Pubdate: Wed, 14 Jun 2000 Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) Copyright: 2000 New Zealand Herald Contact: PO Box 32, Auckland, New Zealand Fax: (09) 373-6421 Website: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/ Forum: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/forums/ Author: Paul Yandall DRUG'S MANAGERS DEFEND HOME USE OF METHADONE Hamilton - Managers of methadone programmes have hit back at criticism for not controlling the prescription drug, following the death of a man who experimented with it. Marcus Binzegger of Hamilton died after he and friend William Rutherford injected themselves twice with the controlled class-B drug on March 10. Rutherford was convicted on Monday for using the drug and ordered to undergo supervision for an assessment of his drug use. Mr Binzegger's death has led to concern over availability of the powerful synthetic drug, which is given to registered opiate addicts for treatment. For non-addicts, such as Mr Binzegger, the drug can be fatal because of the body's lack of resistance to it. Police suspect the pair obtained the drug from an authorised user before buying disposable syringes at Hamilton's Anglesea St needle exchange service. Mr Binzegger's parents, Urs and Rosina, have criticised the apparent easy availability of the drug, in particular the practice of allowing some patients to take quantities home with them. On his Radio Pacific breakfast show yesterday, former National Police Minister John Banks claimed that the Waikato's methadone programme was out of control. But Vicki Crarer, of Specialty Services Mental Health, which administers methadone to 195 users in the Waikato and Coromandel regions, said criticism of the programme was unjustified. She said that although a few users were allowed to take the drug away from where it was dispensed, most had to drink their methadone on the spot. "The programme is not just about controlling their addiction, it's about normalising their life. Having someone constantly wandering down to the local pharmacy to take it - which is too much like a drug "score" - that's not normal, is it?" But she conceded that once a user left with the drug there was no way to stop him or her from selling it to another user, such as Mr Binzegger - along with its potentially fatal consequences. The manager of the Auckland Regional Methadone Service, Max Lloyd, said those allowed to take the drug away had to show that its use would be safe and was necessary because of work, study or family reasons, The Health Funding Authority gave $7 million to the methadone programme this year to cater for the country's 3300 registered users. Rutherford's lawyer, Warren Scotter, told, the Hamilton District Court on Monday that the pair were also encouraged by the easy availability of syringes used to inject the methadone. The national coordinator for the needle exchange programme, Simon Nimmo, said its philosophy was based on harm reduction and it was lack of education about drug dangers that led to deaths like Mr Binzegger's. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek