Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jul 2007 Source: Chatham This Week (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Chatham This Week Contact: http://www.chathamthisweek.com/contact.php Website: http://www.chathamthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/719 Author: Brian Cleeve 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) Methadone Clinic Sought Drug Users Now Have to Go to Sarnia for Treatment Coun. Marjorie Crew wants a methadone clinic opened in Chatham-Kent. "I've received calls from many people about the need for a methadone clinic," says Crew, a member of the Chatham-Kent Public Health Board. "In the last two weeks, I've received three calls from people who are battling addiction. They've approached me about the need for a program for themselves and their families," she told health board members at their June 27 meeting. As it is now, Chatham-Kent residents go to Sarnia for their methadone treatments. "This is one more barrier for people who are trying to get clean," said Crew. Ontario Works pays for about 25 of its clients to go to the clinics. Other people have to find their own way. Anne Coulter, director of public health, said urine samples are needed as part of the program are dropped off at the Chatham-Kent health unit then shipped off to Sarnia. To get a clinic such as the one in Sarnia or Windsor, would require physicians willing to oversee a program, and willing to have the special training needed. Coulter said the health unit is discussing the issue with representatives in Sarnia and Windsor, with a view to possibly having their personnel come to Chatham to conduct the urine tests. An estimated 20 to 30 samples have been dropped off each week over the last three to four years. The number has increased over the last three years. Lucy Brown, general manager of health services, said some local physicians have been approached, but none so far have shown interest. Dr. Del Donald, one of three owners of the Bluewater Methadone Clinic in Sarnia, tells Chatham This Week that his clinic has been operating at Christina St. and Wellington St., since October 2004. The physicians see about 300 people for intensive treatment over a week. "Most people are self-referrals who know they have a problem," Donald said. "With opiate addicts, there's no doubt they have an addiction." Oxycontin is a drug often prescribed for pain, and it has become an addictive drug for many of the people seen at the Sarnia clinic. Some of the patients, who are seen twice a week for treatment, also start taking drugs at work or use them recreationally. The methadone is used to help wean the clients from the opiates. There are people who have developed addictions after taking medications for anxiety or depression. Donald added that "some people just like to take drugs." And, he said the only common denominator among the patients is that "they all get hooked. "They could be the kid next door." Donald and his partners are emergency room physicians, and they still spend part of their time in emergency at Sarnia hospitals. It was that experience that led Donald and his partners to get a licence to operate a methadone clinic. Falling through the cracks "I was chief of emergency and I was always aware of people falling through the cracks. People would come in looking for drugs, because they couldn't afford them on the street." Donald said that any physician could take the year-long training to get accredited and regulated by the Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons. When residents from the University of Toronto or the University of Western Ontario spend time in the emergency room at Sarnia, Donald said he offers them the chance to spend a day at the methadone clinic. "They are always eager." Donald added that there is "quite a bit of ignorance among physicians" about the methadone programs and patients. "One of the rewards of doing this work, is seeing people turn their lives around. People have told us that we saved their lives." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake