Pubdate: Sat, 13 Sep 2008 Source: Daily Observer, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Osprey Media Group Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/udQyY8Mp Website: http://www.thedailyobserver.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2615 Author: Andre Bigras A METHADONE CLINIC IS MERELY THE FIRST STEP TO FREE NEEDLES, CRACK PIPES Editor: I read the article in The Daily Observer on Aug. 22 advising of a methadone clinic opening in Pembroke. As a former resident of Pembroke, this issue concerns me. I have been involved as a volunteer in the inner City of Ottawa for many years and can attest that there are people who have been on methadone, some for over 20 years. Many are poly drug users and still continue taking illegal drugs. They have basically replaced an illegal drug with a legal one but are still not drug-free. Abstinence is not the goal and if it isn't, then the wheel of addiction will only grow as more and more people will be added to it. It is to be noted that it is harder to withdraw from methadone than heroin. This is considered harm reduction and the next phase I can assure you is a needle exchange followed by crack pipes. This clinic will hire two nurses and a support worker that is covered under OHIP, and we wonder why the escalating cost to our health system. How much does the methadone cost and if it is considered a health issue and need, then why not cover it? The most disturbing part of the story is that Ms. Daiter could not estimate the eventual number of clients that will utilize the program and she quotes, it seems to be a bigger issue than what we're seeing now. This is not a scientific survey that studied the needs before implementing this clinic but rather a need that creates and builds an empire on the backs of addicts. Would you want your child to enter a methadone clinic that permeates his addiction in a different form, or would you want them in treatment with abstinence as the goal? Sadly, harm reduction is for the poor and treatment for the rich. Scotland has revisited its methadone program and have placed a two-year limit on it, then the next phase would be treatment. The federal government's new drug strategy is prevention, treatment and enforcement. Let us as a society stop sending mixed messages to our children -don't do drugs but here are some needles, don't do drugs but here are some crack pipes, don't do drugs but walk by the methadone clinic in the middle of the city that replaces illegal drugs with a legal one (yet a drug just the same). Our actions speak louder than words. There are many across this land lately that are questioning the validity of these harm reduction programs and I believe with reason. I would encourage readers to start checking this out and asking questions. Please check out our website at www.saferottawa.ca. Andre Bigras, Drug Prevention Network of Canada ( www.DPNOC.ca) - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart