Pubdate: Mon, 14 Jul 2003 Source: Daily Press (VA) Copyright: 2003 The Daily Press Contact: http://www.dailypress.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/585 Author: Keith Rushing, Daily Press Bookmarks: http://www.mapinc.org/find?159 (Drug Courts) http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) FEWER DRUG USERS SEEK METHADONE TREATMENT Clinic Says Reasons for Decline Are Unclear A year ago, the Hampton Roads Clinic and Support Services Center was overwhelmed by the demand from former heroin addicts wanting methadone treatment, the synthetic opiate that helps former addicts deal with the severe pain and nausea of heroin withdrawal. About 150 people were regular clients at the clinic - the only methadone treatment center on the Peninsula - and more than 50 people were on a waiting list. Since then, the demand for methadone has gone down - dropping 30 percent since 2002, said Stephanie Savage, clinical director at the clinic. "We have 140 clients and no waiting list," she said. The reasons for the reduced demand aren't clear, but Savage knows that some former heroin addicts are receiving pain medication from private physicians, instead of going into the methadone-treatment program. Doctors can't prescribe methadone for drug-withdrawal symptoms, but they're able to prescribe medication for people who have other conditions that cause pain, Savage said. Going to a private physician is a way that some former addicts are avoiding the rigors of methadone treatment, Savage said. "We require them to come every day and go for counseling, which some might consider inconvenient," Savage said. Methadone is a tightly regulated drug that's dispensed in carefully measured amounts each day. Those in the program are closely monitored, required to attend counseling sessions and often work on reducing the amount of methadone that they take. Local administrators can't explain the increase a year ago on the Peninsula. But national studies and trends might offer an explanation: The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration reported that the number of people treated in emergency rooms for heroin-related problems increased 22 percent during 2000-01, compared with data from two years earlier. Other studies have found that heroin use increased among high school students and college-age adults throughout the 1990s. Last year, the Community Services Board - which oversees the methadone program - also faced an increased demand for all kinds of heroin treatment. Locally, clinic administrators worked to meet the higher demand by hiring a counselor and adding nursing hours. [sidebar] THEN AND NOW FIVE YEARS AGO. In July 1998, Newport News received the green light to start a drug-court program. The go-ahead came in the form of a $400,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice. The program also received local and state money. The goal of drug court is to save money and reduce crime by putting addicts into an intensive drug treatment and rehabilitation program, instead of sending them to jail. The program targets people charged with simple possession who have no history of violent crime or drug dealing. Newport News' drug court opened in November 1998. The 13 drug-court programs in Virginia faced a serious threat earlier this year, when the General Assembly failed to provide any money for their operation in budget plans. Money for the programs was later added. The Newport News program has proven to be a huge success. The Daily Press reported in November that none of the Newport News drug-court graduates has been arrested on new felony charges. Last month, Newport News graduated its fourth drug-court class. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake