Pubdate: Wed, 05 Nov 2003 Source: Collegiate Times (VA Edu) Copyright: 2003 Collegiate Times Contact: http://www.collegiatetimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/699 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) CLINIC NEEDS CHANGE OF VENUE The two planned centers, the Life Center of Roanoke County and a clinic run by National Specialty Clinics within Roanoke city limits, have received public backlash as some Roanoke residents feel methadone clinics will present more public woes than benefits. With 42 states housing clinics, Virginia is in the minority with no clinics currently in operation. The common analogy for clinic proponents compares methadone's interaction with heroin to the use of a nicotine patch for cigarettes. Methadone clinics distribute liquid forms of the synthetic opiate, helping wean addicts off of heroin, oxycontin and morphine. Unlike its opiate brethren, methadone absorbs slowly in the body, so users can take part in normal activities including work-related tasks. The unattended problem of heroin and oxycontin addiction pervading the region cannot be overlooked. For Roanoke to feel as if it is insulated from the outlying areas is irresponsible, as a great deal of its consumers and workers are drawn from these locations. Dissenters feel the clinics' proximity to houses and schools will lead to drug dealers infiltrating the area and the reduction of property values. To condemn impoverished areas to unappealing businesses in favor of preserving those areas with money or the voices to lobby in protest is not a social attitude that should be espoused. The clinics should be located in the city of Roanoke or in underdeveloped areas in one of the surrounding counties. Roanoke residents have just cause for setting up a petition drive in protest to locating clinics in close proximity to schools and residential areas. To help alleviate the possible influx of drug dealers or methadone abusers, the clinic within the city should seek zoning among the city's health facilities, as far away from schools and residential dwellings as possible. Surrounding counties consist of plenty of lowly populated areas perfect for an isolated clinic in a less than ideal location for attracting large crowds of drug abusers. This accomplishes a centralized location for a clinic that would serve the largest city and its surrounding counties in Southwest Virginia and keep the unappealing externalities at a reasonable distance from citizens. In accepting these clinics, Virginia has the opportunity to participate in a growing national movement toward acceptance of peoples' mistakes and adopting social responsibility for those in need. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake