Pubdate: Thu, 12 Nov 2015 Source: Niagara Falls Review, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Niagara Falls Review Contact: http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca/letters Website: http://www.niagarafallsreview.ca Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2907 Author: Cheryl Clock Page: A15 METHADONE CLINICS TO REMAIN OPEN - FOR NOW Two doctors have left in frustration. And the remaining physicians who treat drug-addicted patients with methadone at Segue clinics across Niagara will see their income cut by nearly 30 per cent. But unlike speculation by other clinics in Ontario that funding cuts by the province will force them to close, those in Niagara will stay open - for now, said Dr. Robert Fallis, a Seque partner and addictions physician. "It depends on what happens next," said Fallis. "And we don't know what's happening next." What's happened since February is this. The Ontario government has cut its funding to doctors by nearly seven per cent. It's happened in stages and covers things like fees for services and continuing medical education. Then in October, there were more cuts that targeted specific services. At issue for methadone clinics are the cuts in funding for urine screening tests, says Fallis. Patients at methadone clinics must submit to regular urine tests to ensure they aren't using street drugs. Methadone is used as a substitute drug to treat addiction to opioid drugs like heroin. It helps to prevent symptoms of withdrawal and drug cravings. Visits and services at methadone clinics are covered by OHIP. A drug like methadone is covered through the Ontario Drug Benefit Program to people on Ontario Works or the Ontario Disability Support Program. The five Segue clinics in Niagara, and two in Hamilton and Stoney Creek, generate hundreds of urine tests every month, he says. They are a staple of methadone clinics. "Urine drug screens for us are like taking blood pressure for a cardiologist," Fallis said. With t wo weeks warning, the Ontario Ministry of Health announced fees paid to doctors for urine tests were being cut in half, he said. The methadone clinic will lose about a quarter of its revenue, he adds. After spending considerable time and money to open a new clinic this week in Thorold, Fallis says he's disappointed the government has "changed all the rules." But his frustration spreads beyond dollars and cents. Two of the addictions doctors at Segue have left since the spring, both due to frustration with the province. "They don't want to be a doctor in Ontario," said Fallis. As a result, the remaining four physicians have had to take roughly 300 additional patients into their own practices and have extended hours to deal with the increased caseload. "We all have to see more people and run faster," he said. As yet, it has not affected the quality of patient care, Fallis said. Over at the Niagara Health System, funding cuts are not impacting patients. "The NHS methadone clinics have not experienced any reduction in services," said spokesman Steven Gallagher. A doctor was not available for comment. The NHS treated 435 patients at its three methadone clinics last year. And at the On Trac Clinic on St. Paul Street, Jeff Spence, vice- president of Community Outreach and Development for Towards Recovery offered this in an e-mail: "Other than to say that despite the financial impact, our intention is to continue to provide current levels of service, a decision was made that we did not want to comment further." Problem is, it's tough enough attracting doctors to the addictions field, said Segue's Fallis. Patients can be challenging. Add frustrations with the government and it's been near impossible to find replacements for the two doctors who have left, he said. It's not about trimming fat from the system, said Fallis. About 40 per cent of a family doctor's income goes to paying for overhead - everything from nurses to cleaning staff, rent to paper for the photocopiers. "The government never releases those numbers," he said. Across Ontario, there are some 250 addiction physicians, 221 clinics and 40,000 people on methadone. Eventually, it will become a patient care issue. "If they make the system too difficult, so physicians don't find it worthwhile doing it any more, eventually the patients won't get the care," he says. "We'll have 5,000, 10,000, maybe 20,000 people on methadone, who aren't on methadone anymore. And how is that going to impact society? That's the problem. They don't think about the human component." Especially, he added, when patients don't have a voice. "Our patients are some of the most vulnerable in the province," he said. "Frankly, they really have very little political clout. My patients don't complain. They don't go to their MP or MPP and complain about issues. "It's an easy thing to cut back in areas where people are the most vulnerable. They don't have the power to complain." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom