Pubdate: Thu, 02 Mar 2006 Source: Sault Star, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Sault Star Contact: http://www.saultstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1071 Author: Frank Dobrovnik Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) METHADONE SUPPLY FOR ADDICTS MAY BE CUT College Of Pharmacists Tries To Shut Down Bulk Supplier Recovering drug addicts across the province may find access to methadone more difficult, as the Ontario College of Pharmacists tries to shut down a bulk supplier by March 13. The Ontario Addiction Treatment Centres, which operates 25 methadone clinics, including one in Sault Ste. Marie on Queen Street East, vows to continue supplying clients. "The supply of methadone is potentially affected unless the bureaucrats make some imminent changes," said Dr. Jeff Daiter, OATC chief medical director. "I'm working day and night to make sure our patients come out first. But the various levels of government and colleges are threatening that model, making it very difficult." The College of Pharmacists last week ordered a Kitchener-based pharmacy to stop shipping the potentially lethal drug to OATC clinics by March 13. The college accuses Wing and Susan Wong of breaching safety rules that all drugs must be dispensed to patients in person by licensed pharmacists. Methadone is a synthetic narcotic usually taken in liquid form used to wean addicts off heroin and other opiate-based painkillers such as morphine and derivatives such as OxyContin. An Ottawa man died last year when a staffer at an OATC clinic accidentally gave him another client's dose, which contained 10 times the amount he could handle. Daiter, who opened the Sault office in late 2003, said all clinics are staffed by "regulated health practitioners," and methadone is administered by registered nurses. He said the regulatory body "has no real foundation" for suspending the Wongs. "Why is any one health practitioner any more capable of watching someone drink a dose of methadone?" The Wongs operate two pharmacies that supply OATC's 4,000 patients, including approximately 150 in the Sault. Daiter "couldn't develop a relationship" with any local pharmacist to fill methadone prescriptions, he said. Methadone is taken daily, often for two years or more. "If I turn around tomorrow and say to any Sault Ste. Marie pharmacy, Will you accept 150 people in your store tomorrow, 150 drug addicts,' most pharmacists would not like that . . . They're afraid of the drug-using population, that might rob or steal or create terror on their retail storefront." Besides having access to doctors to write prescriptions, OATC offers registered nurses and therapists as part of its clinics. The social benefits of the clinic are immeasurable, Daiter said. "Treated drug addiction costs taxpayers of this province one-tenth of what untreated drug addiction costs, in terms of victimization, incarceration, criminalization and so on." Sault Ste. Marie has another methadone program, through Algoma Health Unit, that opened up in October 2003 a few weeks before OATC set up shop. But AHU's East Street Community, Alcohol and Drug Assessment program has resources for only about 30 clients and is currently "pretty much at the max" with 36, said program director Elizabeth Larocque. Unlike OATC, AHU's clients use a local pharmacy and "won't be affected at all," Larocque said. With files from Canadian Press - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman