Arab Times

Clinics for opioid addiction offer meds first, fast

‘Opioid crisis in US to cost $500bn a year’

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EBy Carla K. Johnson

very time she got out of jail, Jamie Cline started hustling again for heroin, driven by an addiction she didn’t understand.

“You want to get clean so bad. You know something’s killing you and you can’t stop,” said the 33-year-old who used heroin for 10 years.

This spring was different. While in a jail work-release program, she took a medication called buprenorph­ine. It quieted a voice in her brain that told her to keep using.

When she got out of jail, she headed for an Olympia clinic where a doctor is working to spread a philosophy called “medication first.” The surprising approach scraps requiremen­ts for counseling, abstinence or even a commitment to recovery.

Instead, it starts with fast access to prescribed medicine that prevents withdrawal sickness. After patients start feeling better, they choose their next steps.

In St Louis, Seattle and San Francisco, people with opioid addictions can start medication on their first day of treatment. Early research suggests the approach can change lives. But it will be a tough sell elsewhere: Nearly twothirds of US treatment centers don’t offer anti-addiction drugs and there’s resistance to easy access.

Within two weeks of walking into the Olympia clinic, Cline had a job at a millwork shop. Now, nine months later, she has received a promotion and a raise, rebuilt relationsh­ips, found a room in a sober house and is proud to display a chain of “Clean & Serene” key fobs she earned from Narcotics Anonymous. She takes buprenorph­ine twice daily.

Treatment

“I’ve got my life back,” she said. The opioid crisis now kills more Americans than car crashes and is estimated to cost more than $500 billion a year. The epidemic is driving new treatment strategies for the 2 million

Americans addicted to opioids.

Bupe, as it’s known, isn’t new. Approved to treat opioid addiction in 2002, it blocks the effect of other opioids and eases withdrawal. It’s an opioid, but an imperfect fit for the brain’s receptors, so its effect is mild and it doesn’t cause a high. It also lowers the danger of overdose and raises the likelihood a person will stay in treatment.

But finding a prescriber without a waiting list is difficult. Guidelines say bupe should be used alongside counseling, which some doctors don’t feel equipped to provide.

Success stories have convinced some experts that buprenorph­ine should be available in homeless camps, syringe exchanges and anywhere people use drugs.

“This is an obvious thing to do,” said University of Washington researcher Caleb Banta-Green.

Prescripti­on

Martyn is a 57-year-old former heroin user who goes by one name. He was living in a Seattle homeless camp known as the Jungle, running errands for drug dealers.

“Toward the end, you’re not trying to get high anymore,” he said. “You’re just trying to not be sick.”

He got his first bupe prescripti­on at Neighborca­re Health, a free downtown clinic. Once stabilized, he found a spot in a sober home with help from a caseworker.

“Now I’ve got a little room in a house I share with seven other guys.” On bupe, Martyn said, “I don’t get that high feeling. And that’s OK.”

Critics worry medication-first clinics will add to the flood of opioids on the street.

The tactic could also lead to a false understand­ing of addiction, said Atlanta-based counselor Samson Teklemaria­m, who directs training for NAADAC, the Associatio­n for Addiction Profession­als.

“You’re promising the public a cure,” Teklemaria­m said. “There’s not a pill that you can take to alleviate symptoms of true addiction.”

In Missouri, some treatment programs had shunned buprenorph­ine, particular­ly long-term, in favor of abstinence-based counseling and support groups. Some didn’t have doctors or nurses who could prescribe it. Some believed medication­s were a crutch that prevented true recovery.

In 2017, with overdose deaths rising, Missouri tied federal grant money to a medication-first philosophy. Programs would get money only if they started clients on meds rapidly and if they dropped rules about medication time limits and attending counseling.

The result? Medication treatment increased and more patients stayed in treatment longer, said Rachel Winograd of University of Missouri-St Louis who studied the implementa­tion.

There’s pushback in Missouri from those who see the idea as at odds with “full and thriving recovery,” Winograd said. “The state is saying, we can do both.”

Research

Research is beginning on the idea. In New York, 250 drug users will be enrolled at syringe exchanges. Some will be randomly assigned to get sameday bupe prescripti­ons and others will get standard care.

“If the older treatment philosophi­es were working, we wouldn’t have the problems we’re having today,” said Dr Aaron Fox, who is leading the study.

In Washington state, health officials are encouragin­g jails and drug courts to embrace bupe. Many are changing their policies.

Not everyone approves. In Skagit County, Prosecutin­g Attorney Rich Weyrich calls bupe “low-grade heroin.” He bristles at requiremen­ts tying drug court money to medication assisted treatment.

“There are lots of things happening in the big cities that I don’t agree with,” Weyrich said.

Sixty miles away in Seattle, King County Prosecutor Dan Satterberg has tried to convince other prosecutor­s of bupe’s value. His sister, Shelley, used heroin for years. In 2015, after starting treatment with bupe, she got clean.

“I saw firsthand the difference it made in her life,” Satterberg said. “We became a family.” Years of drug use had worn down Shelley’s health. She died in March 2018 of an infection at age 51.

Bupe should be “as easy to get as heroin,” Satterberg said. To those in law enforcemen­t who worry about it trading on the street, he said: “At least they’re not buying fentanyl and supporting the Mexican cartels. At least they’re not going to overdose. And they might find out buprenorph­ine actually makes them feel better.”

A pilot study in Seattle treated 147 patients in one year, most of them homeless. The program reached capacity within three months and kept people in treatment at rates similar to other programs. That drew financial support from a foundation, resulting in four new sites. They are expected to serve 1,250 patients over two years.

To treat one patient for one year at the Olympia Bupe Clinic costs $3,000 in public money, said its medical director, Dr Lucinda Grande. She said the money will prevent steeper hospital costs down the road.

Maintain

On a recent evening, Grande spent more than three hours helping people start or maintain treatment with bupe.

She met with patients in a cluster of donated furniture, a floral-pattern sofa and chairs. Two new patients wanted to start bupe for the first time.

Former patient Jamie Cline proudly told Grande of recent accomplish­ments at her workplace.

“You’re getting used to being successful,” Grande observed, smiling with encouragem­ent.

Later, pharmacist Brad Livingston­e arrived. At the front desk, he opened a clear plastic bin with 14 pill bottles inside.

He called out a name. Jon Combes, 36, of Lacey, Washington, stepped up to get his pills, a “godsend” that has helped him sleep. (AP)

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