Pubdate: Sat, 09 Feb 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Frances Bula Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) DOCTORS PAN MAYOR'S DRUG PLAN Addicts May Risk Housing, Support Services If They Refuse To Participate, Specialists Say A group of B.C. addictions doctors has written an open letter to the B.C. Medical Journal opposing the drug-substitution experiments advocated by Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan, saying the experiments are "not health care." They say Sullivan's Chronic Addiction Substitution Treatment trials also appear to tie needed housing, supports and counselling to an addict's willingness to take substitute drugs. However, other doctors involved in the trials say the critics have misinterpreted basic information. The open letter from the 14 doctors says : "We believe the CAST initiative -- [experiments which aim to provide legal drug substitutes for people currently addicted to stimulants such as cocaine or crystal meth] -- is a poorly conceived strategy that has negative consequences. "We are concerned the provision of housing, counselling, or access to a family doctor may be tied to participation in the CAST initiative, and those same services denied to addicts who decline." The doctors are also critical of the goal for the trial, which the CAST website states is to reduce impacts on public disorder and public health until more "durable" solutions can be found. "This is not health care, nor is it likely that it represents the goal of addicted patients." Dr. Douglas Coleman, who sees thousands of patients a year for addictions treatment with partner Dr. Donald Hedges, said people signed the letter because they have a fundamentally different view of what drug users need to improve their lives. "We are clinicians and we just have different opinions," said Coleman. He said the letter hasn't been sent to the mayor or people involved with trying to start the CAST trials, such as Dr. David Marsh of Vancouver Coastal Health or Dr. Michael Krausz, addiction research chair at the University of B.C., because "those folks don't particularly want to hear from us." But Marsh, who has co-written a response with Krausz to the journal, said the group's reaction is based entirely on misinformation. "There is no indication people would have to participate in a trial to get housing or counselling," he said. "And health benefits are the main goals of any trial." The CAST trials would operate in much the same way as another trial now going on in Vancouver. The North American Opiate Medication Initiative -- or NAOMI - provides heroin to long-term addicts, along with intensive counselling and support. The mayor's representative , David Hurford, also emphasized that city staff have endorsed the idea of trying drug substitution as a treatment method. As well, trials will ultimately be approved by the Canadian Institute for Health Research, which has rigorous standards. Coleman and some others on the list have expressed their opposition in the past to many of the harm-reduction efforts in place for drug users, particularly the supervised injection site. They would like to see far more aggressive efforts for treatment. Sullivan started advocating for a massive program of drug substitution therapy for cocaine and crystal meth addicts shortly after being elected in 2005. So far, there have been some small experiments in the U.S., Finland and Australia. He has claimed that the five trials now being proposed could enrol up to 2,000 people and take $50 million a year out of the local drug economy, which would in turn reduce gang violence on the streets. While harm-reduction advocates locally support the idea of trying out drug substitution for small groups of hard-core stimulant users, the mayor's insistence on running a large-scale program and his claims that it will dramatically reduce crime and drug-dealing have made them uneasy. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom