Monday, May 03, 2010

Proposed Cap on Duration Methadone Treatment in Wisconsin

It is reported (Wisconsin State Journal May 1) that Deborah Powers, who regulates methadone clinics for the state of Wisconsin, has suggested “limits on how long people can be in [methadone] treatment” as a response to substantially increased need and demand for care. This makes as much sense as a demand that those lucky enough to cram into one of the Titanic lifeboats be required to give up their places every few minutes to unfortunate survivors still in the water. Or to use a medical analogy: to proclaim a pre-natal clinic is “at capacity” and thus limiting each pregnant woman’s care to no more than three months.

Opiate dependence is a chronic, notoriously relapsing, potentially fatal medical condition. Many different treatment approaches exist and all deserve support. None, however - whether long-term or short-term, with medication or without, in-patient or ambulatory – has ever been able to make a credible claim that it is a cure. As for methadone maintenance in particular, no treatment has been shown to be more effective in attracting and retaining patients and in helping them resume healthy, productive lives. Furthermore, experience throughout the world for more than four decades has demonstrated that it can be expanded rapidly and at a modest cost, with enormous benefits not only to patients but to the community as a whole.

Wisconsin, and every other state in the nation, should focus on providing prompt care for all opiate dependent people who want and need it – and with tragic frequency die without it. No public officials should be more committed to this goal than those who, like Ms. Powers, are given the authority and responsibility to “regulate” treatment services.

3 Comments:

At 11:57 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Bob,
Thanks for saying it AGAIN and again and again! How archaic the thinking remains about addiction. That stigma sticks like super glue and turns normally intelligent people into complete idiots!

Sharon Dembinski

 
At 7:44 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Bob,

This phrase 'time-limited treatment' is, in my opinion, another euphemism for detox. The benefits of methadone tend to be lost when the treatment is discontinued, particularly against patients wishes. Not sure whether Dole and Nyswander were responsible for the nomenclature but what a remarkably appropriate term 'methadone maintenance' is.

 
At 11:35 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

here we go again,apointing another person to a position witch they know nothing about.lets start limiting treatment time to someone with cancer to one month!

 

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