Pubdate: Fri, 30 May 2003 Source: Kelowna Capital News (CN BC) Copyright: 2003, West Partners Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.kelownacapnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1294 Author: John McDonald Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) DOCTORS, IHA SCRAMBLE TO START METHADONE SERVICE Interior Health Authority recognizes need for methadone clinic in Kelowna but hesitant to step on B.C. College of Physician and Surgeon's administrative turf. A tentative solution is in the works for Central Okanagan methadone patients. Details are not yet available but Dr. Jan McIntosh, chief of staff for Kelowna General Hospital, said a local physician and a member of the hospital staff are working together on a plan to create a methadone clinic somewhere in Kelowna. "We have to get some more physicians but we have an idea of where we will set up the physical structure," said McIntosh. Currently, the Central Okanagan does not have a physician to administer the B.C. Methadone program, which is run by the B.C. College of Physicians and Surgeons. Opiate addicts here who want to participate in the methadone maintenance program must travel to Vernon for weekly or monthly appointments with Dr. Robert Ross. However, Ross has served notice he will no longer take on new methadone patients and will turn away his existing clients from the Central Okanagan beginning Nov. 1. Ross told the Capital News that methadone patients from the Central Okanagan cannot be properly managed from Vernon alone. His decision affects 150 addicts from the Central Okanagan who currently travel to Vernon, although Ross estimated another 300 or 400 addicts here would benefit from having a local program. Ross also said Kelowna is the only major community in the province that does not have a methadone prescribing physician. McIntosh hesitated to put a date on when the clinic will open, but he said it should be in place well before Ross' deadline. He blamed the bureaucratic process of joining the B.C. Methadone program plus the unique problems associated with treating methadone patients as the impediment that has kept local physicians from signing on before this. "You have to get your methadone license which is quite an involved process," said McIntosh. "Just looking after the patients is different than your average family practice. "Up to this point, everybody has been so busy in their practices that it hasn't been a priority. For the numbers (of patients) they had before, it just wasn't worth it." Pat Townsley, addictions manager for the Okanagan Health Service Area, said what they can do to help establish a program is limited by the fact it is controlled by the College of Physicians and Surgeons. "The IHA recognizes the need for a methadone physician but we can't tell them what to do," said Townsley. "Our role is to facilitate a methadone program by helping them find space and perhaps provide training. A local man, now in recovery, who used to be on the methadone program said the transfer of patients from Ross in Vernon to who ever eventually takes it on in Kelowna would be a golden opportunity to conduct an outcomes assessment of the program users. "We need to make a point of contact, maybe the chemical dependency unit at the hospital, to find out where they're at," said Russ Cunnington, who up until 1999 ran four supportive recovery houses in Kelowna. He's an admitted critic of the methadone program but said local addiction service providers could garner valuable baseline information about opiate addiction. While there's no legal obligation for such an assessment when transferring patients between physicians, Cunnington said it should be done anyway. "Is there a moral obligation, I think so," Cunnington added. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh