Pubdate: Thu, 20 Nov 2008 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2008 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Margaret Wente Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?131 (Heroin Maintenance) UP NEXT: FREE HEROIN FOR ADDICTS Should we be giving free heroin to addicts? Don't choke. Researchers in Vancouver say yes. And they've just spent $8-million in public money to prove their case. Last month, after concluding a landmark clinical trial, they announced that the best way to treat hard-core heroin addicts is: Give them more heroin! They argue that methadone, a much safer treatment, doesn't work with this crowd. But free heroin makes them happier, healthier and less inclined to steal so they can get their next fix. And since they can't kick the habit, we ought to minimize the social harm and feed their habit, legally. The findings from the NAOMI (North American Opiate Medication Initiative) trial were instantly endorsed by the same progressive folks who've failed to clean up Vancouver's drug-infested Downtown Eastside. The media applauded wildly, too. But a number of addictions doctors aren't impressed. And they've issued a sweeping critique of the NAOMI trial that raises important questions about it. "The trial was badly designed," says Mel Kahan, head of addiction medicine services at St. Joseph's Health Centre in Toronto. "And there are better and safer solutions." The trial was supposed to study addicts for whom methadone had repeatedly failed. But Dr. Kahan says many of those recruited for the trial had scarcely tried methadone at all. The trial also relied heavily on self-reports. You won't be surprised to learn that subjects lucky enough to get the real stuff (as opposed to the control group, which got a rather skimpy dose of methadone) said they were highly motivated to stick with a program that gave them pure and uncut heroin for free. "It was quite delicious," said Greg Liang, a trial participant who was tracked down by The Globe and Mail's Jane Armstrong. Some of the addicts, he said, competed to see how much they could consume. "They were heroin pigs." A much smaller third group in the study also got lucky. They were given injections of hydromorphone (more widely known as Dilaudid), a potent legal narcotic that is similar in effect to heroin. They couldn't tell the difference. NAOMI researchers know they're highly unlikely to get Ottawa to authorize the use of prescription heroin. So they're lobbying the B.C. government to approve a hydromorphone clinic on the NAOMI site. The critics aren't buying it. Vancouver's real problem, argues Dr. Kahan, is an acute shortage of good methadone programs. The next step in tackling the heroin problem is to expand them. "In medicine, we try to go by the principle 'First, do no harm.' You try the safest thing first and you go up from there." A hydromorphone clinic, Dr. Kahan says, is a bad idea. "It's a nasty drug. What kind of message do we send when it's okay for a world-famous academic clinic to inject it?" Stan deVlaming, a Downtown Eastside addictions doctor who's also a strong critic of NAOMI, says: "There's a fine line between harm reduction and enabling. If I make it easier for people to stay addicted, am I doing them any favours?" Injecting any drug, he says, can have gruesome and life-threatening side effects. And he sees them every day. Both doctors point out that keeping addicts addicted is nothing more than palliative care. They'd rather see the money spent on rehab. Even some of the most dysfunctional patients, they say, can eventually recover. "My work is incredibly satisfying, because a lot of them do get better," says Dr. Kahan. "It's kind of like a return to life." But many people in B.C.'s drug policy establishment have a very different vision. They want to see prescription heroin made available on a broad scale, and some would even like to see it legalized. As far as they're concerned, $8-million in federal research money to fund the NAOMI trial is money well spent. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin