Pubdate: Fri, 16 Feb 2007 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Frances Bula, Vancouver Sun EX-TORY ORGANIZER TO LEAD MAYOR'S DRUG PROGRAM Lois Johnson Will Head Plan To Provide Substitute Legal Drugs To Cocaine Users VANCOUVER - A former campaign organizer for federal Health Minister Tony Clement has been named to drive forward Mayor Sam Sullivan's plan to provide substitute legal drugs for cocaine users. Lois Johnson, a long-time Conservative who was the B.C. co-chair of Clement's leadership campaign, said she has agreed to take on the complex project, aimed at providing an experimental drug treatment program that is privately funded but somehow integrated with existing public-health systems, to try to make progress on drug treatment and crime reduction in Vancouver. "I'm really passionate about the fact that we have to move forward on treatment," said Johnson, who was also the chair of the Conservative constituency association in Vancouver South until 10 days ago. She is also a past board member of the Non-Partisan Association, Sullivan's party. Johnson will become the director of the non-profit society Inner Change, which is still in the process of establishing its board and filing papers for incorporation. She will be responsible for a daunting set of challenges. She acknowledged there is no other model she can think of for what Sullivan is trying to do. His efforts to single-handedly create a first-in-Canada experimental drug treatment program with private money have baffled even some who are in favour of a trial. Sullivan first began talking publicly about the project a year ago. The current plan is to set up the non-profit, raise privately the half-million dollars a year that it would take to run even a modest program, and somehow mesh that with Vancouver Coastal Health and the doctors who will deliver the actual substitute drugs. In addition, Johnson will need to get qualified medical personnel to write a proposal for Health Canada to request an exemption from existing policy so that Ritalin or other drugs used for attention deficit disorder can be used as substitute drugs for cocaine and crystal meth users. No one in Canada has mounted this kind of trial yet, although one researcher in the United States and others in Australia and Europe have conducted small-scale trials with various amphetamine-type drugs. Many addiction experts have encouraged Sullivan to promote this kind of stimulant-maintenance trial for Vancouver, especially since it has such a large cocaine-using population. Currently, those drugs can only be prescribed for conditions like ADD or narcolepsy. The B.C. College of Physicians has a policy prohibiting doctors from prescribing those drugs for other purposes and doctors who have done it in the past have been disciplined. Health Canada may grant exemptions for scientific trials. Usually, those exemptions are granted to research teams affiliated with major medical or education institutions. The exemptions are supposed to be granted strictly on the basis of scientific support and are not supposed to be subject to political influence. However, Sullivan says that he has had positive meetings with Clement and that Clement has asked the mayor to pass on this proposal to him personally, rather than just sending it to the Health Canada bureaucracy. Johnson said that she has had no meetings yet with Clement on this subject. In addition to Johnson, the project is also getting some assistance from three prominent public health officials. B.C.'s medical health officer Dr. Perry Kendall and Dr. John Blatherwick and Dr. David Marsh of Vancouver Coastal Health have all agreed to help vet any proposal put forward by Inner Change. Kendall and Blatherwick said they don't have a lot of details yet on how the program might work, in terms of which drugs would be used or how it would be delivered. Both men also said that it's very unlikely that that kind of trial could start off with 700 people, as Sullivan has envisioned. But they want to support what they think is a worthwhile effort by a political leader. "We like the concept," said Blatherwick. "We don't know yet how far we can go with the concept. But we don't want to stop trying to make a difference." THE MAYOR'S PROPOSAL Mayor Sam Sullivan's drug program would: - - Set up a private experimental drug treatment program. - - Raise privately the half-million dollars a year that it would take to run the program. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek