Pubdate: Tue, 19 May 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/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) HELP FOR CITY'S DRUG ADDICTS WELCOMED SAINT JOHN - At least 500 drug addicts in the city could get help as early as June 1. Today, the provincial government is expected to announce plans to open a methadone treatment clinic at the Mercantile Centre on Union Street and funded by the province. The clinic will treat opiate addicts - those dependent on drugs such as Dilaudid and heroin - with methadone, a synthetic opiate narcotic that when administered once a day and in adequate doses, can usually suppress a heroin addict's craving and withdrawal for 24 hours. The program will be the first of its kind in the province and is different from the methadone maintenance program at Ridgewood Addiction Services, which provides addicts with methadone and social services such as counselling. While counselling is a requirement at Ridgewood, it's not a mandatory condition of the new clinic. The program will not have a limit to the number of people it can treat, while Ridgewood has a limited number of spaces. Julie Dingwell, executive director of AIDS Saint John, said there are other differences between the new program and Ridgewood. "People can self-refer or enter through another agency," she said. "If someone is an opiate user and has issues with addictions, the door is open and it will be a quick entry." The program being announced today is similar to a pilot project proposed by Tim Christie, chairman of ethics services for the Atlantic Health Sciences Corporation. Christie's proposal would have provided methadone and nothing else - no counselling, for example - to 45 people on the Ridgewood wait list. Another 45 people 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 2008 interview. The project never got off the ground because the New Brunswick Prescription Drug Formulary, a document that lists the drugs that are eligible benefits under the province's prescription drug program, only allows methadone to be prescribed in cases of opioid dependence as an adjunct to psychosocial interventions. In order for today's program to go forward, the wording of the formulary would have to change. As of last week, it had not changed, but those involved with the program say it's in the works. The program will have a steering committee made up of Dingwell, Christie, Saint John police Chief Bill Reid, distdrict medical health officer Dr. Scott Giffin and Dr. Duncan Webster. Webster will run the clinic. A nurse practitioner will work at the clinic doing work-ups on clients and present the results to a doctor, who will then write a methadone prescription for the individual. The addict will then get a daily dose of methadone at a pharmacy. Two pharmacies have already agreed to take on clients from the program. Both Dingwell and Reid believe the program will help decrease crime, as well as societal costs of untreated addicts. New Brunswick's methadone treatment policies and procedures document states the approximate annual cost of a client in the methadone maintenance program is $6,000, while the untreated opiate user can cost society approximately $49,000 per year. The cost per client of the new program will be lower than $6,000. "We expect within a couple of years that the province will more than save their money by not having (as many addicts) tied up in the legal system, hospitals or children in foster care," Dingwell said. As for curbing illegal activities, Reid said opiate addiction often leads to a life of crime. "It takes control of their life and because of that they involve themselves in crime in order to feed their addiction," Reid said. "In order to change that, you have to change their behaviour and methadone can help do that. "We're not about arresting people, we're about reducing crime." The police chief hopes the Mercantile Centre is a temporary home for the program and would like to see it run out of St. Joseph's Hospital. Reid added the steering committee estimates 500 people could be helped by the program within a few months, but he said the number could climb even higher. Both Dingwell and Reid said credit should be given to the provincial government, notably Health Minister Mike Murphy and Saint John Harbour MLA Ed Doherty, for helping make the program a reality. "I think it's a recognition by the province that we can save more money by actually engaging and working with people who have an addiction instead of marginalizing them," Dingwell said. "I've got to give kudos to Minister Murphy because this was not an easy decision to make. "In this case he's stepping outside of politics and doing the best thing for New Brunswick." - --- MAP posted-by: