Pubdate: Sun, 26 Feb 2006 Source: Sacramento Bee (CA) Page: A19 Copyright: 2006 The Sacramento Bee Contact: http://www.sacbee.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/376 Note: Does not publish letters from outside its circulation area. Author: Laura Mecoy, Bee Los Angeles Bureau Cited: Proposition 36 http://www.prop36.org Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prop36.htm (Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) DESPITE SUCCESSES, MANY WARY OF METHADONE Drug Blocks Heroin Cravings but Is Rarely Used Under Prop. 36. For more than three decades, Eddie Vela "chased the bag," desperately seeking heroin to feed his addiction. He started shooting up at age 13 after his alcoholic father kicked him out of the house, and he spent most of his adult life on the streets or in prison. That all changed last year when he became eligible for treatment under Proposition 36, the voter-approved initiative requiring treatment instead of prison for nonviolent drug offenders. Vela kicked his heroin habit by entering a methadone program at the Bi-Valley Medical Clinic in Sacramento. "I don't crave for drugs anymore," the 48-year-old former addict said. "Every day I wake up, and I don't have to think anymore that I have to go make some money (for heroin) and get well." Methadone, a medication that blocks the craving for heroin for about 24 hours, is the most successful treatment for heroin and other opiate addictions, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. But it is the most controversial, least used and arguably most problematic treatment offered under Proposition 36. Almost 10 percent of Proposition 36 participants are heroin users, but only 1 percent of those sentenced to treatment under the initiative get methadone. A University of California, Los Angeles, study of Proposition 36 found lower success rates for heroin users than other drug offenders in the program and suggested more could kick their habits with methadone. "You would quickly get 2 to 3 percent higher completion rates with potentially many hundreds fewer people going to jail," said Dave Fratello, one of Proposition 36's authors. "There is just an inherent bias against it (from people who believe) you need to stop all drugs." Kathryn Jett, director of the state Department of Alcohol and Drug Treatment Programs, said most of the opposition to methadone stems from a misunderstanding of the treatment regimen. "They think it's just a dispensing office when, in fact, a well-managed methadone clinic would not only dispense but provide regular routine counseling and medical oversight," she said. Methadone is not an intoxicating drug when it's used properly. But it can be intoxicating and deadly if it's mishandled, too much is ingested or it is combined with other drugs. In a tragic case in Berkeley, for instance, a 3-year-old took his aunt's methadone and died. Its use is tightly monitored because the medication can be sold on the street to other drug users seeking a high or relief from addiction. But street sales still happen. In Los Angeles, for instance, the Martin Luther King Jr. methadone treatment program was shut down for several problems, including a nurse who stole the drug and sold it on the street. Proposition 36 also poses an additional hurdle for methadone treatment. It pays for just 18 months of treatment, and most former addicts will take methadone for longer than that. They must find another way to pay for their doses or wean themselves off methadone. Jett said state officials are trying to increase the use of methadone under Proposition 36 by educating county officials about its effectiveness and the use of counseling with the medication. For Vela, who is receiving methadone in Sacramento, the counseling helped him succeed. For the first time, he said he's forging relationships with his six children and 10 grandchildren. He's stayed out of prison for more than a year, and he's free of the constant search for heroin. "This program works," Vela said. "It works really well." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake