people currently receive methadone as part of an addiction treatment program. There are approximately 900 meth-adone treatment programs in the United States. The prospect of locating a methadone treatment service in Bangor is much like getting a medical diagnosis for an operation we didn’t expect, much less wanted, but need. Touching up the X-ray to avoid the operation may be less painful, but it surely isn’t a cure. Bangor is the most strategic regional center in northern and eastern Maine. One cannot fault the Maine Department of Mental Health for selecting Bangor as a potential site. Mayor Michael Aube demonstrated wise civic leadership by recommending that a community task force examine ways of doing what is best for all concerned. Personal or political agendas have no place in this dialogue. Acadia Hospital encourages citizens of this community to take an active interest in these public sessions. Attend if you can, and become educated about this important subject. While you are doing so, you might consider the closing thought of a Joint Statement issued July 22, 1999 by Health and Human Services Secretary Donna E. Shalala, General Barry R. McCaffrey, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, and U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno, regarding a regulatory proposal that requires the accreditation of substance abuse treatment programs that use methadone to treat heroin and other opiate addictions: "Improving access and availability to substance abuse treatment is an essential part of our national strategy to reduce drug addiction and its consequences. These proposed regulatory changes will bring the full force of our medical and clinical knowledge to bear on treating heroin addiction. The result will be a strengthened treatment system that will be good for patients, practitioners, providers, communities and our nation." I take comfort in the collective wisdom, caring and dedication of the Acadia family as decisions about treatment for all patients are considered in human terms with the primary objective of returning people who are ill to healthy and purposeful lives. Certainly, all concerned citizens would probably agree with that objective, now let’s work together on how best to attain it. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck