Pubdate: Sat, 03 Nov 2012 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Evan Wood Note: Evan Wood is a professor of medicine at UBC, where he holds the university's Canada Research Chair in Inner City Medicine. ADVANCEMENTS IN ADDICTION TREATMENT BYPASS CANADA Canadians battling alcohol and drug addictions have a tough road ahead. Finding treatment is difficult. For those who are able to get into a treatment program, care is often substandard and lacks the full benefit of modern medicine. The new long- acting formulation of a drug called naltrexone is a perfect example of how Canada is playing catchup in the world of addiction treatment. The drug, which has been marketed in the U. S. under the trade name Vivitrol, is a drug that takes advantage of modern advancements in pharmaceutical development enabling an extended-release preparation that allows the drug to be slowly released into the body over the course of a month. Vivitrol is proven effective. As an opioid antagonist, Vivitrol reduces the rewarding effects of alcohol and completely blocks the effects of opioids like heroin for up to 30 days. In the first large randomized trial published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, Vivitrol reduced heavy drinking in alcoholics by 25 per cent. In a subsequent study published in the British Medical Journal The Lancet, 90 per cent of heroin addicts prescribed Vivitrol became abstinent compared to 35 per cent of patients injected with a placebo. In a study published earlier this year, which considered the most down- and-out population of addicts using both methamphetamine and heroin and published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, the drug more than doubled the rate at which patients became drug free. Aside from its substantial benefits in alcohol treatment, the drug has huge health care cost savings and public health implications in Canada where untreated heroin addiction and addiction to prescription opioid drugs remain serious public health concerns. Unfortunately, just as the Canadian federal government prepares to spend billions on new "tough on drugs" criminal justice measures that will ensnare untold alcohol and drug- addicted individuals, this remarkable addiction treatment advancement remains unavailable in Canada. This is ironic given that the government's lack of support for proven public health measures, such as providing sterile syringes to intravenous drug users, has been based on the argument that addiction treatment should be provided instead. Unfortunately, recent reports have suggested that Canada's anti-drug strategy renewal will soon see extensive cuts to Health Canada's addiction treatment budget while funding for law enforcement activities will be redoubled. Sadly, the high rates of untreated alcohol and drug addiction in Canada are a casualty of this long-standing allocation of resources and it appears that the federal government is set to repeat past mistakes. Instead, the government could make great strides in improving community health and safety by making the modernization of Canada's approach to addiction medicine a centrepiece of its new drug strategy. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom