Thursday, December 12, 2013

Methadone Patients get bad stigma again.

This comes from Substance Matter by Dr. Mark Willinbring. M
http://mattsub.blogspot.com/2013/12/mmt-and-12-step-groups-stigma-persists.html

Sunday, December 8, 2013

MMT and 12-Step Groups: Stigma Persists

In his latest contribution to the academic literature, William L. White and colleagues turn their focus on 12-Step participation among patients in methadone maintenance treatment (MMT). Rates of self-reported Narcotics Anonymous (NA) and Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) attendance were very high; however, participants frequently reported that their MMT status prevented them from taking part in many of the "key ingredients" of the groups that most members take for granted. When asked about the experience, nearly half of all respondents who had attended NA or AA reported that they had "received negative comments about methadone use" and nearly "a quarter (24.4%) reported having had a serious problem within NA or AA related to their status as a methadone patient."

The following table from the report details the "frequency with which respondents faced particular challenges":

Table 4: NA and AA Responses to MMT Patient Status                                NA            AA

Response to MM Patient Status:                                                                         (n=228)     (n=142)

Received negative comments about methadone use                                                43.0%     45.1%

Were pressured to reduce the dose of methadone                                                  21.9%     23.2%

Were pressured to stop taking methadone                                                             32.9%     34.5%

Were denied the right to speak at a meeting because of being
in methadone treatment                                                                                         14.5%      14.1%

Were denied the right to become a sponsor because of being                                  8.8%        9.9%
in methadone treatment


White and colleagues implemented this small study at not-for-profit opioid treatment program (OTP) in the Northeastern US. A total of 322 respondents answered a 53-question survey about their participation in recovery support groups. Of the 322, 259 (80.4%) reported a primary affiliation with a recovery support group. Of these, 88.8% reported it to be in some way a 12-Step group. Importantly, 66% of respondents reported past-year NA/AA participation, with 88-89% reporting the group was "helpful".

Despite these figures, the authors found MMT patients had low rates of participation in the "key ingredients" that seem to be critical influencers of long-term recovery outcomes: having a home group (50%), having a sponsor (26%), sponsoring others (13%), attending 12-Step social events (23%), and active step work (21%).

Anecdotally, we see a lot of patients at Alltyr who have a hard time finding a place in the local 12-Step scene. We even began compiling a list of medication-friendly meetings in the Twin Cities as we learned about them, but the stigma associated with maintenance is still prevalent. Could it be that we are on the verge of another breakthrough in medication acceptance? After all, there was a time when you weren't considered "sober" if you were on antidepressant or antipsychotic medications (but now, as Dr W likes to say, you're more likely to be referred to the psychiatrist by your sponsor than by anyone else). We would be interested to hear reader stories about this experience - or opinions on the topic. Are things changing - or not?

See the full paper by White, et al., here: http://www.williamwhitepapers.com/pr/2013%20Co-participation%20in%2012-Step%20Groups%20and%20Methadone%20Maintenance.pdf

Her is a few things I have been copying from other sites but is worthwhile information. Gaia Vasiliver-Shamis, Ph.D If your phone's so smart, why isn't it doing science for you? Great tips for turning your toy into a tool! Gaia Vasiliver-Shamis, Ph.D Scientific Program Manager at NIH/ NIAMS 5 Killer Ways to Use Your Smartphone for Science - Scizzle Blog myscizzle.com Go from procrastination to productivity with these great ways to use your smartphone for...




Gaia Vasiliver-Shamis, Ph.D
Go from procrastination to productivity with these great ways to use your smartphone for...

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Stuff we should have been told in treatment ''The Hidden and Forgotten Plague''

The Hidden and Forgotten Plague 

Thanks to my colleagues from 

National Alliance for Medication Assisted Recovery 

 http://methadone.org  

"Just that you people who are involved in advocacy, keep up the work. I have seen
changes come about because of people becoming involved. It is these who are the real heroes
in all this. Without advocacy, changes will not come about within the present system."
Dr. Vincent Dole 
 
''Listen to your patients'', Dr. Vincent Dole spoken at the  American Methadone Treatment Association in San Francisco in 2001. (The AMTA is now AATOD http://www.aatod.org 
 
Don't miss the important documentary: 'The Hidden and Forgotten Plague - A film about hepatitis C'. with English subtitles Produced by The Swedish Drug Users Union. In Sweden approximately 50 000 persons are infected with…
00:46:13
Added on 9/29/13
293 views

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Am an enabler for health


Getting Off Right Safety Manual - Harm Reduction Coalition

harmreduction.org/drugs-and-drug-users/drug-tools/getting-off-right/

Getting Off Right Safety Manual

Getting Off Right is a straightforward, easy-to-read how-to survival guide for injection drug users. It is a compilation of medical facts, injection techniques, junky wisdom and common sense strategies to keep users and their communities healthier and safer. The Safety Manual was written in collaboration by drug users and services providers.
Read below and download the PDF here.
Hard copies are also available for purchase in our store.
We would like to thank Kif Scheuer for contributing artwork on pages 16, 24, 35, 48, 57, 60, and 77.

[PDF]

Getting Off Right - Harm Reduction Coalition

harmreduction.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/getting-off-right.pdf







From
StopTheDrugWar.org


Many locations, specially all over Europe have clinics for active users to "get off right", this service may also include nurses to assist. If it wasn't for our bigotry, we may learn there are many benefits to treating people with dignity.



 Clean, Well-Lit Place to Shoot Dope -- In Your City, Soon? [FEATURE]

The only existing supervised injection site for hard drug users in North America is Vancouver's Insite, but panelists at a session of the International Drug Reform Conference in Denver last month said activists in a number of US cities are working to be next. (Plans are also afoot in a couple of Canadian cities.)


client at Vancouver's Insite supervised injection site (vch.ca)
Supervised injection sites (SIS) are a proven public health and harm reduction intervention that can save lives by preventing overdoses, bring a measure of stability to the sometimes chaotic lives of addicts, reduce the spread of bloodborne infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and Hepatitis C, and reduce crime and disorder in the community.
SISs also exist in a number of European countries and Australia, but face both legal and political hurdles in the US. Still, advocates are ready to push the envelope here in a bid to bring the life-, health-, and money-saving innovation here.
Donald Macpherson, executive \director of the Canadian Drug Policy Coalition and former head of Vancouver's Four Pillars drug policy program explained the prehistory of Insite, offering hints of possible courses of action in the US.
"We had a public health disaster," he said, referring to the city's escalating heroin problem in the 1990s. "Drug users themselves opened an SIS in 1995, and the police watched it, but didn't shut it down. A second opened in 2002. A year later, another non-sanctioned injection site opened up. It was really messy and it took years."
But in the end, Vancouver ended up with Insite and has managed to keep it open despite the best efforts of the Conservative federal government in Ottawa.
"Insite survives because it has an exemption from Canadian drug laws," Macpherson explained. "We won in the British Columbia courts, we won in the Canadian Supreme Court, which instructed the health minister to issue a permit. But we still barely have Insite, and though other cities are working on it, there is a big chill in Canada right now and we're just trying to hang on to what we've got."
Plans for SISs in the US face similar obstacles, but that isn't stopping advocates in a number of cities -- notably Austin, New York City, San Francisco, and Seattle, as well as somewhere in New Mexico -- from pressing forward with plans to open them there.
"I don't know if we'll be first, but we'll be one of many," said Robert Cordero, president and chief program officer of Boom! Health in the Bronx.
Boom! Health, which resulted from the merger of Bronx AIDS Services and Citiwide Harm Reduction, is a multi-service organization with a three-story building that includes a pharmacy, pharmacists with a harm reduction orientation, and a seven-day-a-week drop in center.
"Safe injection would be embedded with all these other services," he said.
"I don't know if we want to be first, but we want to be one of many," said Olivia Sloan, outreach and education associate for the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA) in New Mexico, which has been working patiently to bring cutting edge programs like SISs to the state. "We passed harm reduction, including needle exchange, through the state legislature, but it's not working," Sloan said. "We have overdose deaths at four or five times the national average."
Advocates in New Mexico have been and continue to lay the groundwork for SISs, Sloan said.
"We took a political and academic approach, and our conversation about injection facilities started a few years ago," she explained. "We have mobile syringe exchanges. We drafted legislation last year and the Senate passed a memorial to require we study the feasibility of SISs in New Mexico. We have partnered with the University of New Mexico and are looking for a principal investigator."

In San Francisco, preliminary discussions with local officials about SISs have been going on for some time, but the San Francisco Drug Users Union may follow the path taken by organized Vancouver drug users, as well as many of the needle exchange pioneers in the US, and just do it.
"We have a committee very committed to an SIS that meets every Monday for two hours," said Holly Bradford, the union's coordinator. "We're really on the verge. We have a very active bathroom here; you just open the door," she smiled. We're bringing it to San Francisco," she said. "It might not be sanctioned or aboveground, but it's going to happen."
Whether underground or not, SISs face a hazard-strewn trek. State, local, or federal officials can throw up any number of obstacles, said Lindsay LaSalle, a Berkeley-based law fellow for DPA.
"Drug possession remains illegal and could impact any SIS user, although probably not the staff or operator because they're not handling the drugs," she explained.
"Then there are the crack house laws, which both the federal government and some states have. They make it illegal for anyone to maintain, own, lease, or rent a property where drugs are used, consumed, or manufactured. These laws could cover SISs, and this could impact both clients and staff and operators alike," she elaborated.
"Then there are civil forfeiture statutes. They've used them to go after medical marijuana dispensaries," she enumerated.
Winning local official support reduces some risks, but not all, LaSalle said.
"If SISs were sanctioned at the local level, many of the legal risks dissipate, but state actors could still choose to prosecute," she warned. "In most states, local officers are deputized to enforce state law, so they could still go after an SIS. If authorized at the state level, that would be an incredible victory, but we would still have to deal with the federal government."
While acknowledging that lawyers can be "a buzzkill," LaSalle also hastened to add that things can change faster than we think.
"These legal barriers are not so different from the challenges we've faced with other drug policy issues, like syringe exchanges," she noted. "They were seen as completely radical, but now we have an almost universally accepted public health intervention with the exchanges."
Part of the process of initiating a supervised injection site is selling it to other stakeholders. Panelists had a number of ideas about messages that worked.
"For business people, you tell them this is how we clean up the neighborhood," said a Seattle activist.
"It is a very incremental change from syringe exchange to supervised injection sites," said LaSalle. "Position it as a very small change in an organization that provides all these other services to drug users."
"There's always 'what we're doing is not working,'" said Sloan.
"We're not going to arrest our way out of this problem," suggested Cordero. "But don't go straight to the SIS conversation. Let people see what we're doing, and then they say 'you're doing God's work' and second, 'Holy shit! Where would all those people be if you weren't open?'"
The obstacles to implementing supervised injection sites in the US are formidable, but the need to do so is urgent and increasingly understood, as are the benefits. With activists and advocates in a number of American locales pursuing SISs through a variety of means, the question is not whether it will happen here, but when and where.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Saving Lives with Narcan

Saving Lives with Narcan
By Tessie Castillo

No one wants to be in a situation where the life of a friend is at risk. Unfortunately, for many people who use opiates such as heroin or prescription painkillers, this scenario is not uncommon. Louise, a drug user in central North Carolina, has been called on to save lives over more than 100 times.

Drug overdose is the leading cause of accidental death nationwide, surpassing even auto fatalities. The majority of these deaths are caused by opiates, which slow a person’s respiratory system to the point where he or she stops breathing. As Louise can attest, seeing someone overdose on opiates can be scary – blue lips, shallow, gargled breathing, clammy skin – but many people simply look asleep. These are the most dangerous overdoses, because the warning signs may come too late.

Calling 911 is the best response to an overdose. Unfortunately, studies it’s not the most common. Studies report that due to fear of law enforcement, witnesses to an overdose call for help less than half the time. , and instead they try “home fixes,” such as rescue breathing, which helps, or putting ice or cold water on the person, which does not.

“We read in the news that most police officers are not making arrests at the scene of an overdose, but that is not our truth,” says Louise. “I have never once heard of an overdose [in my area] where police treated it as a medication situation instead of a criminal one. This is a major problem for drug users. Their lives are devastated by the legal system. With a criminal record they can’t get jobs, housing, scholarships; the justice system invades every aspect of life. So they won’t call for help. It’s not that we don’t care about our friends [who overdose]. But nobody wants to be the person who called 911 and sent everyone to jail.”

Due to fear of police, many drug users they may try “home fixes” in the event of an overdose, such as placing ice on the person’s groin, putting them in a cold shower, injecting them with milk or salt water, or a number of other remedies that don’t actually work. The best way to help someone experiencing an overdose is to do rescue breathing (not CPR) and to administer naloxone, an antidote that reverses the effects of opiate overdose.

In April 2013 North Carolina passed a new law, the 911 Good Samaritan/ Naloxone Access law, to help save lives from overdose. The first part of the law grants limited immunity for possession of small amounts of drugs to anyone who experiences a drug overdose or calls 911 for help. The second part of the law removes liability from doctors who prescribe naloxone to patients and bystanders who administer the antidote to someone experiencing an overdose. It also allows community organizations such as the North Carolina Harm Reduction Coalition to distribute naloxone to people at risk for opiate overdose and their loved ones under the standing orders of a medical provider.

Changing state law by granting limited immunity from drug or paraphernalia charges to witnesses who call for help can go long way towards encouraging people to do the right thing. In the past two years, 10 states have passed 911 Good Samaritan laws that do just that. This year, 12 more are moving similar bills, including North Carolina.

“We read in the news that most police officers are not making arrests at the scene of an overdose, but that is not our truth,” says Louise. “I have never once heard of an overdose [in my area] where police treated it as a medication situation instead of a criminal one. This is a major problem for drug users. Their lives are devastated by the legal system. With a criminal record they can’t get jobs, housing, scholarships; the justice system invades every aspect of life. So they won’t call for help. It’s not that we don’t care about our friends [who overdose]. But nobody wants to be the person who called 911 and sent everyone to jail.”

The 911 Good Samaritan laws encourage people to call for help, but there is another option to reduce premature deaths from overdose. Narcan, or naloxone, is an antidote that reverses the effects of opioid overdose. Similar to the EpiPen for allergies naloxone, Narcan is simple to use, effective, and safe enough to be administered by people with no medical trainingnonmedical personnel. Paramedics have used it for years, but particularly in rural areas where emergency response may come too late, Narcan is becoming available to drug users and their loved ones. Louise has personally reversed over 30 overdoses.

“The first reversal was the scariest,” she said. “I got a call in the middle of the night from someone in a panic. I told her to call 911, but she wouldn’t because of police. I explained over the phone how to do rescue breathing while I drove to the house with Narcan. When I got there I found the guy [who had overdosed] lying on the floor, bluish and naked. They had put him in a cold shower to try and wake him up. I didn’t even know what drugs he had taken, and no one could explain it to me because they were all freaking out. I gave him a dose of Narcan and he started breathing again, but raspy, so I gave him more. Then we called 911 and I left. I found out later that he had woken up soon after. He really appreciated what I’d done for him.”

Nationwide, over 10,000 lives have been saved through distributing Narcan directly to people most affected and training them on how to recognize and respond to an overdose. Yet the practice is not without dissent. Opponents argue that if drug users have the antidote to an overdose, they will use more drugs. Fortunately, scientific facts and eyewitness accounts prove these claims false. Narcan puts a drug user into acute withdrawal. The experience is so unpleasant that no user would deliberately increase use because Narcan was close at hand. Giving stomach pumps to alcoholics won’t cause them to drink more, because no one wants his or her stomach pumped. No one wants to self-administer Narcan either.

“People don’t set out to overdose,” says Louise. “Having narcan makes no difference in whether you overdose, but it makes a huge difference in whether you live.”
NCHRC   //  PO BOX 13761, Durham, NC, 27709  //  336-543-8050   //   www.nchrc.org


Cotton Fever by Dr. Jana Burson

I can only copy what is best that I see, and Dr. Jana Burson do not stay behind.

Cotton Fever

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaacotton
An addict still using heroin recently asked me what “cotton fever” was, and how he could tell if he was sick with it.
Cotton fever is caused by bacteria commonly found on cotton plants, initially named Enterobacter agglomerans, later changed to Pantoea agglomerans. Most intravenous drug addicts filter heroin through cotton filters, to remove particles that could clog both their injection needle and their veins. Sometimes fibers of cotton break off from the filter, carrying the bacteria with it. These bacteria in the bloodstream cause fever and chills, but in a healthy person, this usually resolves on its own. It’s rare to see it cause serious infection. However, doctors still recommend addicts with cotton fever seek medical care and receive appropriate antibiotics, due to possible impairment of their immune system brought about by intravenous drug use. (1)
At least one study isolated an endotoxin produced by this Enterobacter bacteria, so it’s possible that the fever is actually caused by this toxin released from the bacteria and not from an actual infection.
Enterobacter species, while found in feces of both animals and humans, are also found in the plant world. Usually, these bacteria aren’t a particularly vicious, which is why they rarely cause sepsis (overwhelming infection) unless the individual has an impaired ability to fight infection. In the 1970’s, some medical products (blood, IV fluids) were found to be infected with this species, and caused significant infections, but this was probably due to a large amount of the bacteria infused into patients.
Cotton filters become more fragile with use, so addicts using new filters probably have a lower risk of cotton fever. After cotton filters are used, they remain moist and can become colonized with all sorts of bacteria, especially if they are kept warm, as happens when they are stored in a pocket, close to the body. These bacteria can cause infection when injected. Cotton filters can transmit hepatitis C and possibly other infections, if they are shared with other drug users. (2)
Filters also retain some of the injected drug, making them of some value in the world of intravenous addicts. It’s considered a gesture of generosity to offer another addict your “cottons” because the addict will get some small amount of the drug. (3)
Even in view of all of the above, it’s still better to use a filter than to use unfiltered heroin. A new cotton cigarette filter has been shown to remove up to 80% of particulates in heroin, and reduces the risk of thrombosis of the vein from particles. Other makeshift filters are made from clothing, cotton balls, and even tissue paper.
Syringe filters are manufactured for medical and laboratory use. They can be designed to filter particles down to 5 micrometers. Besides being more expensive and difficult to obtain, studies show these filters retain more of the drug than other makeshift filters, making them less desirable to some addicts. (2)
Cotton fever itself usually isn’t fatal. The biggest challenge is knowing if the addict has cotton fever or something worse, like sepsis. Sepsis is an infection of the blood stream, and even heart valves can become infected, causing serious and life-threatening problems.
I asked a former IV drug addict about his experience with cotton fever.
Me: What does cotton fever feel like?
Former Addict: You get a fever that kind of feels like withdrawal. You know there’s something bad wrong, and you don’t know what to do about it. I’ve laid on the floor and thought I was going to die. A lot of times people get it when they’re rinsing, and that means they’re coming down anyway. When the dope got short and I was rinsing cottons, that’s when I got it.
Me: How long does it last?
FA: It seems like it lasts a long time, but the intensity is bad maybe an hour or two. You shake, you sweat; it feels just like the flu.
Me: Ever go to the hospital with cotton fever?
FA: No, no! (said emphatically) I was usually wanted by the police. Only time I went to the hospital is with severe trauma.
Me: I don’t understand what you mean by rinsing.
FA: Rinsing’s when you squeeze that last little bit of drug out of the cotton [filter]. You rinse the spoon and cotton with a little water. I would save all my cottons. That was my rathole for when the dope ran out. I would actually load the cottons into the barrel of a syringe then draw water in to the barrel of syringe, then squeeze until they were bone dry. I squirted that on to a spoon, and used a new cotton to draw that into a syringe.
Me: Why do you use cotton filters? Do you use it with every drug you injected?
FA: I used cotton to strain any dirt that may be in the product, that might get up in the syringe. I didn’t want no dirt. Didn’t have to be cotton. [If you don’t use a filter, you] shoot a bunch of trash up in yourself, and get trash fever.
I used an itty bitty cotton. Some people would use a quarter of cigarette butt. That was wasteful to me. It got too saturated, could hold too much residue, or dope.
I didn’t have to use cotton with quarter gram morphine or Dilaudid. Not enough trash to stop it up. If there’s trash in the syringe, I used a cotton.
Thankfully, this person has been in recovery from addiction for more than fourteen years.
Recovery is the best way to avoid cotton fever. You never have to go through that again.
1. Rollinton, F; Feeney, C; Chirurgi, V; Enterobacter agglomerans-Associated Cotton Fever, Annals of Internal Medicine 1993; 153(20): 2381-2382.
2. Pates, R; McBride, A; Arnold, K; Injecting Illicit Drugs, (Oxford, UK, Blackwell Publishing, 2005) pp. 41-43.
3. Bourgois, Phillippe; Schonberg, Jeff; Righteous Dopefiend,(Berkeley, California, University of California Press, 2009) pp8-9, 83-84.

34 YEARS the Feds. say nothing less than measurable proof of therapeutic success would be acceptable

From "Coping with Psychiatric and Psychological Testimony", by Dr. David Faust,  and Jay Ziskin

If this was quoted in 1979 to psychologist in the monthly magazine the monitor.  Why are all
the Federal Agencies continue to promote pseudoscientifically procedures?  Patients have the
right to know, and we should cause a big fuzz and write to the directors and chiefs of this
federal agencies.  Perhaps I will make a list of emails for you all to write to them.


This Evidence Based treatment have fallen in deaf ears. In fact the first record I find is
in the Chief of what is not SAMHSA back in the 1970, for those who are interested I find the
reference..... In fact I just found it. it was a Dr. Gerald Klerman, in 1979 wrote to the American
Psychiatric Association in APA's magazine The Monitor November 1979 page 9. quoted as
saying that nothing less than measurable proof of therapeutic success would be acceptable
to the government. "One can not demonstrate the efficacy of therapy in terms of the
"INTENTION OF ITS PROPONENT... never can a therapy can be consider routine and
acceptable on the basis of testimony of authorities... it goes on.

Here is the whole article. If you want a copy of the actual "The APA Monitor this article came out in November 1979 I will be glad to do so. Please email me at worsetreatmentihad@gmail.com

Klerman Challenges Professions To Prove Therapy Works
Alcohol, Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration (ADAMHA) chief Gerald Klerman, addressing the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association in September, called on the mental health professions to take on the task of psychotherapy evaluation, noting that the promise of national health insurance and the consumer movement have led to a climate which demands more than custom as justification for reimbursement. Elaborating on an earlier speech in which he underscored the need,, to circumscribe legitimate mental health activity, Klerman told APA that nothing less-.than measurable proof of therapeutic success would be acceptable given the federal government's sizable and expanding role as a third-party payer. "We can attack the problem of defining boundaries in part by returning to the practical problem that many therapeutic methods are well intended; but poorly established in terms of safety, efficacy and economy. One cannot demonstrate the efficacy of a therapy in terms of the intentions of its proponents." "Neither can a therapy be considered routine and acceptable on the basis of the testimony of authorities--that is/ because outstanding •members of the profession are of the opinion that it is useful, safe and effective. I believe that only evidence as to outcomes will suffice in the rigorous climate of consumerism and health insuranc~ coverage."
Klerman pointed to the recently established National Center for Health Care Technology as a sign of the times. The center is currently evaluating 40 treatment methods for efficacy, including aversive drug treat- ment of alcoholism. "I view this as a possible prototype," Klerman said--"a 'shadow of the future.' Next year, evaluation of the efficacy of group treatment of family distress might be requested. Or of chlorpromazine for treatment of schizophrenia. Or Librium for sleep and anxiety." "The establishment of this center within a short time of the formation of the Health Care Financing Administration to tighten the federal reimbursement purse strings, in my view, makes it especially noteworthy," Klerman added. "As the federal third-party payer, HCFA dispenses dollars in the 'megabillion' range. It thus inevitably sets a tone which other reimbursers may follow." The public no longer accepts credentialing and licensure as sufficient guarantees of effective and safe service, Klerman said. "The new consumerism demands •a  new 10ok at these protections. It demands not just good training, but good services. It demands an evaluation not just of the state of the artist, but the state of the art .... If we don't respond, i~ will be brought upon us." W.H.


Please note that this article was written in 1979, that is over 34 years ago, and clinician continue to do their own thing and call it treatment.