Pubdate: Sun, 28 Apr 2002 Source: Kingsport Times-News (TN) Copyright: 2002 Kingsport Publishing Corporation Contact: http://www.timesnews.net/index.cgi Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1437 Note: Will not publish letters in print editions from online users who do not reside in print circulation area, unless they are former residents or have some current connection to Southwest Virginia and Northeast Tennessee. TENNESSEE SHOULD TIGHTEN METHADONE RULES A proposed methadone clinic in Johnson City - like one proposed in Kingsport a few years ago - has the medical community up in arms. And no wonder. As many physicians have concluded, when it comes to detoxing drug addicts, methadone's cure is illusory at best. Designed to wean addicts off heroin, methadone and the clinics that dispense it have sparked a great deal of concern in the Tri-Cities, particularly in the last few years. The outcry produced a bill in 1998 that gave local governments a veto over the location of new clinics. But the legislation wasn't constitutional. The regulation of methadone clinics has since been judged a state responsibility, meaning local governments don't have a voice in the matter. New rules were developed in 1999 to regulate the clinics. But they aren't much of a hurdle for addicts or the clinics who depend on them to make money. All patients have to register with the state. This is supposed to ensure that a patient isn't using the services of more than one clinic at a time. But then again, are the records being reliably cross-checked? Random drug testing of patients has also been mandated to make sure addicts aren't using drugs other than methadone. But if the state were genuinely interested in catching violators, it would demand testing of all addicts on a basis so frequent that no one would have a chance to escape the drug screening. There are nearly 2,000 addicts in Tennessee receiving methadone treatment, but that term is deceptively benign. The fact is, methadone is a highly addictive Schedule II drug, which places it in the same category as morphine and other potent painkillers and opiates. Methadone treatment, therefore, doesn't cure or rehabilitate a drug addict, but merely steers him from being addicted from one drug to another. For all the time, professional attention and money that have been lavished on heroin addicts in Tennessee, for all the years that methadone has been dispensed, there are no state statistics on the effectiveness of the program. Why? The reason has to do with money. Since methadone treatment moved out of carefully monitored, intensive hospital settings into for-profit clinics, there is no economic incentive to terminate treatment. The dirty little secret is that, in Tennessee, as in most states, most methadone patients continue treatment indefinitely. It wasn't supposed to be that way. Methadone was introduced a generation ago as a means to an end, a way to wean hardcore heroin addicts away from their addiction and eventually to reintroduce them into society as useful, working, crime-free citizens. Methadone was envisioned as something which would eventually fall into disuse. Instead, it has become an alternate addiction not only for its patients, but the clinics that have come to depend on the profits. If the state has responsibility for regulating methadone clinics, the legislature needs to radically change the rules under which methadone is distributed. A good start would be to bring methadone treatment under the TennCare system, which means only physicians could dispense the drug. Weekly drug screenings would catch users of other drugs who would be turned over for criminal prosecution. Physicians would be required by the state to eventually wean all patients from methadone at a date certain. Drug addiction is a terrible thing. But we do no kindness to addicts by allowing for-profit clinics to prey upon them in the name of compassion while the taxpayer picks up the tab into perpetuity. The legislature needs to address this situation as soon as possible. When it does, it ought to ensure that methadone's use be as regulated as it is rare. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens