Pubdate: Mon, 18 May 2009
Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK)
Page: A1
Copyright: 2009 Brunswick News Inc.
Contact: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact
Website: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2878
Author: Benjamin Shingler
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone)

HELP FOR DRUG ADDICTS

New Provincially Funded Methadone Treatment Clinic To Open In Uptown Saint John

FREDERICTON - Help is on the way. A new methadone  treatment clinic 
is being established in uptown Saint  John to assist those struggling 
with opiate addictions.

The provincially funded clinic will treat individuals  hooked on 
opiates - such as heroin and Dilaudid - with  methadone, a synthetic 
opiate narcotic that can  suppress an addict's craving and withdrawal.

The program, which is the first of its kind in the  province, won't 
require counselling in conjunction with  treatment, and won't have a 
limit on the number of  people that can get help.

Ed Doherty, Liberal MLA for Saint John Harbour, said  the clinic 
represents a new way of tackling drug  addiction, a growing problem 
in his riding and around  New Brunswick.

"The biggest health issue in Saint John is addiction,"  Doherty, who 
worked as a doctor in the Port City prior  to entering politics, said 
Sunday. "By having an uptown  location, it means more people can have 
access to the  service."

The clinic will be situated in the Mercantile Centre on  Union 
Street, and run by Dr. Duncan Webster. Further  details of the 
program will be announced at the centre  Tuesday.

News of the clinic comes after months of pressure on  the provincial 
government to provide more methadone  treatment centres, and as Saint 
John, Moncton and  Fredericton have experienced a wave of drug-related crime.

Carl Urquhart, Opposition public safety critic and Tory  MLA for 
York, has repeatedly called on the Liberal  government to do 
something about the long waiting lists  at the province's methadone clinics.

The New Brunswick Association of Chiefs of Police  adopted a motion 
in February calling for more treatment  spaces. Fredericton Police 
Chief Barry MacKnight,  president of the association, said at the 
time that a  large portion of street crime is committed by 
drug  addicts. He said improved methadone treatment would  help reduce crime.

"We know with a large proportion of those cases, once  they get onto 
methadone, they're not doing crime,"  MacKnight said.

Saint John's Police Chief Bill Reid, another advocate  for more 
methadone treatment, said earlier this year  that providing improved 
treatment ends up costing the  province much less in the long term.

The annual cost of a client in the methadone  maintenance program is 
about $6,000, while it's  estimated the untreated opiate user can 
cost society  approximately $49,000 per year. The new program 
will  cost less than $6,000 per client.

The new treatment centre in Saint John means an  increase from the 
$1,790,000 the provincial government  currently devotes to methadone 
programs. Prior to the  new clinic, Saint John received about 
$403,000 for 151  treatment spots, with many more addicts waiting 
for  treatment.

There are about 80 people in the program at Ridgewood  Addiction 
Services in Saint John West, where treatment  is provided along with 
counselling and social services.  Ridgewood expects to create 50 new 
treatment spots in  the next few months.

Doherty said some clients at the Mercantile Centre will  also receive 
counselling at Ridgewood. The program was  developed in consultation 
with Dr. Webster, Reid, and  Julie Dingwell, the executive director 
of AIDS Saint  John.

Last April, the provincial government announced four  new clinics in 
St. Stephen, Edmundston, Campbellton and  Bathurst - in addition to 
those in Fredericton, Saint  John, Moncton and Miramichi. Improved 
methadone  treatment was a promise in the Liberal party's 2006 
Charter for Change.

- - with files from Canadaeast News Service
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom