Pubdate: Fri, 28 Aug 2009 Source: Cape Breton Post (CN NS) Copyright: 2009 Cape Breton Post Contact: http://www.capebretonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/777 Author: Christine Porter, Executive Director, The AIDS Coalition EXPANDED DRUG TREATMENT NEEDED TO SAVE LIVES I want to encourage awareness of the plight of addicts and the lack of treatment options available to them. It is not unlike the crisis that struck us six years ago when OxyContin was claiming the lives of many struggling with opiate addiction; the death toll is rising again. I am unable to state the number of lives lost within the past year or two, but as director of the AIDS Coalition of Cape Breton and Sharp Advice Needle Exchange I have witnessed the loss first-hand. Unlike the vast media attention that was given to lives lost during the OxyContin crisis, lives lost today are kept quiet and under wraps. In addition to the rise in the death toll, numerous overdoses have occurred that have not resulted in death. These near fatalities are never mentioned in the media. Thanks to the great work of the Partnership on Drug Abuse and its encouragement of prescription drug monitoring, OxyContin isn't as readily available as it was six years ago. OxyContin was not the only problem; the problem was, and still is, all opiates. It just so happened that at that time of the crisis, OxyContin was the most accessible. Recently in our news, a warning was issued of a new drug on the scene, hydromorphine (Regional Police Chief Warns Hydromorphone Abuse Growing, Aug. 1). This isn't a new drug; it's been around as long as OxyContin or longer, and has been widely used for the same purpose. The same goes for Dilaudid, Percocet, morphine, methadone, fentanyl (patch or pill form, either can be injected) or any codeine-based pain medication. The message I am trying to relay is that opiates are here and they are here to stay. There is such a taste for opiates here in Cape Breton. Could it be possible that if an attempt is made to make prescription opiates unobtainable a much more lethal and addictive street drug will take the place? Maybe that drug is heroin. Heroin is already available in Halifax and is a major problem in New Brunswick. We have been fortunate enough to have avoided it to this point. I would much rather see a person addicted to a prescription drug than to a street drug. At least prescription drugs are manufactured with standards. We have no idea of the cut, strength or content of street drugs. Our community acted quickly on the OxyContin crisis and was eventually able to convince our provincial government to provide Cape Breton with a methadone maintenance program. We can now proudly boast that Cape Breton has a top notch, medium threshold program that runs smoothly through Addictions Services and is appreciated greatly by all those who benefit from it. It is not enough! We need two programs. The existing program, however beneficial, does not meet the needs of the more severely, poly-addicted individuals who do not qualify. Our program cannot handle the numbers of addicted people who need it. There is a long waiting list. We need a low threshold program. Low threshold: Methadone is provided primarily to opiate users with few restrictions regarding use of other drugs or involvement in rehabilitation. Typically, "carries" are not allowed; clients must visit the program site daily to drink their methadone. (A carry means that a participant in the program is allowed to take methadone home, usually enough for three or four days, without ingesting it in front of the pharmacist.) Medium threshold: Methadone is provided primarily to opiate users, with moderate restrictions regarding the use of other drugs or involvement in rehab. Participants are generally given five chances to abstain totally without threat of discharge. Typically, carries are allowed after proven abstinence and program compliance, with ongoing monitoring. In addition to the loss of lives, the strain on the economy from just one addicted individual is enormous. If the only source of income is from stealing, a user will have to steal about $500 per day worth of goods and fence that for a mere $100 to support a $100 a day habit. In one year, the average user would have to steal about $181,000 worth of merchandise. If the person is caught and imprisoned, it costs Canadians $66,381 per year to house a male prisoner and $110,473 per year to house a female, according to recent figures. It also costs Canadians $16,800 per year to supervise an offender on parole. One of the most significant risks is in the sharing of injection drug equipment, which can often result in the spread of HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C. The financial burden these two blood-borne diseases pose on our health care system is astounding; lifetime cost of treating one person living with HIV infection was calculated as $153,000 back in 1997. Cape Breton has the highest rates of Hepatitis C in Nova Scotia. The cost of medical care for a person who is Hepatitis C positive is about $125,000. The cost for a liver transplant is $228.000. Even if the addict never becomes infected with a blood-borne pathogen, the countless trips to emergency for serious problems such as abscesses, cellulitis and even endocarditis cost health care dollars. In comparison, the cost of methadone maintenance for one person per year is about $3,500. Methadone is an investment in lives as well as in the economy. With all the evidence and facts based on research, it is time to push for more treatment options, including low threshold methadone maintenance and youth treatment centres. Let's take control before any more lives are lost. We can't stop the flow the drugs or the harms related to drug use but we can control and manage them. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr