Pubdate: Fri, 24 Nov 2006 Source: Bluefield Daily Telegraph (WV) Copyright: 2006 Bluefield Daily Telegraph Contact: http://www.bdtonline.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1483 Author: Tammie Toler Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) METHADONE PLAN MEETS WITH PRAISE, PROTEST PRINCETON -- On one side of the Mercer-Raleigh county line, methadone maintenance treatment was presented as a solution. On the other, area businesspeople worried the addiction therapy would turn into a scourge. Beckley Treatment Center and CRC Health Group officials opened the Beaver facility's doors Friday in an effort to show the public and people concerned about a proposed Mercer clinic how the operations worked. CRC Health Group, a California-based company that has worked in addiction treatment for the last 10 years, has filed an application for a certificate of need to establish a similar clinic in Mercer County. Vice President of Operations Joe Pritchard estimated 400 Mercer County MMT patients travel beyond county boundaries for their daily doses of methadone in either Beaver or Tazewell, Va. He said his company is petitioning the West Virginia Health Care Authority for permission to build a clinic because there is a need for methadone maintenance treatment in Mercer County. "Four hundred patients driving a long way shows us there's a need," Pritchard said. That's what CRC representatives will tell the HCA panel that will hear both sides Tuesday in Charleston and ultimately decide whether the clinic is headed here. While MMT supporters presented their case in Beckley, executives at the Princeton-Mercer County Chamber of Commerce were busy Friday planning a caravan to protest the proposed clinic. A group of citizens who oppose the certificate of need will pull out of the PMCCC lot at 6:45 a.m. Tuesday on the way to Charleston to speak out against the clinic they fear will only increase drug deaths, draw crime to the area and harm future business opportunity. PMCCC Board of Directors Chairman Roger Topping rallied for more signatures on a petition against the clinic Friday during Business Before Hours, just days after explaining to a Hope 4 Dope audience that MMT clinics were one business the chamber would not support. "An entity such as this will be very difficult for us, as an entity, to sell to a business when they want to come into this community," he said. Law enforcement officials have also been critical of any proposed methadone clinic, citing an increase in methadone-related deaths in the area during recent years and the growing popularity of the often powerful, highly addictive drug on local streets. It is particularly dangerous mixed with benzodiazepines, a group of drugs prescribed to relieve anxiety and sometimes insomnia, but that also depress the central nervous system, according to Medline Plus, a resource of the National Library of Medicine. How do clinics operate? Dr. Maria Encarnacion is medical director of the Galax Life Center and an outpatient MMT center in Tazewell County. She said anyone seeking MMT treatment in her centers must exhibit physical and emotional signs of opioid addiction and a history of dependence spanning more than one year. The only exception to the year rule involves pregnant women. Those clients must be admitted, according to federal law, no matter how long or short their history of dependence, Encarnacion said. The Beckley Treatment Clinic medical director, Dr. Ebineezer Obenza, was not on hand Friday. After the initial medical evaluation, the MMT clients are assigned counselors who meet with the patients to track their progress at least once a week, Beckley Treatment Center Program Director Casey Aust said. Often, clients need to meet with their mental health care representative more than once weekly, but they must see the counselors once each week in order to keep getting their methadone doses. Once counselors meet with the clients, the MMT participants then claim their doses at one of the dosing windows manned by licensed practical nurses. Some MMT clients must take their methadone doses in the presence of the nurses and speak to them afterward, ensuring they swallowed the liquid that keeps them from going into withdrawal from their drugs of choice. Others have been in the program long enough to earn take-home privileges, meaning they don't have to report to the clinic daily to get their doses. Their time in the therapy and their behavior dictates how many take-homes patients are eligible for, Aust said. All of CRC's treatment facilities are private, for-profit entities, Pritchard said. In order to fund the programs, the businesses charge on a per-dose basis for the substances that block the opioid receptors in the brain, preventing withdrawal and reportedly blocking the euphoria, or high, addicts experience from the drugs they were originally hooked on. In Beckley, each dose costs clients $12.50, while the average dose of methadone costs the clinic approximately 30 cents to purchase. Aust and Pritchard were quick to qualify that clients don't pay for the medication alone. They also pay for unlimited sessions with their counselors, case workers and physicians. "If patients put too much emphasis on medication, then they believe it's the medication that's helping them," Aust said. "Medication is only a small process," Pritchard said. "...only there to stabilize the individual long enough, in a consistent manner, for therapy to work." The clinic personnel argue that a person addicted to opioid drugs cannot strive to improve their education, problem-solving skills and relationships in the throes of withdrawal. Methadone keeps their bodies fom going into withdrawal, thus freeing their minds to work on other issues by saving detoxification for later. The problem many opponents voice is that the patients are then no less addicted to drugs than when they entered the program. They're simply dependent on different substances. For some MMT patients, that will never change. "There's a portion of the opiate population that will always be on some kind of drug," Pritchard said. "The larger percentage of patients will not be." Aust reported that most of her clients stay on methadone for 18-24 months before slowly weaning themselves from the potent painkiller. Clinics and communities According to a copy of the certificate of need application, Treatment Associates Inc., a subsidiary of CRC, requested approval to lease and renovate property in Mercer County totalling approximately 2,000 square feet. If the CON were approved, Pritchard said CRC officials would immediately seek a meeting with county zoning officials to determine the best location for the proposed clinic. The MMT clinic would have a capacity to serve an initial client capacity of 370-390 people. And, all of those people would pay $12.50 per day for their treatment, a fact that raises the ire of opponents who see the clinics as private businesses out to capitalize on others' addictions. "They want to be in here for the money," Topping said last week. Pritchard said the money had no place in the MMT debate. "If we're providing good services and we're capable of providing good service, that shouldn't even be an issue," he said Friday. He said fears of crime and increased drug trade are common wherever clinics seek to open. "All concerns and all the fears are exactly the same," he said, adding that he had never seen those fears realized. In an earlier interview with the Princeton Times, Pritchard was skeptical of reports that the Southern Regional Drug and Violent Crime Task Force had traced drugs obtained in controlled buys back to methadone clinics. Since clinics administer liquid methadone while doctors who prescribe the drug for pain dispense tablets or wafers, identifying whether the drugs came from a private physician or a clinic should be fairly straightforward. When the methadone clinic debate began in late summer, task force Sgt. J. Centeno reported his officers or cooperating individuals had obtained methadone, some from clinics, in more than 20 controlled buys within a few months. Although the numbers were not available, he later said the methadone buys had climbed in later weeks. CRC Wheeling Treatment Clinic Director Chris Byers said he makes every effort to communicate with law enforcement officials whenever possible. He also said he is quick to revoke take-home privileges or even expel a client from treatment if he finds out the client is either abusing the drug or diverting it to the streets. He cited one example involving an undercover operation. He said he told the officers, "The minute you have your case, you come tell me. This guy's done." While Byers said he welcomed involvement from and communication with law enforcement officers, he said federal laws prohibit clinic officials from notifying investigators that methadone may be diverted. To do so would be a violation of the federal law that guarantees doctor-patient confidentiality, CRC officials said. That same law also prohibits clinic officials from listing methadone as a prescription in clients' files. If it were listed, in West Virginia at least, that client's other doctors and pharmacists would be able to access the patient's medication file on a Board of Pharmacy website and know that the client was on methadone. To list the addiction therapy there would also be a breach of confidentiality, clinic officials said. To combat diversion internally, Byers said clients with take-home privileges are called back at least once each quarter for bottle checks -- an inspection of their methadone containers to ensure they are dosing consistently and accurately. And, he said clinics strive to educate their patients about the possibly fatal mixture of methadone and benzodiazepines. In spite of the overdose concerns, Byers said people involved in addiction treatment have a 30 percent higher chance of survival that those addicted but not in treatment. Opposition to the proposed clinic was spurred to action after county leaders nearly missed the HCA hearing on the certificate of need. The application and hearing were announced in Charleston publications, but not in a publication in the local community. Health Care Authority officials said Friday that was not due to action from CRC. HCA regulations require that the legal announcements be published in Charleston, according to state officials. What happens now? Pritchard said CRC, which administers MMT doses to an estimated 24,000 opiate addicts a day in 17 states, strives to keep a "local face to what we do." In Raleigh County, and in Mercer if approved, that face would belong to Aust, a Mercer County resident, who said she would never think twice about having an MMT clinic in her back yard. "I live in Mercer County. Those are my people. It's my county. I take full ownership over it," Aust said, later emotionally adding that the region's citizens have an obligation to try to stem the addiction problem. "I see too many people every day who are dying. Socially, we have a responsibility to do something," she said. Back in Mercer County, however, the people who oppose the clinic feared such a facility would only add to the problem. "It's a legal way of getting drugs," PMCCC President Robert Farley told the Princeton Community Hospital Board of Directors recently. Another director at the meeting said she believed some clinics kept people addicted for a lifetime. According to a press release distributed by PMCCC, "The Princeton-Mercer County Chamber of Commerce will lead caravan of people to a hearing in Charleston on Tuesday, Nov. 28 in opposition to allowing methadone clinics in Mercer County. The caravan will gather at the Chamber office located at 1522 North Walker St. in Princeton and will depart for Charleston at 6:45 a.m. The group is comprised of Mercer Countians opposing the issuance of a Certificate of Need by the WV Health Care Authority for the development of a methadone maintenance treatment program in Mercer County as requested in CON File No. 03-17771-BH." The West Virginia Health Care Authority is located in Charleston off I-64, Greenbrier Street Exit (Exit 99). From I-64 West, turn right on Greenbrier Street (Route 114) toward Yeager Airport. Turn right at the top of the hill and enter Hillcrest Office Park. Bearing left, at the second road on the left, turn left onto Dee Drive. The Health Care Authority is located in the beige metal building on the right, with double glass doors with black awning. Free parking is located in front of the entrance, HCA authorities reported. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake