Pubdate: Mon, 31 May 1999 Source: Orlando Business Journal (FL) Copyright: American City Business Journals Inc Contact: 315 E. Robinson St., Suite 250 Orlando FL 32801 Fax: 407-420-1625 Feedback: http://www.amcity.com/orlando/lettertotheeditor.html Website: http://www.amcity.com/orlando/ HOW TO SAVE A HEROIN ADDICT You can rant yourself hoarse about the Puerto Rican heroin connection. You can demand more money for more cops, with more tools. But heroin is known as "the Hook" for a reason. Anyone who has ever had a passing glimpse of a person in the grip of the deadly stuff knows that, even if law enforcement could get it off the streets, addicts will just take to the alleys. That's just one reason why the state needs to sit up and pay attention to the 20 or so folks lining up every morning, like clockwork, outside the paint-chipped building housing the Center for Drug-Free Living. They look like you and me because they are like you and me. They hold jobs. They have families. They can do that because they are lucky enough to afford methadone, a chemical that alleviates the vicious physical cravings of a body dependent on heroin. They line up in front of the Center for Drug-Free Living because it's one of just a handful of Central Florida locations that offer methadone. And, like clients at almost every methadone treatment facility in Florida, they have to pay for it: The state cut off all local methadone funding in 1996 -- just as the needle-marked bodies began piling up in Central Florida. Here's what's happened since the state turned off the local methadone spigot: More people have died from heroin use. A lot more people. Despite an influx of drug enforcement dollars, the high-minded rhetoric of national politicos and the copious bleeding of liberal hearts everywhere, deaths from heroin use in Orlando jumped from 16 in 1997, one year after state-financed methadone funding was last available in Orlando, to 36 last year. The deadly outcome is all too predictable: Insurance companies, not known for their soft and tender side, are among methadone's biggest fans specifically because hard data links the treatment to sharp reductions in heroin-related deaths, and thus, sharp reductions in heroin-related hospital stays. So why would a community accept this kind of methadone funding cut just as its children are being laid out on morgue slabs in record numbers? It is as though we have elected to stand vigil over the bed of a dying patient, weeping for the imminent loss, moaning the absence of a cure -- and refusing to administer antibiotics. Maybe antibiotics would work. Maybe they wouldn't. Maybe the only sin is not caring enough to find out - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck