Pubdate: Wed, 08 Jul 2009 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: John Reynolds SALOME A NEW WAY OUT FOR ADDICTS /John Reynolds is a senior strategic advisor to law firm Lang Michener in Vancouver and a member of the Inner Change Foundation board. He served as a Member of Parliament for more than 13 years -- including as Leader of the Opposition. He has served the B.C. legislature as an MLA, minister of environment and Speaker. More recently, he co-chaired the Conservative Party's successful campaign in 2006./ One of the reasons I am a proud supporter of Vancouver's Inner Change Foundation and research like the Study to Assess Longer-term Opioid Medication Effectiveness (SALOME) is because our health-care system needs to offer a wider array of effective treatment options for some of our most vulnerable citizens suffering from chronic drug addiction. By providing a new option that stabilizes addicts, transitions to legal oral medication and offers psycho-social treatment to address the underlying causes of addiction, SALOME represents hope and something average-thinking people can participate in to help our neighbours in the Downtown Eastside and beyond. It is about time that we end the stigma around addiction and start thinking about this as treatable illness instead of a moral failing. SALOME is a client-centred, integrative treatment model. The federal and provincial governments should be applauded for supporting this research -- as should the financial donors from the private sector that are coming forward through Inner Change. SALOME is more treatment than harm reduction. It offers a new way out for addicts and addresses root causes while reducing crime and profits of organized crime at the same time. That makes sense to me. As someone who loves Vancouver and Canada so much, it causes me great concern to think that people from all walks of life are killing their souls to buy these drugs every hour of every day in our city. Taxpayers also pay a price for this carnage while gangs reap substantial financial rewards. Consider that a market of 1,000 heroin users can generate more than $30,000 a day in revenue for a drug dealer. In two short years, that is $25 million -- tax free. No red tape. No consumer protection. On the other hand, 1,000 addicts participating in legal substitution treatment amounts to a profit of zero for organized crime -- not to mention lower court costs, fewer break-ins, less prostitution, shorter emergency-room waits and increased productivity from recovering addicts. Decades ago, people diagnosed with cancer were confronted with a very limited number of treatment options. Today, thanks to the advances of medical research, cancer patients are able to choose from a much wider array of choices. If the same cancer patient decades ago wanted to stop smoking, it was generally done cold-turkey. Today, that same tobacco addict can choose among a pack of gum, the patch or many other alternatives. If you were diagnosed with a drug addiction decades ago, you were also lucky to have more than one treatment option. If it was heroin you were addicted to, your options were withdrawal, methadone or jail. The problem is that this situation remains much the same today. If we can show this innovative addiction-research treatment works, why wouldn't we move towards this kind of option? If we can offer expanded treatment options for so many other health conditions, why not addiction, too? Anything that thinking people can do to help people get rid of that illness is a good idea. This is a non-partisan thing. This is about people helping people. Let's hope with advances like SALOME it won't take another decade for people with drug addiction to have another exit to choose from. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr