Pubdate: Tue, 02 Nov 2004 Source: Oshawa This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 Oshawa This Week Contact: http://www.durhamregion.com/dr/info/oshawa/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1767 Author: Lesley Bovie Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) METHADONE INQUIRY PUTS A FACE ON FOUR DURHAM REGION DEATHS Coroner's Inquest Examines Final Hours OSHAWA - They were four very different people who looked to methadone to help them lead normal lives. But a coroner's inquest, which began Monday, will try and determine how the drug may have contributed to their premature deaths. The inquest is expected to last at least a month and will examine the circumstances leading up to the deaths of four methadone users: David Stevenson, 28, who passed away in his sleep Nov. 12, 2002; Craig Beers, 17, who was found dead by his mother in their Bowmanville home July 13, 2003; Steven Pidgeon, 46, who died in his Genosha Hotel room July 16, 2003; and Judith Jenkins, 44, who passed away in her Oshawa home Sept. 21, 2003. All but Mr. Beers were patients at the First Step Oshawa Clinic, which prescribes methadone for addiction treatment. He acquired it from an unidentified patient being treated at First Step. An inquest has been called due to the fact there have been more than 20 methadone-related deaths in and around Oshawa since 2001. A five-member jury will examine these four deaths and possibly come up with recommendations for preventing similar fatalities in the future. Durham Region Crown attorney John Scott is acting as counsel to the coroner, with Regional Coroner Dr. William Lucas presiding. Four lawyers representing three doctors and the medical clinic each have standing at the inquest, as do solicitors for the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario and the Jenkins family. Jeff Mutter, a lawyer for Dr. Bobby Esbin, said his client treated David Stevenson and the unidentified patient who gave his methadone to Mr. Beers. He plans to show that it was a mixture of drugs, not methadone alone, that caused the deaths of Mr. Stevenson and Mr. Beers. A toxicologist was expected to take the stand Tuesday (after our press deadline) ti testify as to how the different drugs detected in the two victims may have worked against each other. Forensic pathologist Dr. Nihad Ali-Ridha showed that in each case vital organs slowed down and filled with fluid, consistent with the slow failure of a drug death. Not finding any anatomical causes of death, toxicology tests were ordered, and found methadone in their system, he said. Other drugs were also detected. "Methadone causes central nervous system depression," he said. "Sleepiness is the hallmark of depressing brain function." Mr. Scott said in his opening address that, in at least two of the four cases, families noticed their loved one "nodding off" or acting sluggishly. "These are people who had real struggles," he said. All three seeking treatment were taking methadone to overcome addictions to pain killers. Mr. Pidgeon was a long-time methadone patient, who, after suffering an injury at the age of 17, turned to painkillers and later street drugs. Ms. Jenkins began using painkillers after having stomach surgery. Mr. Beers struggled with depression and anxiety, and was once hospitalized in 2003 before acquiring his methadone from a patient at First Step. Developed to treat opiate addiction, methadone "is a wonderful drug if used in the right way," Mr. Scott told the inquiry. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin