Pubdate: Sun, 10 Oct 1999 Source: Sunday Independent (Ireland) Copyright: Independent Newspapers (Ireland) Ltd Contact: http://www.independent.ie/ Author: Geraldine Niland NEW METHADONE POLICY BRINGS DRUGS REALITY INTO COMMUNITIES THE treatment of heroin addiction is no longer confined to a handful of communities across greater Dublin. Over the past 18 months the operation of the methadone treatment programme in areas served by 142 GPs and 190 pharmacists has meant that local communities across Dublin, Wicklow and Kildare now witness the legacy of heroin addiction almost daily. The Central Treatment List operated by the Eastern Health Board now carries over 4,000 addicts on its register. Just over two thirds of those registered for methadone maintenance attend one of 51 treatment centres across the region. These are a mixture of Addiction Centres operated by the Eastern Health Board and clinics run by GPs. There are also three mobile clinics. Under the new methadone protocol, which came into effect with the introduction of the Misuse of Drugs (Supervision of Prescription and Supply of Methadone) in July 1998, some 1,138 addicts are now treated by GPs and pharmacists. The terms of the new protocol allow GPs to treat between 15 and 35 addicts in their surgeries, provided they have undergone training supervised by the Irish College of General Practitioners. Unlike the operation of Addiction Centres, GPs are not obliged to consult with local communities about the operation of the methadone treatment programme in the locality. This lack of consultation has brought uncertainty and unease to some communities who up until now have had no direct contact with heroin addiction. According to the Eastern Health Board, the new protocols were introduced last year to provide more structured treatment for addicts in their locality, together with stricter prescribing controls to prevent the flow of methadone onto the illicit market. However, the scheme has made little impact on the supply of methadone on the streets, according to a senior investigator at the National Drugs Bureau. ``It is a bureaucratic answer to the problem and it is not addressing the issue of demand reduction as well as tackling the problem of our drug culture,'' he said. The use of methadone to treat heroin addiction is controversial. It is increasingly argued that in the absence of a clear, drug-free policy, methadone maintenance merely feeds the addict's habit. Statistics may serve to highlight this fact. The EHB has 17 detoxification beds at Cherry Orchard hospital, and uses a further 10 beds at Beaumont hospital. It also provides funding for a limited number of detoxification places at the Merchants Quay Project in Dublin and Cluin Mhuire in Athy. There is a waiting list of 61 addicts from the current 4,001 population on the methadone treatment programme. According to some recovery groups, the methadone treatment programme is a medical model which is over-used and abused in dealing with heroin abuse. ``There are not enough after-care and recovery groups run by and for addicts,'' said Grainne Kenny of the National Drug Prevention Alliance. ``We oppose harm reduction and the long-term use of methadone. We believe that methadone treatment should be used for a six-month period. The public are beginning to object to clinics because they do create a nuisance. It is not just the addicts who are being maintained; the dealers are also being maintained,'' she said. The Eastern Health Board, however, disputes this, maintaining that the protocols on the new methadone treatment programme mean that local fears of loitering drug addicts are ill-founded and that there has been a reduction in local crime and nuisance. ``Our experience is that properly organised drug treatment and secured drug treatment clinics pose no threat to anybody,'' said a statement from the EHB. ``Persons on drug treatment programmes are well motivated and the Gardai have found that there is a reduction in local crime following the opening of drug treatment centres.'' A garda spokesperson could not comment on the source of the EHB claim. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea