Pubdate: Tue, 01 Feb 2005 Source: Medical Post (Canada) Copyright: 2005 The Medical Post Contact: http://www.medicalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3180 Author: Mark Quinn Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) ST. JOHN'S ADDICTS DRIVE HOURS FOR METHADONE No MDs in or Near Newfoundland's Capital Are Willing to Dispense Drug ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. - Drug addicts here are car-pooling 450 km for methadone treatment. Almost 100 people, most addicted to oxycodone, drive to Grand Falls-Windsor monthly because there isn't a doctor willing to prescribe this treatment in the provincial capital. Right now, the nearest physician who'll prescribe it, Dr. Surender Manhas, is four and a half hours down the Trans-Canada highway. St. John's has a growing oxycodone abuse problem. Methadone is commonly used to treat heroine addiction, but in this province it's increasingly being used to treat addictions to oxycodone. Ron Fitzpatrick is the chaplain with the Metro Community Chaplaincy in St. John's. He works with dozens of people with drug addictions and estimates there are thousands more in this province. He said it's "appalling" that people using methadone must travel so far to get a prescription. "They have to get out there to see the doctor once a month," said Fitzpatrick. "Four or five of them piled in cars on slippery winter roads. It's just disgraceful really. It's just not right." For months now, Fitzpatrick has been calling on the province to open a St. John's methadone clinic. Newfoundland and Labrador Health Minister John Ottenheimer agreed people should be able to receive methadone prescriptions in St. John's. He said there's one reason why that's not happening. "A physician who would be willing to prescribe and administer methadone, as of yet, has not been found." Dr. Paul Bonisteel, a family doctor in Carbonear, about an hour east of St. John's, said he knows why the government can't find a doctor to prescribe methadone. Denial "(Doctors) want to avoid the hassles. Dealing with this drug means ascribing to a very tight set of regulations. It also means dealing with people who are likely to have a troublesome past. Denial is one of the hallmarks of addiction. Some of these folks will have been involved in manipulating the system in the past and can be fraught with a whole lot of troubles." In order to prescribe metha-done, a doctor must receive special dispensation from Health Canada. Four doctors in this province have licences to prescribe it. Dr. Bonisteel is one of them but doesn't want any new patients-especially not methadone patients. "Physicians that I have spoken with clearly don't want to be seen as the methadone doctor for fear of attracting a whole bunch of extra work to their practice sites . . . on top of their already busy schedules. I would be prepared to prescribe methadone to people in my practice who require it, but I would not want to be known as 'the methadone doctor,' " Dr. Bonisteel said. Health Minister Ottenheimer said it's a doctor's right to refuse to take on methadone patients. However, he does expect the province to find a willing physician in St. John's. Ottenheimer said the province has met with a couple of doctors in the capital region who are considering taking on this work. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake