Pubdate: Fri, 30 Nov 2001 Source: Duncan News Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 Duncan News Leader Contact: http://www.duncannewsleader.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1314 Author: Paul Rudan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) ADAM BEADLE'S LAST DAYS His determination to become drug-free was so strong that Adam Wayne Beadle walked most of the way from Duncan to Campbell River to enter a rehabilitation program. "He walked a great distance and he hitch-hiked when he could," said Wendy Conover. "He was determined to seek treatment." On day three of a coroner's inquest into the death of Beadle, the jury heard from Conover, a registered nurse who coordinates the Campbell River Hospital's drug and alcohol treatment programs, and Dr. Anna Kindy, sometimes referred to during this inquest as the "methadone doctor." Beadle was 27 years old when he died near midnight March 2, in a Campbell River RCMP jail cell. Before being taken into custody, he had taken a lethal combination of hard drugs culminating in respiratory failure mainly due to an overdose of methadone. When he arrived in Campbell River a week earlier on Feb. 23, Beadle was literally on the road to a new life but his old habits quickly caught up with him. A urinalysis conducted at Dr. Kindy's clinic on Feb. 27 confirmed that, other than hospital-prescribed valium, Beadle was "clean" of cocaine and opiates. But three days later, a concoction of prescribed methadone and street drugs killed him, and his family wants to know why. "We were all led to believe that Adam was getting treatment. If we knew he wasn't following through, we would have come and got him," said Leonette Gibbons who then burst into tears during the Wednesday morning break. Gibbons is Beadle's aunt who is in Campbell River for the entire inquest. She is joined by Adam's mother (Jeanette Beadle), grandmother and sister. The four Cowichan Valley residents are sharing a room at the Ramada Inn where the inquest is taking place. "No one should have to go through what I went through," Jeannette Beadle said in regard to her son's death. "I hope this is the last man who dies needlessly in a police cell." On Wednesday, the family had to endure more as Beadle's life was laid bare during questions from six lawyers and five jurors. .An amateur boxer in Duncan, Beadle stood six feet and weighed between 250 and 270 pounds. In high school, he was described as quiet and friendly, and as a new father, he was tender and caring for his infant son Elmer. But there was also a mean streak which resulted in street fights and run-ins with police. When Beadle decided to leave Duncan for Campbell River last February, he seemed ready to deal with his drug addiction. But he fell in with a young party crowd, succumbed to his addiction and missed opportunities to receive the treatment he desperately wanted. He was supposed to enter the Second Chance 28-day rehabilitation program, but on two occasions Beadle missed his appointments to be admitted. And on the day of his death, an agitated Beadle was taken by police to hospital but left without seeing Conover because he wasn't under arrest and forced hospitalization is only possible if someone is committed under the Mental Health Act. When he was picked up by police later that day after he was reportedly seen staggering through traffic and falling asleep while standing, Beadle was not taken to hospital. He died roughly seven hours later without seeing a doctor. "He did not fall through the cracks," insisted Jonathon Brenner, a registered nurse, who testified Tuesday that he attended to Beadle on a few occasions at the hospital. "We were using all the community resources but he wasn't latching onto the resources offered to him. "There was so much time spent with Adam. From my perspective, and that's nursing, everything was done." On Feb. 27, Conover met Beadle for the first time. She said he seemed anxious to get started with treatment. She agreed and that led to his first visit to the methadone clinic run by Kindy. According to Kindy, Beadle said he was using "nine to 10 points of heroin a day" (10 points equals a gram). "That's a pretty significant habit," noted Kindy who had earlier said, "To be on methadone you need a significant history of heroin addiction." Taking into account his physical size and tolerance for drugs, Dr. Kindy prescribed 60 mg. of methadone a day for Beadle which is considered the high end of dosages. "Most people weren't like Adam," she explained. "They didn't smoke a gram a day." During their short time together, Dr. Kindy warned Beadle of the dangers from combining other drugs with methadone. It was advice he didn't take and he died three days later. "It's not unusual for patients starting the program to be 'dirty'," Dr. Kindy said, referring to addicts who combine methadone with street drugs. "But this is the first time a patient of mine on this program has died since I started in '93. "If I knew he was taking other drugs, I could have stopped his methadone." The inquest was scheduled to wrap up around presstime Friday, but given the volume of witnesses and questions, it could be looking at overtime. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh