Pubdate: 13 March 1999 Source: Sunday Times (UK) Contact: http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/ Copyright: 1999 Times Newspapers Ltd. Author: Daniel McGrory THE CURSE OF METHADONE - KILL OR CURE IN BRITAIN'S HEROIN CAPITAL On the stairwell of his tenement flat, 15-year-old Mark gulps back a mouthful of methadone and winces. The drug was prescribed to a heroin addict who lives three doors away on the same housing estate in Glasgow. The addict sold it to the boy for UKP2. Mark licks his lips to get rid of the taste of the bitter, green liquid and says: "Its easier to buy methadone around here than a pint of milk." The medical experts insist that methadone is helping to curb the worst excesses of many of Glasgow's estimated 12,000 intraveneous drug users. Critics blame the easy access for contributing to 21 drug deaths in Strathclyde since the start of the year and say that the treatment is, in effect, a state-sponsored drugs plague. Although methadone treatment - the "chemical cosh" - allows the addict to live a more stable life, cutting reliance on crime to feed a habit and bringing him into contact with health professionals, the downside is that large amounts go to a thriving black market as people are overprescribed and sell the surplus. Britain's heroin capital is now in the throes of a debate about whether the supposed cure is actually making the problem worse. David Bryce, a drug-treatment campaigner who was an adviser on the film Trainspotting, said: "GPs are the biggest drug dealers in Glasgow. You don't treat an addict by giving him a free drug that is as hard to kick as heroin." Two streets away from where Mark and two friends are sharing a plastic bottle of methadone in Cranhill, Alan Harper, 13, became Britain's youngest heroin victim last year. Alan had asked his mother if he could go to her partner's flat at 2am to watch a video. His stepfather, a convicted drug dealer, was in the flat when the boy took three times as much heroin as would kill an adult. When the police found him lying on the floor, his stepfather's collection of tarantulas and scorpions were crawling over his body, birds of paradise were flying around the flat and a dog had gnawed at the boy's arm. Nobody has ever been charged. Gaille McCann, who lived downstairs from the boy, persuaded the mothers of Cranhill to take on the dealers polluting their estate. Cranhill's children sent photographs of their ghetto to Tony Blair. Earlier this week, Henry McLeish, the Scottish Office Minister, drove around the estate with some youngsters to applaud new initiatives. Mrs McCann said: "What is to celebrate? The dealers still get away with it and addicts get as much free methadone as they like, which just cuts down their heroin bill. This is a war zone and the dealers are winning because whatever they say, the authorities have given up trying to stamp out drugs. Doling out the methadone is just crude, cheap social control. The police boast crime is down but it's still rife and no one comes off drugs." The minister had a photocall on the Cranhill estate to "declare war on the dealers who are killing our children and getting money for doing it". His motorcade drove past a drugs factory where a father-of-two mixes heroin and Valium in a new offering called "Zonks" and uses 12-year-old boys as couriers. Mark took that day off school and went looking for more methadone as he couldn't afford the UKP10 for "a heroin jag". Used syringes lie among the rotting rubbish in the front garden where he waited to buy his methadone. Graffiti glorifying the prescription drug defaces some of the metal sheets covering windows of the derelict flats. Mr McLeish accepts that methadone has its critics and needs to be more tightly controlled: "We have had some successes with it but there are dangers and these need to be carefully watched." Last week Mick Goodwillie, 16, died from a cocktail of Valium and methadone in his parents' flat two hours before they were to take him to Ireland to get him away from the drug dealers. The family had already moved out of the East End of Glasgow to escape the needle culture but his mother, Mary, said: "No matter where you go, there are always people ready to push drugs to our children." Mick was drugs victim number 21. A few days earlier, Victim 20 had been Kenneth Warren, 26, a Big Issue seller, who was found in a portable lavatory in a shopping precinct with a syringe sticking in his groin. Mr Bryce, who runs the recovery group Calton Athletic, says that he has information that the majority of those dying have taken methadone: "Some people have been it on for 15 years or more. When are the doctors going to say isn't it time you kicked the habit, not feed it? There are 3,500 prescriptions for it every day. Addicts are liars and they exaggerate their heroin habit to the GP to get bigger methadone doses. What they don't swig themselves, they sell. The addicts go along with the sham because they get free bus passes to collect their methadone, improved benefit Giros and there are jobs earmarked for them even though they are still on drugs, yet no help is given to kids who want to be clean." Mr Bryce, a reformed addict, says his attacks on the methadone programme has cost his Calton project its official funding. His work has had high-profile supporters including Lenny Henry and Robbie Coltrane - who played him in a television film. The Chancellor, Gordon Brown, extolled Calton's virtues for a glossy magazine. "The experts think they control the addicts," Mr Bryce said. "Police pat themselves on the back and say heroin addicts on methadone commit one crime a day instead of five, but that's still one too many." In the downstairs snooker room of his project, Kerry, 21, describes how methadone was "my free hit in the morning to get my head off the pillow - you take it because they tell you it will ease the pain of withdrawal but it's harder to kick than heroin. I started on heroin at 14 because I wanted to impress a boy." Chris, 20, admits he was a dealer and a housebreaker to pay for his habit. "I bought methadone from friends but it makes you feel worse and just keeps your tolerance level up for the heroin you still need." Beside him, Angela, 19, confessed that she would ask friends to go the doctors and lie about having a heroin habit so they could get prescriptions for methadone. Tom Gilhooly, the clinical director of Lanarkshire Drug Service which covers the east side of Glasgow, argues that it is not the drug that is to blame, but the failure of some of his colleagues to police its use. "We have the worst heroin problem in Britain so you have to fight fire with fire. Used properly, methadone allows addicts to function and stops them stealing. It does work, but doctors should do regular monitoring of users and not hand out weekly doses in one go." Pharmacists are supposed to dole out the daily dose at their counter and make the addicts swallow a glass of water to stop them holding the methadone in their mouth to sell later. Some pharmacists now have private rooms where patients take methadone and in some areas "swallow clinics" have been set up to ensure people take their treatment under supervision. Dr Gilhooly, who works at a drug crisis centre, said: "It's a synthetic opiate that acts in the body the same way as heroin and takes away the withdrawal symptoms. It stops craving but doesn't give the buzz so youngsters think they should take more. If you overdose, the part of the brain that tells you to breathe shuts down and you asphyxiate. That is what you die of from methadone. "It's easy to say stop it tomorrow but more than 3,000 people would be at risk. The use of heroin would rocket, so would crime and people will die of other drug abuse. Addicts here mix their drugs including the liberal use of the sleeping capsule, temazepam, which is a local delicacy in Glasgow." On the club scene, police say that teenagers are buying UKP35 "party packs" which include an Ecstasy tablet, some amphetamines, cannabis, temazepam or heroin. Detective Superintendent Barry Dougall said: "Youngsters who don't want parents to know they are on a high from Ecstasy or amphetamines think they can come down by smoking heroin or cannabis or taking the temazepam. Methadone helps to stabilise heroin users and takes the chaos out of their lives and reduces criminality." He said that 19 of the 99 who died last year from drugs had taken methadone. The figures are about average for recent years in Strathclyde. The latest figures for the rest of England and Wales show 177 addicts died along with another 220 from "non-dependent abuse of drugs" in 1997 but the Home Office doesn't list which drug killed them. An extra UKP13 million was promised in the Budget to target Scotland's drug dealers but David McAuley, who resigned as head of Scotland Against Drugs, said: "The messages are still confused whether we want to stop drugs or just reduce the harm." As a pharmacologist in 1982, he was one of the first to run a methadone project at Muirhouse in Edinburgh where Trainspotting was set. Now he says: "It's a tragedy to have seen this drug so misused. The arrogance of some doctors who advocate it is breathtaking and yet people are dying every week." - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady