Pubdate: Thu, 05 Feb 2009 Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2009 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: Andrew McGilligan Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) ADDICTS SEEKING METHADONE TREATMENT IN PROVINCE FACING A 12-WORD ROADBLOCK SAINT JOHN - Twelve words in a provincial document are preventing addicts from getting treatment. In the New Brunswick Prescription Drug Formulary - a document that lists the drugs that are eligible benefits under the province's prescription drug program - methadone can only be prescribed for two circumstances. The first is for the treatment of severe cancer-related or chronic non-malignant pain as an alternative to other opioids. The second states, "For the treatment of opioid dependence as an adjunct to psychosocial interventions." The second reason means methadone can only be given to an addict as part of a comprehensive treatment program, including counselling and other social services. That is what takes place at Ridgewood Addiction Services' methadone maintenance treatment program. However, the program is full with more than 80 names on the wait list. A pilot program proposed by Tim Christie, chairman of ethics services for the Atlantic Health Sciences Corporation, is ready to go, but the wording in the formulary prevents it from going forward. Christie's proposal would provide methadone and nothing else - no counselling, for example - to 45 people on the wait list. Another 45 would simply remain on the wait list. The study would track and compare the two groups' results. "This is based on scientific literature that says if you take two people that are both opiate addicts and you give one methadone and the other nothing, the person you give methadone will do vastly better on almost every conceivable outcome," Christie said in a September interview. However, because no counselling is provided, the study - which has already received $30,000 from the Health Promotion Research Fund, a joint venture between AHSC and the University of New Brunswick Saint John - cannot begin. A conference call was held last week with the working group that deals with the provincial methadone program, said Department of Health spokeswoman Meghan Cumby. The policy in the formulary blocking the pilot program was discussed during the call. "That concern was brought up, discussed and it's being taken under advisement," Cumby said. However, should the group decide the policy needs to be changed, it would only be a recommendation. "Any sort of change in the policy would have to go up the line," Cumby said. If the wording in the formulary was changed, allowing methadone to be prescribed for treatment of addiction without counselling, it would clear Christie to implement the pilot project. Christie declined comment for the story. As for how the change could benefit the Ridgewood program, regional director of community relations and marketing regional health authority B Erin Barnes said it's a provincial issue and would not comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin