Pubdate: Wed, 25 Feb 2004
Source: Charleston Gazette (WV)
Copyright: 2004 Charleston Gazette
Contact:  http://www.wvgazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/77
Author: Tara Tuckwiller
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone)

CLINIC METHADONE NOT TO BLAME FOR DEATHS, PANEL FINDS

Federally regulated methadone clinics are not to blame for the recent glut 
of methadone-related deaths, according to a press release issued by the 
federal regulator.

The press release came as legislators in some states, including West 
Virginia and Virginia, debate bills to regulate methadone clinics.

The regulator exonerated methadone clinics, based on a report issued by a 
"panel of state and federal experts, researchers, epidemiologists, 
pathologists, toxicologists, medical examiners, coroners, pain management 
specialists, addiction medicine specialists and others." The "others" 
included representatives from three methadone manufacturers, two methadone 
marketers and three consultants for Purdue Pharma, the maker of the 
painkiller OxyContin - the abuse of which leads many addicts to methadone 
clinics.

That information was in the 60-page report, which was not issued to the 
press along with the press release from the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental 
Health Services Administration.

More methadone-related deaths were reported in 2001 alone than during the 
entire period from 1990 to 1999, the report noted. Those deaths doubled 
again between 2001 and 2002.

SAMHSA concluded that the cherry-flavored liquid methadone and 
fast-dissolving methadone diskettes - the methadone of choice at methadone 
clinics - aren't to blame. Instead, people are dying after taking methadone 
tablets prescribed by doctors for pain.

"In the cases in which the sources of methadone associated with deaths 
could be traced, [clinics] did not appear to be involved," the report stated.

However, the panel had no idea where the methadone came from in many of 
those deaths. For example, in about half of the methadone-related deaths in 
North Carolina from 1997 through May 2001, the source of the drug - 
methadone clinic or pain doctor - could not be determined, the report stated.

A Drug Enforcement Administration database tracks the forms of methadone - 
clinic liquid or pain-doctor pill - investigated by police in 35 states. 
The agency was consulted by the panel. But in 39 percent of the cases in 
2002 (the most recent year tracked), the form of methadone wasn't listed.

Police in West Virginia have complained that they simply cannot track 
illegally used methadone that came from clinics, because a federal 
regulation says the clinics don't have to provide patient information to 
police.

A bill (HB4387) introduced in the West Virginia Legislature seeks to force 
clinics to cooperate with investigating officers.

It would also make the state Department of Health and Human Resources 
oversee West Virginia's private-run methadone clinics. The state would 
impose standards for operations and staff qualifications, among other things.

The SAMHSA report argues against such "state-imposed restrictions on 
prescribing methadone," saying they "are unlikely to be effective."
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