Pubdate: Fri, 30 Jun 2006 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Ian Gillespie Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) NOT ALL ADDICTS FIT PROFILE A lot of people don't have a lot of sympathy for drug addicts. Many view them as lazy, selfish pleasure-seekers who could solve their problems with a bit of gumption. Let 'em rot, some say. Good riddance. And I have to admit that sometimes, I agree. But there are a lot of addicts who don't fit the stereotype. Like Andrew Hooper. I first heard about Hooper's plight a few weeks ago. After reading my column about the problems afflicting the area around the methadone clinic on Dundas Street near William Street, Hooper's mother sent me a note stating most people don't know "the whole story" about addiction. Yesterday, Hooper told me how his problems started in 1997 when he was a passenger in a car that slammed into a pole near Windsor. The impact shattered Hooper's pelvis, broke his hip, ribs, arm and elbow and gave him a concussion. He was in a hospital for several weeks, then spent a month in a wheelchair. Today, he walks with a cane. In many ways, Hooper was lucky. He's alive, he's mobile and mentally sharp. But the crash left him in chronic pain -- and addicted to painkillers. Hooper says when he left the hospital, he was taking Demerol. Later, he tried Tylenol 3s, but when their effectiveness wore off, he was prescribed another powerful painkiller, Percocet. Then, he says, arthritis set in and his doctor prescribed an assortment of powerful and highly addictive painkillers, including OxyContin, MSContin and Oxycodone. Hooper says he had "a fabulous physician" who monitored the treatment for his chronic pain, including the dull aching in his hip, the burning in his pelvis and the tightness in his neck. But then about three years ago, his doctor left his practice and Hooper's world caved in. "When my prescriptions ran out, I had to start buying medication," he says. "I tried to go days without it, but I couldn't get out of bed or anything (because of the pain) and I thought, 'I have to do this.' And so I spent lots of money buying drugs off the street." Hooper admits without a doctor's supervision, he was taking more medication than he was supposed to because, "I felt better when I did take it. And that's the trap, right?" Hooper says the low point came about seven months ago, when he was spending about $400 a day to buy OxyContin on the street. He says he bought the drugs "pretty much anywhere," including the area around the methadone clinic on Dundas Street. With his long dependence and high tolerance, Hooper knew he was in trouble. But he says the shame and expense was far easier to bear than the "ungodly" pain of withdrawal. "You think of the worst flu you've ever had, and multiply those symptoms -- like chills, hot-cold flashes and wanting to crawl out of your own skin -- by about tenfold," he says. "There's vomiting, extensive diarrhea, you can't eat anything . . . That's the worst thing I've ever been through." Hooper says he enrolled briefly at the methadone clinic, but the dose was far too low to control his craving for the painkillers. For a while, he found a helpful doctor at a local walk-in clinic. But then that doctor left the clinic. Hooper says he sought help at various local agencies, but to no avail. Some have lengthy waiting lists, while some offer only counselling. "Every treatment centre I talked to, I begged them, 'Please, I'm at the end of my rope, do something,' " he says. "And no one did anything." Broke and suicidal, Hooper says he finally found a local addiction psychiatrist who is slowly helping get his life back on track. "Things are still rough," he says. "But what I have now, at least, is hope." In the end, Hooper insists there are far too few addiction treatment centres in this city and far too much willingness to prescribe painkillers and let patients cope with the consequences on their own. "The system allows you to get into it very easily," he says, "and then doesn't help you to get out." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman