Pubdate: Wed, 20 May 2009 Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK) Page: C1 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: Sandra Davis Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) POLICE CHIEF GETS CREDIT FOR NEW METHADONE CLINIC SAINT JOHN - Health Minister Mike Murphy is crediting police Chief Bill Reid with convincing him to fund a methadone clinic in the uptown. "The reason I'm here is because of the chief," Murphy told a Tuesday morning news conference. "He contacted me when it was apparent that drugs and drug abuse were spilling into the streets. This wouldn't have taken place without the chief." Murphy, along with Supply and Services Minister Ed Doherty, the MLA for Saint John Harbour, announced plans to fund a methadone treatment clinic at the Mercantile Centre on Union Street, which is expected to serve at least 500 drug addicts in the city. It will be located there until a permanent location can be identified. There are 163 clients participating in the methadone treatment program at the Ridgewood Addiction Services Treatment Centre and 93 on the waiting list. 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 new clinic allows addicts to refer themselves for treatment. "The wait time here in Saint John should really drop to virtually nothing," after the clinic opens this summer, Murphy said. Overseen by Dr. Duncan Webster, the clinic will complement a program at Ridgewood, located at South Bay. Webster, an infectious diseases specialist, along with a nurse practitioner, will see patients at the new clinic. Murphy also announced that counselling will no longer be required in tandem with methadone, which will improve access for some patients province-wide. "The counselling requirement has been an obstacle to care in the past," Murphy said. "In order to reduce the wait times as soon as possible, we've eliminated the obligation for counselling. "While we firmly believe that counselling along with methadone remains the best treatment option, some individuals - because of their circumstances or psychological makeup at the moment - can't commit to counselling." If clients want to go into counselling as they become stabilized, it will be provided, he said. Changes to the wording of New Brunswick's Prescription Drug Formulary, a document that lists the drugs that are eligible benefits under the province's prescription drug program are in the works because, as it stands now, the program only allows methadone to be prescribed in cases of opioid dependence as an adjunct to psychosocial interventions. The province will also renovate the Ridgewood Treatment Centre so that methadone can be dispensed there seven days a week. "By dispensing methadone from Ridgewood, we will be addressing an ongoing challenge of finding enough pharmacies within the community to dispense methadone," Murphy said. He expects that 100 Ridgewood clients will get their methadone prescriptions filled at Ridgewood every day. A major challenge in meeting the demand for methadone treatment in the Saint John area has been recruiting physicians and pharmacists, Murphy said, because doctors must be licensed by Health Canada to prescribe methadone. Four physicians work 57 hours per month with the clinical team at Ridgewood Addiction Services; the number of hours they work will be increased to 66, Murphy said. Ridgewood isn't easily accessible to everyone, Doherty acknowledged. "This clinic will be handy for uptown residents," he said, adding that there will be savings to society because associated costs of an untreated opiate-dependent resident is about $44,000 per year, compared to less than $10,000 it costs to treat the problem. Julie Dingwell, executive director of AIDS Saint John, described the new clinic as a "more relaxed approach. "It won't be a hard program to get engaged with. Most people want to get a job and get their life back and that's what we're going to try to do. "We've come a long way. We did one methadone program and now we have a complimentary program. It always works the best when you have different kinds of services." A request for proposals will be issued by Regional Health Authority B requesting pharmacies to submit proposals to dispense methadone on-site at Ridgewood. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom