Pubdate: Fri, 27 Jul 2001 Source: Sault Star, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2001 The Sault Star Contact: http://www.saultstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1071 Author: Frank Dobrovnik Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) ANOTHER LOCAL DEATH LINKED TO MORPHINE While community service agencies study establishing methadone treatment locally, another sudden death in Sault Ste. Marie has been added to a mysterious cluster the Ontario chief coroner's office is investigating as morphine-related. A sudden death in June is now being looked at in relation to 12 local deaths since October 1999, confirmed deputy chief coroner Dr. Jim Cairns. "It's being investigated, as they all are, in its own right, as a single death, but it's also being investigated to see if there's anything regarding the circumstances of that death that may tie in to the other deaths," Cairns said Thursday. Citing confidentiality rules, he would not reveal details about the victim or circumstances of the death. But he said some aspects of the latest death may "be of help in resolving some of the issues" that have so far kept investigators from solving the other 12 deaths. He expects firmer results in about a month's time. "There are some similarities but that's all at this time it would be accurate for me to say," he said. "There are some things here that we may know more about than we did in some of the others . . . There's a line of inquiry that's ongoing that may be fruitful, but it's too early to say." One of the theories being pursued is whether the victims _ those confirmed are 10 men and two women _ received morphine from the same source. Cairns said investigators are no closer to confirming that but he hopes the question will eventually be answered. A few facts have emerged since April, when the chief coroner's office took the investigation over from the regional coroner in northwest Ontario and the Sault Ste. Marie Police Service to see if new patterns could be gleaned from a different perspective. As reported in January, morphine has been confirmed as the primary cause of death in only one of the victims. The drug has been attributed as a contributing factor to natural disease in five other cases. Four of those were determined to have been prescribed morphine legally for ailments such as chronic back pain. In contrast to earlier suspicions, injection is not the preferred method of administering the drug. Injection has been determined in only five cases so far. Six were found to be known drug abusers, and several of the victims, aged between 30 and 50, were at least acquaintances. Meanwhile, a committee of community service providers met for the first time Wednesday to study the feasibility of methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) in Algoma District to combat morphine addiction. Traditionally, addiction to painkillers _ largely heroin but also morphine _ has been treated through methadone, a synthetic opioid that helps suppress withdrawal symptoms and can be regulated to prevent euphoric or sedative side-effects. According to the CAMH, the number of Ontario patients involved in MMT has been increasing dramatically _ from 770 in January 1996 to more than 5,000 four years later. But several communities, including the Sault, offer no methadone treatment services outside correctional services. The nearest centre is Sudbury, which has only one physician licensed to prescribe methadone. As of June 2000, only 118 physicians were actively prescribing methadone for the purposes of MMT in all of Ontario. So far the committee has representation from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, the Algoma Health Unit, the John Howard Society, Addiction Treatment and Prevention Services of Algoma, Ontario Works, a local pharmacist, a local family physician and a local provider of laboratory services. The committee is partly a result of a directive of the Ontario Substance Abuse Bureau, an arm of the provincial health ministry that funds addiction treatment agencies such as the CAMH. The committee also grew out of the work of Addiction Treatment and Prevention Services of Algoma, which in May released an information pamphlet offering tips for safer injection drug use. Committee chair and CAMH program director Mike O'Shea said the need for MMT has been proven but recruiting a family physician here for that purpose is a daunting task. "It's more of a resource barrier to service, in terms of finding a physician who might be interested in providing the service," he said. "It's kind of a difficult sell to tell a physician who's already run off his feet he should be looking at this kind of treatment." He added that MMT involves more than just a physician _ a number of community supports need to be established to methadone patients, such as counselling and follow-up. He does not expect service this year, even if it is determined to be feasible. - --- MAP posted-by: GD