Pubdate: Mon, 26 Oct 2009 Source: Telegram, The (CN NF) Copyright: 2009 The Telegram Contact: http://www.thetelegram.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/303 Author: Alisha Morrissey PART 3: LOOKING BACK, AND AHEAD Is Methadone The Only Option For Addicts? In Newfoundland and Labrador, there are two main ways to come off opiod drugs if you're hooked - taking methadone or going cold turkey. Barry Hewitt, program manager of the Recovery Center, Opioid Treatment Clinic and Terrace Clinic, says the cold turkey method is probably the hardest way to come off drugs like OxyContin, heroin and other narcotics. "It's not deadly. You won't die," he says. "You start (feeling symptoms after) about 24 hours. It gets worse around Day 3: a lot of sweats, dancing leg, aches and pains ... not many people stay (at the recovery centre until they completely detox)." Still, there are some people who simply don't want to take methadone, Hewitt says. And while people who work in addictions will tell you methadone is not a magic elixir for OxyContin addicts, it's here and it works. "We're still new to methadone ... we're still learning. Are we close to (getting it right)? Yeah. Do I think we have a good program? Yeah," Hewitt says. There are other options out there. Other options aren't practical A quick search of the Internet turns up hundreds of responses on how to detox from OxyContin - methods that can be costly and, in some cases, radical. One of them is ultra-rapid detox - which sees the addict put under anesthesia and quickly detoxed through the use of other drugs. But recent studies say ultra-rapid detox may not be the safest option, nor is it cheap. There's also plenty of advice on the Internet about cold-turkey detoxing, some of which includes the use of other drugs to fight the symptoms of withdrawal, also known as medical detoxing. The Calton Athletic Recovery Group, an athletic-based recovery centre in Glasgow, Scotland, bans all alcohol and drugs, instead promoting endorphins from exercise as a cure to heroin addiction. "At Calton Athletic we realize this stance can seem harsh to some people. They believe that not everyone is capable of giving up drugs. We accept that. But we also believe that most drug addicts want to give up, but feel that they can't," reads the group's website. Another controversial weaning option was offered recently to a test group of addicts in Vancouver and Montreal. The experiment saw the addicts provided their drug of choice - heroin - - in measured doses. The 251 participants hadn't benefited from standard addiction treatments. The results of the North American Opiate Medication Initiative showed that the overall health of the addicts improved, illicit drug use dropped by nearly 70 per cent and the illegal activity and the amount of money spent on drugs dropped dramatically in the first 12 months, something the parallel-running methadone maintenance program couldn't accomplish. There are other also other pharmacological options for people not willing or unable to take methadone, including methadone replacement Bupernorphine, and Levo-Alpha Acetyl Methadol, the long-acting but rarely-prescribed version of methadone known as LAAM. But they don't all work the same, nor are they a guarantee or cure. Risky business Gerry Young, the pharmacist for this province's opiod treatment program, says there are problems introducing new drug treatments - specifically for pharmacists. Pharmacists already take risks when they have to judge just how sober their methadone patients are when they watch them drink the methadone-laced cup of orange Tang. A patient who is already high could overdose on opiates, or if they're drunk they could stop breathing, as methadone decreases respiration and alcohol can add to that effect. Handing out similar drugs in pill form would add another potential liability in that pharmacists would have to make sure the patients swallowed the pills, Young explains. Another problem with these alternative drugs - none of which are available in this province - is that success rates are quite low. Abstinence programs have an even higher rate of failure, some experts say. Dr. Jeff White, one of few doctors in the St. John's area prescribing methadone, says just stopping taking opiates doesn't work. "They've already tried it. Every person who comes in to me has already tried some form of detox whether it's home, detox centre, jail," he says. The best treatment White knows of is the combination of methadone and counselling. But sometimes that treatment is hard to come by. "In my estimation, methadone is better than nothing," he says. "The counselling opportunities are dismal in St. John's. In fact, they're so bad right now I'm not even referring anyone because they never hear back." The opioid treatment centre offers counselling as part of the methadone treatment, White says, but the waiting list for the centre is longer than that of a doctor's office. "At least (at my office) they're getting methadone (even if they aren't getting counselling). ... What else am I going to do? If they don't get it now, I don't want to see these people two years down the road, who are gone from taking six Percocets today to taking six OxyContin 80 milligram tablets a day." Methadone isn't the panacea, he says, but it does work and it's the best tool available right now. "You're not going to fix everyone ... but you have to try," White says. "And I'll give them a chance." - ---------------------------- Third in a three-part series examining the effectiveness of the province's methadone treatment program for drug addictions - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr