Pubdate: Sat, 15 Aug 2009 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2009 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Sonja Puzic, The Windsor Star Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) CLINIC OFFERS HOPE FOR ADDICTS Methadone Treatment a 'Saviour' Jason Martin and Kathy Wroblewski's days used to revolve around getting high. The couple would wake up and go to bed thinking about OxyContin, a powerful painkiller they bought on the street. They were unable to focus on their children or their health. Eventually, they lost custody of the kids and Wroblewski feared she wouldn't get to see them grow up. "The pills took everything out of us," she said. "I thought: 'For sure, these things are going to kill me.'" With their lives spiralling out of control, the couple decided to enter the Drouillard Road Clinic's methadone program. Wroblewski was pregnant with the couple's third son at the time. "We hit rock bottom," Martin said. One year later, Martin, 30, and Wroblewski, 27, say the clinic has helped them turn their lives around. They've been reunited with their kids, Wroblewski is focusing on getting a college diploma and Martin is making a living as a tattoo artist. "The day that we lost our kids -- that's what started the wheels in motion," Martin said. "There was nothing more in the world I wanted than to get clean. I tried before on my own, but I just blew it," Wroblewski said. She had tried detox, but that didn't work. Methadone, the couple said, has been their "saviour." "We've had great support here. I can't say good enough things about the people at the clinic," Martin said. "Now, we have a totally different lifestyle." Martin and Wroblewski are among the 460 patients attending the Drouillard Road Clinic, which has been helping opiate addicts for the past 11 years. The clinic is small and gets limited funding from the government. About 70 people are on a waiting list. Some may have given up waiting and left town in search of another methadone program. Others may have given up altogether. When Ontario Addiction Treatment Centres, a private company based in the Toronto area, quietly opened a new methadone clinic in west Windsor at University and Elm avenues last week, area residents and some local politicians were outraged that the group did not seek input from the community first. Questions have also been raised about OATC's practices. The company has been the target of numerous complaints and investigations over the years, involving improper billing to OHIP and two patient deaths in Ottawa and Toronto. The controversy surrounding OATC has put a spotlight on opiate addictions and methadone use in the city. Those who work with addicts say more needs to be done to curb drug abuse and its consequences, including violence, criminal activity and premature deaths. Dr. Tony Hammer, a family physician who has been treating addicts at the Drouillard Road Clinic since its inception, estimates the clinic's methadone program takes care of about half the population in the community needing the service. Another methadone program is offered through Hotel-Dieu Grace Hospital, but it sees only between 15 and 20 people a week. Some Windsor addicts have had to go to Hamilton or Brampton to enter a methadone program, said Hammer, one of six physicians at the clinic certified to prescribe methadone through the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Clinic director Lynda Ruddock-Rousseau said it pains her when people have to be turned away. There is only so much the staff and doctors can do with one case manager and a cramped office, she said. "There is a huge need for methadone in the community," she said, adding that addicts come from all walks of life. "Teachers, autoworkers, supervisors -- it can happen to anyone." For Martin and Wroblewski, it began with legitimate use of Percocet, a painkiller that took care of Martin's shoulder injury and Wroblewski's back problems. "Eventually, that just wasn't good enough so we were out on the street looking for something bigger and better and this (Oxycontin) is what came our way," Martin said. "We would wake up thinking about how we would get it, when we would get it," Wroblewski said. "It took over our life. We couldn't think about anything else." When Hammer first began working with the Drouillard Road Clinic 11 years ago, intravenous drug use was more common and heroin was a more popular opioid, he said. But the increased use of narcotics in pain management has changed that. People of all socioeconomic backgrounds have become addicted to prescription drugs like OxyContin, either taking them orally or crushing them up and snorting them. Such drugs have also become very valuable commodities on the street. "It entraps people easily," Hammer said. The success of methadone "can't be ignored," he said. "In addiction medicine, there is absolutely no question that it saves lives." Hammer said methadone has a success rate of between 70 and 80 per cent. The success rate of counselling alone is about five per cent, he said. "Some (addicts) have been in residential programs four, five, 10, 12 times -- over and over again and have relapsed," he said. "This is very dangerous because these people are likely to die of an overdose." At the Drouillard Road Clinic, patients must abide by strict rules, which include providing urine samples so that doctors can be assured they are not using illicit drugs while in treatment. Methadone is not dispensed on site -- only prescriptions are handed out. It takes about three weeks to stabilize a patient on methadone, Hammer said. Most people who approach the clinic are addicts who "perceive a crisis," or are in the midst of one, such as losing a job, a home or a spouse to drugs, he said. Ruddock-Rousseau said lack of addiction treatment leads to criminal behaviour and putting an addict through a methadone program is far more beneficial and cost-effective than incarceration. "It costs about $7,000 per year to send someone to a methadone program. To send them to jail, it can cost between $30,000 and $70,000," she said. Marina Clemens, executive director of Drouillard Place, a service centre for the Drouillard Road community, said education and open communication is key to establishing a methadone clinic in any neighbourhood. She said many area residents were initially opposed to the Drouillard Road Clinic, but grew to understand its role and purpose in the community. "I truly don't believe that the methadone clinic has caused an increase in prostitution and drug houses in the neighbourhood," she said. "Just the whole proliferation of drugs and the access to them has exacerbated that more than any clinic or any other service in the community." Clemens said she understands why neighbours are fearful of the new methadone clinic in town, since OATC "didn't give any information and they didn't do any education or let the people around them know what they're up to." Martin said the community also needs to be educated about the all-consuming nature of addictions, in an effort to reduce stereotyping and prejudice. "To be honest with you ... we are always going to feel like misfits in society because of the misconception that people who do drugs are terrible people," he said. "But that's not us." [sidebar] HOW IT WORKS In the brains of addicts, methadone prevents heroin or morphine from interacting with receptors for natural painkillers called endorphins, blocking the effects of the addictive drugs and reducing the physical cravings. In controlled doses it creates its own effects of mild euphoria and drowsiness, but lasts much longer (one to two days) and does not create the sometimes fatal respiratory depression that opiates do. Columbia Encyclopedia - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake