San Francisco Chronicle

S.F. plan to treat addicts on street

Team to give heroin users drug that ends craving fast

- By Kevin Fagan

San Francisco’s mayor wants to create a special medical team — the first of its kind in the nation — to spread out onto the city’s streets and give homeless people a drug that one expert calls “blindingly effective” at abruptly stopping heroin cravings.

Mayor Mark Farrell is set to announce Thursday that he is including $6 million in his current budget proposal to fund the 10-person team over the next two years, with the aim of prescribin­g the medication buprenorph­ine to at least 250 street junkies.

Buprenorph­ine, widely available only in recent years and commonly known by its main

brand name Suboxone, works faster and causes fewer side effects than methadone. Given the heroin epidemic that is swelling the city’s streets with dirty needles and addled addicts, it’s being seen as a potential game-changer.

“The consequenc­es of standing still on this issue are unacceptab­le,” Farrell told The Chronicle. “Drug abuse is rampant on our streets, and the recipe of waiting for addicts to come into a clinic voluntaril­y is not working. Plain and simple. So we’re going to take a different approach.”

The Department of Public Health, which will run the team, began testing out the effectiven­ess of prescribin­g buprenorph­ine in tent camps in 2016 — and since then, nearly 60 percent of the approximat­ely 200 people who began taking the drug are still working on staying clean, officials said. That is remarkable considerin­g more than 80 percent of heroin users relapse into addiction after starting treatment.

The department estimates there are 11,000 heroin addicts in San Francisco who use needles. There is no accurate count on how many of those are homeless, but it is believed to be in the thousands. The Public Works Department alone picks up more than 12,500 discarded needles every month at homeless hot spots and encampment­s.

“This is a great innovation because we are going out to people where they are, not waiting for them to come to us,” said Director of Public Health Barbara Garcia. “We want to get people into treatment because of not just the heroin epidemic, but the danger of overdose. But we have this situation where people can be afraid to come in for care because of the stigma and maybe even a fear of being arrested even though we don’t arrest people in our clinics.

“So we’re making sure, with this approach, that we really reach people,” she said. “This is what the rest of the country needs to think about. They need to follow our lead on this.”

The money Farrell proposes to spend would come from the city’s general fund, but about $900,000 would be reimbursed each year to the city by MediCal.

Dr. Alex Stalcup, a national expert in addiction technique and head of a clinic in the East Bay, said he is excited at the prospect of San Francisco launching a buprenorph­ine team. He has been prescribin­g it on a limited basis at his clinic since 1990, when he first heard of “this amazing new drug” in Britain.

“From the very first patient, I was nearly on the edge of tears when I saw buprenorph­ine’s effect,” Stalcup said. “I saw people coming in throwing up, messing their pants, in terror from the junk (heroin), and 15 minutes later they were sitting up having a cup of tea. It is blindingly effective.

“It clearly saves lives. It ought to be part of the national program. And people who go into tents, like San Francisco has done to distribute Suboxone, they are my heroes.”

Methadone is considered an effective treatment for heroin addiction. But the advantage of buprenorph­ine is that rather than gradually pulling an addict away from cravings as methadone does, it stops them almost immediatel­y — and, unlike methadone, it blocks opioid receptors in the body so effectivel­y that it’s virtually impossible to overdose, or even feel an effect, if a user relapses and shoots smack.

Like methadone, however, buprenorph­ine must then be taken regularly to keep the hunger for heroin suppressed. Most patients can taper off buprenorph­ine quicker than methadone to become medication-free, but for each some doctors recommend long-term usage. They also recommend a range of other treatments and therapies, in conjunctio­n with medication, to help addicts stay clean.

Perhaps most significan­tly, however, is the legal aspect that makes the proposed new team possible. Under federal law, methadone can be prescribed and disseminat­ed only at a special methadone clinic. But buprenorph­ine can be prescribed by a doctor and handed out immediatel­y at any pharmacy, and the drug can be given to an addict in a oneweek pack of daily doses, which means he or she won’t have to return for resupply right away.

In a pinch, the street team can go fetch the medication and give it to the addict on the spot — an important capability, given the notorious inability of chronicall­y homeless people to keep appointmen­ts. But driving an addict quickly to a pharmacy has worked very well, said Dr. Barry Zevin, who led the buprenorph­ine test program, and as head of the public health Street Medicine division would oversee the new team.

“This treatment has been remarkably effective,” Zevin said the other day as he saw patients at his downtown clinic. “In the short term and the long term, it takes away any craving for opioids, and that’s quite an amazing effect.

“It also sits on the opioid receptors and won’t let anything else in, which prevents overdoses and the feeling of being high. Almost everyone is initially skeptical about that, but it’s true. And yes, it is amazing.”

“Amazing” is also how 24year-old Ronald Sellers describes what buprenorph­ine has done for him since Zevin helped get him on the medication eight months ago at his tent encampment in the Bayview neighborho­od.

“I tried methadone, but I couldn’t go in to the clinic every day while I was living in a tent,” Sellers said when he dropped into Zevin’s clinic for a checkup. “But Suboxone? It stopped my heroin craving, like, right then and there — and I got to take home a week’s supply. I was able to get straight for the first time in years.”

After letting Zevin’s team work on his other medical issues, including recurring sores, Sellers finally moved into a Navigation Center all-service shelter two weeks ago and is now on track to get permanent housing. Drawing people in for encompassi­ng medical care is a prime secondary goal of the buprenorph­ine program, Zevin said, and Sellers chuckled when he mentioned that.

“Seriously, I never trusted doctors before, but this guy — he actually talks to me, and not just to write some s—-ass report,” Sellers said. “If he hadn’t talked to me about Suboxone I probably wouldn’t get (help for) all the other stuff.”

Zevin allowed himself a small smile. “See you next Monday?” he said.

“Yes sir,” Sellers replied.

 ?? Photos by Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle ?? At a city health clinic, Rebecca Pfeifer-Rosenblum (left), a registered nurse with the street medical team, gathers supplies for Ronald Sellers, who recently moved into a Navigation Center.
Photos by Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle At a city health clinic, Rebecca Pfeifer-Rosenblum (left), a registered nurse with the street medical team, gathers supplies for Ronald Sellers, who recently moved into a Navigation Center.
 ??  ?? Sellers (left) talks with Dr. Barry Zevin, who led the buprenorph­ine pilot program and oversees the street medical team.
Sellers (left) talks with Dr. Barry Zevin, who led the buprenorph­ine pilot program and oversees the street medical team.

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