Pubdate: Sun, 15 Sep 2002 Source: Portland Press Herald (ME) Copyright: 2002 Blethen Maine Newspapers Inc. Contact: http://www.portland.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/744 Author: David Hench Note: Staff researchers Julia McCue and Beth Murphy contributed to this story OTHER STATES SEE SPIKE IN ABUSE OF METHADONE Several areas of the country have experienced a surge in methadone overdoses much like Portland has seen this year, part of what drug policy officials say is an increasing problem with the illegal use of prescription drugs. Portland has experienced a record 23 suspected overdose deaths this year, nine of which are believed to have been caused by methadone. In all of 2001, there were 16. Officials in Virginia and Florida say they witnessed a similar increase in 2001, and the problem seems to be growing this year. Nationally, emergency room treatment tied to methadone abuse grew 37 percent from 2000 to 2001, according to the Drug Abuse Warning Network of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Drug policy officials have been unable to pinpoint the cause for the dramatic increase in methadone abuse, although increased availability of powerful prescription drugs, misinformation about their properties and faddish trends in use seem to be factors. "There's always been prescription drug abuse as long as there have been prescription drugs," said Kim Johnson, director of the Maine Office of Substance Abuse. "The thing that seems different now is they're young people, and I just think the quantity of it is bigger than it has been in the past." The prescription drugs frequently being abused today - opiates like methadone and oxycodone - are extremely powerful and deadly when misused. "It's spread the same way as any other kind of fad. It's just word of mouth. Unfortunately, a lot of (the information) they share with each other is really wrong, and it seems clear in this case there's a lot of mythology about prescription drugs in general and methadone in particular," Johnson said. And prescription drugs are more available to those people who would abuse them. Synthetic opiates like oxycodone had become common on the street through forged prescriptions; drugs improperly obtained through feigned symptoms and patients using multiple doctors; and theft. The increased use of methadone to curb the craving for drugs like heroin and OxyContin also has created new avenues for drug users to obtain methadone. None of the people who died as a result of methadone poisoning in Portland were clients of the area's two methadone clinics. This fact suggests they obtained the drug illicitly and has led to calls by some police officials for new curbs on its distribution. These officials have called for an end to the practice of allowing methadone clinics to dispense doses of the drug for future use, which they say dramatically increases the opportunity for diversion. "Methadone has become a major law enforcement problem across the country," said Portland Police Chief Michael Chitwood. For example, methadone overdose deaths in Florida surged 80 percent last year to 179. By comparison, cocaine killed 390 people and heroin 271. The methadone problem appears most severe in Florida's rural panhandle, where oxycodone abuse has also been a major problem. The problem of misusing prescription drugs seems to have spiked in the past 24 months, said James McDonough, director of the state's Office of Drug Control. Florida has had some success curbing oxycodone and hydrocodone abuse through education of potential users and health professionals and through law enforcement, and McDonough hopes similar strategies will pay off in dealing with methadone abuse. "You have to almost prove drug by drug that you're playing with your life," said McDonough. "Maybe the addicts had to understand that oxycodone and hydrocodone were super dangerous and then their buddy told them methadone was less dangerous. There's been a major movement toward abuse of prescription drugs and methadone is seen as a painkiller just like oxycodone is seen as a painkiller." Police describe a new group of hard-drug users - those who were initially attracted by the perceived safety of prescription OxyContin, which when stripped of its time-release properties produces a powerful high. Some of those who became addicted to the painkillers moved on to heroin, police say. In many methadone clinics across the country, clients seeking help with addiction to oxycodone - the active chemical in the brand-name drug OxyContin - exceed those addicted to heroin, according to a survey by the Drug Enforcement Administration. Addicts, whether on heroin or OxyContin, find themselves experiencing the craving that methadone helps alleviate. But a methadone dose that may be appropriate for one person can kill someone else. Also, the depressant effects on the body are exaggerated by the use of other drugs or alcohol, which is often the case when methadone is used without physician supervision. That problem seems to be at the root of some methadone overdose deaths in Maine, where people have taken large doses of methadone in search of a high, or mixed it with other drugs with the same intention. Western Virginia has struggled with OxyContin abuse, and the number of methadone deaths doubled to 44 from 2000 to 2001. There were 22 in the first three months of this year, said assistant chief medical examiner William Massello. In the rural area of the state, drug users have only sporadic access to drugs like heroin and cocaine, and so prescription drug diversion has become a major source of narcotics, as it has in rural parts of eastern Maine. "We saw a sudden increase in OxyContin in 1998, '99 and 2000. That's when we got this tremendous surge. Then right behind it, methadone started picking up," Massello said. "Right now we're anticipating we'll see more methadone than OxyContin, significantly more." But there are differences in Virginia's and Maine's experiences. While police here believe most of the methadone involved in overdoses has come from methadone clinics, Massello said virtually every methadone overdose he is aware of in his state has been related to pills prescribed for pain by doctors. In Maine, some officials are linking the problem to the dispensing policies of methadone clinics. "What has happened is it's becoming more available because there are more and more clinics that allow take-home, which is going to lead to diversion on the street in some cases," Chitwood said. Methadone also is being prescribed more often as a pain medication by doctors trying to avoid prescribing OxyContin because of its potential for abuse, he said. But not all police officials in Maine are focused on dispensing practices as the root cause of methadone-related overdose deaths. Westbrook Police Chief Steven Roberts, whose city hosts one of the Portland area's two methadone clinics, says methadone maintenance has a strong track record for keeping people off illegal drugs. And that, he said, helps to reduce the burglaries, thefts and robberies that coincide with illegal drug addiction. Investigators suspect methadone played a part in several of the seven overdose deaths Westbrook has experienced so far this year, but police are focusing their investigation on those individuals who provided the methadone, not on the clinics. "Some people choose to ignore the warnings. A small percentage of them are going to die from it. That doesn't mean you have to throw the baby out with the bathwater," said Roberts, who supports the use of methadone. "The reality is there are some people who can only be treated by take- home doses by nature of their work, where they live and distance to the clinics. Let's not demonize the people attempting to treat these folks; let's look at the people who are diverting it and hold them responsible." Clinic directors say the abuse of methadone by those for whom it is not prescribed reflects a problem in the community with untreated addiction. They say they are working to make sure only those people who handle their take-home doses responsibly maintain those privileges. Diversion of methadone is a relatively new problem, at least to the current degree. The medication has been used effectively to replace addiction to opiates for more than 30 years. Drug policy officials say people receiving methadone treatment are 68 percent more likely to hold a job and 47 percent less likely to commit crime. "What else do we do in this society that would reduce criminal behavior by that percentage?" asked Johnson, of the Maine Office of Substance Abuse. Johnson said police who favor scaling back take-home doses see only the worst in methadone usage, drug users who are not in recovery and the bodies of those who have gambled with powerful drugs and lost. "They only see the people who are in trouble. They're never going to know all the rest of the patients who come to work every day, who live stable lives and have families. That's the majority of patients," she said. There are 925 patients enrolled at the Portland area's two methadone clinics, Discovery House in South Portland and CAP Quality Care in Westbrook. There are also clinics in Winslow and Bangor. Historically, methadone has not been viewed as a recreational drug, because it does not produce the high that other drugs do. It is designed to stop the cravings for heroin and other opiates, without creating a sense of euphoria. But for some reason, the drug culture in Portland and possibly other parts of the country has identified methadone as a recreational drug. Johnson traveled to Washington recently to discuss the problem with officials at the National Center for Substance Abuse Treatment. She returned with a $50,000 grant to study users' beliefs about methadone and other prescription drugs and to devise an educational campaign to counteract dangerous misinforma-tion. Drug habits do change over time, and sometimes identifying the reasons behind the popularity of a particular drug can be difficult. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, PCP was a popular recreational drug until it was linked to several deaths. In the 1960s, powerful amphetamines were all the rage on Munjoy Hill, recalls Roberts, a Portland police officer at the time, "till you had several kids die and then it dropped off." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth