Pubdate: Wed, 2 Apr 2008 Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2008 Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact Website: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2878 Author: Megan O'Toole Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) NEW HEALTH PLAN EXPANDS METHADONE DRUG PROGRAM Methadone treatment will be expanded to four additional regions under the province's new health plan, unveiled Tuesday by Health Minister Mike Murphy. Services will become available in St. Stephen, Edmundston, Campbellton and Bathurst. The Health Department could not provide a timeline for rollout of the methadone initiative, but the health plan is being implemented in phases over the next four years. Saying that addictions are "destroying the lives of many New Brunswickers," Murphy vowed the province will do more to fight the growing problem. The new services will make it easier for people to obtain the care they need closer to home, while also addressing ballooning waiting lists, he said. The initiative delivers on a pledge from the 2006 Liberal Charter for Change to improve the availability of methadone treatment in urban centres and rural communities. Methadone clinics are currently operating in Saint John, Fredericton, Moncton and Miramichi. In the four additional regions, methadone treatment will be added to existing addiction services programs. To facilitate the provision of treatment, six full-time employees will be added: two in each of St. Stephen and Bathurst, and one in each of Campbellton and Edmundston. St. Stephen mayor Allan Gillmor said the initiative should address some of the region's immediate problems linked to drug use, which has become a more pervasive issue in recent years. "Obviously drugs are a problem in every community and if this is a way of dealing with it, it certainly should be a help," Gillmor said. But the jury's still out on whether methadone - used to wean addicts off drugs from the opioid family, including codeine, morphine and heroin - is a good solution in the long term, he said. Dennis Greene, mayor of nearby Grand Manan, lauded the initiative, saying it will be a valuable resource for residents. But he said his village, which was shattered two years ago by a riot that culminated in the burning of a suspected crack house, would have benefitted from having treatment available on its own turf. Drugs have become a major problem in every community in the province, said Barry MacKnight, president of the New Brunswick Association of Chiefs of Police and chief of the Fredericton force. About 75 per cent of all crime is related to substance abuse, he said, and, in Fredericton, all reported robberies are related to drug addiction. The methadone clinic in Fredericton has provided some relief, he said. "When people are on methadone, they're not doing crime to support their drug habits, and that's a big deal to us," he said. But MacKnight stressed that methadone is only part of the solution, underscoring the value of education and prevention. The methadone treatment program in Saint John has admitted about 300 people since opening in February of 2005, said co-ordinator Marj Mullin. The government's announcement is "absolutely exciting," she added, pointing to major studies that have shown methadone is the most effective method of treating opioid addiction. "Designating that this is an area the province needs to go in and address and provide more resources to is extremely exciting," Mullin said. But high demand has kept many who need access to methadone on hold. Currently, 166 people are actively involved in the Saint John program and 56 are on a waiting list, Mullin said. In Miramichi, 173 people are in methadone treatment at the addiction recovery clinic, while 248 are stuck on a waiting list, a spokesperson said. That problem is not being addressed in the government's new plan, since the additional resources are not directed toward existing clinics, said Opposition health critic Claude Landry. He also blasted the initiative for lacking detail. "It's quite vague," Landry said. "We don't have any timeframe or budget allocated. We are talking about six (new full-time employees), but are we addressing those issues of waiting times?" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake