Pubdate: Thu, 28 Mar 2002 Source: Herald, The (UK) Copyright: 2002 The Herald Contact: http://www.theherald.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/189 Author: Graeme Smith RISE IN USE OF METHADONE 'SHOWS DRUGS PROGRAMME FAILING' THE number of drug addicts using methadone in Grampian has almost quadrupled in the past four years, prompting an MSP to question the success of its use. The number of dispensed items of methadone rose from about 70,000 in 1996-97 to more than 270,000 in 2000-01 - twice the national increase. The figure emerged following a parliamentary question by Richard Lochhead, North-East SNP MSP, to Malcolm Chisholm, the health minister. One leading drugs worker said the increase was "absolutely no surprise at all" and reinforced the view of her agency that the methadone programme was not working. However, Grampian Health Board strenuously denied that claim. Mr Lochhead called yesterday for the government to look again at the increasing use of metha-done as a heroin substitute. "These are shocking figures for Grampian, with the amount of methadone dispensed quadrupling over four years. We really have to stop and ask where this is going," he said. "The pressure on drug services is such that methadone is often the easy answer, but that can just shift people's addiction. What we really need is to get people clear of their addiction rather than simply moving it from an illegal, to a prescription drug on what can seem to be an indefinite period." Janice Jess, co-ordinator of the Grampian Addiction Problems Service (Gaps), said: "Members of our organisation have been derided when we talked about the scale of the problem in Grampian and now there is clear evidence what we have been saying is true. "Methadone is obviously not the answer - if it was the figures would be declining. This is a sign the methadone programme is failing. Methadone is not helping people become drug free - they are on a prescription drug rather than a street drug and in most cases which Gaps encounters they are on both." However, Graham Cronkshaw, drugs policy and strategy manager for NHS Grampian, said the rising figures were a sign of success and an increase to that level had been anticipated. He said methadone was not the only option but the main option in line with national policy, and from 300 people in the mid 1990s they were now treating around 1000. "Some people need metha-done for six or nine months while others may need it for 10 years. There is no quick answer, no magic pill. It gets people off street heroin and injecting and many stop crime as well. It has no effect on cocaine or cannabis use." He said the vast majority on these programmes became heroin free, not necessarily drug free. "Methadone is only there to get them off heroin - it doesn't affect their appetite for cocaine or cannabis." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom