Pubdate: Sun, 17 Aug 2003 Source: Kentucky Post (KY) Copyright: 2003 Kentucky Post Contact: http://www.kypost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/661 Author: Shelly Whitehead, Post staff reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) DRUG DEATHS SOUND ALARM Northern Kentucky Is Sedating Itself To Death. Heroin, methadone, morphine, OxyContin -- all strong opiates -- have been found in varying degrees and combinations in the blood of the 44 people dead so far this year from accidental drug overdoses in Boone, Campbell and Kenton County. That overdose death count for the three counties so far in 2003 is nearly equal to the number in all of 2002. County coroners see it as an alarming upsurge in a deadly abuse trend in opiates overall. Increasingly, though, the cure is part of the disease. The three coroners say toxicology reports point to another growing problem with a particular opiate -- methadone. The narcotic, known for its use in addiction treatment, has been involved in 16 overdose deaths already this year in Northern Kentucky, double the number in all of last year. Yet amid these reports that suggest a growing problem with methadone abuse comes news of a new effort to open Northern Kentucky's first methadone maintenance clinic. State officials will say little about the effort except to confirm that "there's an interest to open one in Northern Kentucky" involving a group of local business people anxious to fill what many say is a gap in treatment. For the growing number of Northern Kentucky residents addicted to heroin, OxyContin and other opiates, there's one local option for methadone maintenance treatment: the East Indiana Treatment Center, 30 miles away in Lawrenceburg. "From Northern Kentucky, we have about 600-plus addicts who drive to Lawrenceburg every day to get their dosages. Most are coming from the Florence area," said Mac Bell, support services coordinator for the Kentucky Division of Substance Abuse, who keeps close tabs on the state's addict population and Kentucky's nine narcotic treatment programs. "There's just a large opiate addiction problem in Northern Kentucky, and heroin is the drug of choice, mostly because Oxy-Contin has gotten extremely expensive. -- So there's an interest to open one (a methadone clinic) in Northern Kentucky. "This will be the third group that's tried to open up here. The others got chased out by the community. It all boils down to the old 'not-in-my-backyard' thing." That "not-in-my-backyard" sentiment was instrumental most recently in a four-year court fight between Covington and MX Group, a Pittsburgh concern which planned to open a for-profit clinic in Covington. Residents and business owners feared the clinic would bring addicts, crime and plummeting property values. City officials tried to amend zoning to keep the clinic out. Last winter, an appeals court ruled in the clinic's favor. After Covington paid a $140,000 settlement to MX Group last February, though, the company dropped its plans for a clinic here. Still, Bell and others say the opiate-addict population continues to grow in Northern Kentucky. And though the attitude toward treatment clinics is "not-in-my-backyard," experts say the simple truth is the addicts already are in everyone's backyards. All three coroners say the problem is larger than a simple "heroin problem" or "OxyContin abuse trend." They say most of the dead mixed three or more medications and street drugs, apparently in search of that "more perfect high." Too often this year the results have instead been tragic. "I go to these death scenes and a lot of people are on numerous medications and you'll come out with shopping bags filled with medications," said Boone County Coroner Doug Stith. "They've either been prescribed a lot, or they're getting a lot of them illegally and they just start mixing meds, and they don't know the interaction of the drugs." The addicts are not those many might suspect. Most are young adults or middle-aged. Despite the lethal pharmaceutical cocktails they mixed, the coroners say most only meant to get high rather than die. Too often the death scenes reveal little about what drugs they took and where they got them. Only the toxicologist's microscopic analysis reveals the nature of their fatal addiction. "I don't think any of these people were determined to be suicides," said Campbell County Coroner Mark Schweitzer, who reported 15 overdose deaths in his jurisdiction in the first half of this year. "They're usually people who have troubles, and the issue is they're not in control of what they're taking. They get in over their heads. -- " Kenton County Coroner Dr. David Suetholz was so concerned about his medical patients' ability to get monitored medical treatment, he continued writing methadone prescriptions for addiction. That's something currently forbidden to family doctors in Kentucky, and Suetholz lost his license to prescribe drugs for nearly a year. Though the presence of an amber bottle filled with prescribed methadone tablets would seem to finger methadone maintenance clinics as the source of the problem, Bell says otherwise. Methadone clinics in Kentucky, he says, do not prescribe the drug, only dispense it in carefully approved portions in a form that is nearly impossible to abuse for the purpose of a drug high. Bells asserts that much of the methadone abuse problem in Kentucky comes out of pain-management clinics where the drug is prescribed like morphine, OxyContin and other opiates to treat severe pain. "The methadone we're finding on the streets is the 10 mg. form, and they don't come from our clinics. We use longer-acting liquid or sulferated tablets where you have to add water to it so it's not injectable," Bell said. "I'm sure some of the methadone (abused) comes out of (maintenance) clinics. But in the state of Kentucky the (methadone) diversion we see on the streets is coming from pain management clinics where they may get 300 tabs of methadone to last for a month and they end up selling half." On the street, a 10 mg. methadone tablet sells for about $20 in Kentucky, and, unlike the clinic doses, the pain tablets can be easily crushed and snorted or injected for the sought-after high. Best of all, from the opiate-addict's perspective, it's affordable. These days, though, Bell said heroin is cheaper than methadone on the street. Methadone is still a "cleaner" and supposedly more reliable street buy that is much cheaper than other highs like OxyContin (about $50 per 10 mg. on the street). Apparently, as indicated by its growing presence in coroners' reports and emergency room visits, it's far more available than many opiates. "Obviously there's an access problem here," said Suetholz, a Taylor Mill family practitioner. "The ones (methadone addicts) I've seen and been associated with have had much greater access to it. They take it home from the clinics. -- They go to the methadone clinic -- the patients I talk to -- and the average dose is over 100 mg. -- "One girl I had that died was given wafers in bottles -- pills this big -- 100 mg. methadone wafers," he said, making a half-dollar sized circle with his thumb and index fingers. "She was taking 150 mg. a day. She had recently taken her weekly take-home of seven bottles with 150 mg. in each bottle." Depending on addiction level and other health issues, some addicts can be maintained on 40 mg of methadone a day. Many local law enforcement personnel also say that they see methadone obtained at nearby clinics being abused. Much of the methadone available in Northern Kentucky comes out of the Lawrenceburg treatment center. The for-profit business has drawn criticism for both the ease with which it dispenses methadone and the take-home quantities provided to patients. Center officials contend that the clinic has helped thousands who have come there struggling with opiate addictions. And, according to the Indiana Division of Mental Health and Addiction's 2001 report on the 6,809 addicts treated at the state's 12 methadone clinics, patient data refutes the assertion that clinic-dispensed methadone is being sold in substantial amounts on the street. The report says the state's experience, based on information provided by the treatment programs, agrees with national data that indicates that only one one-thousandth of the methadone dispensed is diverted to the illegal drug trade. Besides, as Bell said, the East Indiana Treatment Center undeniably fills that aforementioned "treatment gap" for the growing number of Northern Kentucky residents who choose methadone maintenance to kick the opiate monkey off their backs. Though Kentucky is renowned for the stringent operating guidelines imposed on the state's two public and seven private methadone clinics, those nine facilities combined can treat only about 1,600 opiate addicts. The closest one to Northern Kentucky is in Lexington -- a long trip for a daily dose, especially for people whose lives have been so ravaged by addiction that they may not have a car. At the Lawrenceburg clinic, 1,800 patients are treated annually -- a third of them from Northern Kentucky. To those who argue the programs simply replace one drug of addiction for another, Bell argues that well-executed and monitored programs turn lost lives into thriving ones. He says the patient data from Kentucky's methadone programs shows the difference methadone treatment can make. The proposed Florence clinic would have to adhere to Kentucky's stringent regulations. "Seventy to 90 percent of our clients eliminate all criminal activity. Eighty percent or better hold down jobs and have stopped all other illicit drug use," Bell said. "That's the main thing: to get them off the streets and stop the criminal activity." In Kentucky's narcotic treatment programs, continual drug screens detect the type and quantity of drugs clients are using, including methadone. Bell said the tests finger clients who are abusing other drugs or selling clinic-supplied methadone. He says few do that, particularly at the two state-run lower-cost clinics where waiting lists are up to 13 months long. The desperation of some addicts to kick their habits is evident in the lengths some indigent women have gone to for free treatment. "In Kentucky, our public clinics are based on ability to pay because we don't have a third-party payer in the state at all. We don't have Medicaid reimbursements for substance abuse," Bell said. "The only way (to get treatment paid for in Kentucky) is for pregnant opiate addicts. We have a lot of women who intentionally go get pregnant to get the services for nine months. -- It sounds off the wall, but we're talking about a disease here." That desperation and level of addiction exists in hundreds of people in Northern Kentucky now, Bell says. He and others in law enforcement, health care and the legal system believe the problem of opiate abuse here is fast becoming an issue that demands immediate attention before the addicts in our backyards become the addicts in our graveyards. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin