News (Media Awareness Project) - Ireland: Smart Card Would Help In Rural Heroin Addicts |
Title: | Ireland: Smart Card Would Help In Rural Heroin Addicts |
Published On: | 2000-06-10 |
Source: | Irish Times, The (Ireland) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 19:42:20 |
SMART CARD WOULD HELP IN RURAL HEROIN ADDICTS
The introduction of a smart card computerised system allowing heroin
addicts to receive methadone treatment from any chemist, rather than
one designated chemist, would aid the treatment of rural addicts,
according to a doctor in the midlands.
In a submission to the National Drugs Strategy, Dr Patrick Troy, who
worked to establish two methadone treatment centres in the Midlands
Health Board region, said tying an addict's supervised consumption of
methadone to their local chemist often prevented stabilised users from
getting work.
"Some of my clients make a 50 mile round trip for a prescription to
get three days' supervised consumption in the pharmacy near their
home. Some stabilise so well they can go back to work, but what if
they live in one town and get a job in another?
"I would like to see some vision in the system to give clients more
mobility, because as it currently stands treatment can hamper further
progress," Dr Troy said.
Seventeen heroin addicts attend the recently set-up treatment centre
in St Vincent's Hospital in Athlone; 12 addicts are on a waiting list
for the centre.
In Portlaoise the heroin problem is described as "more discrete" and
10 people get treatment at the centre there, including a boy aged 16.
There is no waiting list.
Many of the heroin addicts in the midlands are local people who became
addicted to heroin while living in Britain or Dublin and some move
home for treatment.
Other addicts, most notably from Athlone, come from marginalised and
deprived communities there.
Dr Patrick Doorley, the director of public health for the Midlands
Health Board, said there was no major heroin problem in the area but
health workers were determined not to become complacent. "I worked in
Dublin's north inner city in the 1980s and we were receiving informal
information from youth workers on the ground on how the drugs problem
was increasing well before it hit the headlines. You always have to be
on the lookout for signs the problem is evolving," he said.
In the midlands region a health promotion manager oversees the drugs
issue, with four health education officers also taking part in a
schools education programme. Community drug councillors operate
clinics which, according to Dr Dooley, run a "confidential and
non-judgmental service".
The introduction of a smart card computerised system allowing heroin
addicts to receive methadone treatment from any chemist, rather than
one designated chemist, would aid the treatment of rural addicts,
according to a doctor in the midlands.
In a submission to the National Drugs Strategy, Dr Patrick Troy, who
worked to establish two methadone treatment centres in the Midlands
Health Board region, said tying an addict's supervised consumption of
methadone to their local chemist often prevented stabilised users from
getting work.
"Some of my clients make a 50 mile round trip for a prescription to
get three days' supervised consumption in the pharmacy near their
home. Some stabilise so well they can go back to work, but what if
they live in one town and get a job in another?
"I would like to see some vision in the system to give clients more
mobility, because as it currently stands treatment can hamper further
progress," Dr Troy said.
Seventeen heroin addicts attend the recently set-up treatment centre
in St Vincent's Hospital in Athlone; 12 addicts are on a waiting list
for the centre.
In Portlaoise the heroin problem is described as "more discrete" and
10 people get treatment at the centre there, including a boy aged 16.
There is no waiting list.
Many of the heroin addicts in the midlands are local people who became
addicted to heroin while living in Britain or Dublin and some move
home for treatment.
Other addicts, most notably from Athlone, come from marginalised and
deprived communities there.
Dr Patrick Doorley, the director of public health for the Midlands
Health Board, said there was no major heroin problem in the area but
health workers were determined not to become complacent. "I worked in
Dublin's north inner city in the 1980s and we were receiving informal
information from youth workers on the ground on how the drugs problem
was increasing well before it hit the headlines. You always have to be
on the lookout for signs the problem is evolving," he said.
In the midlands region a health promotion manager oversees the drugs
issue, with four health education officers also taking part in a
schools education programme. Community drug councillors operate
clinics which, according to Dr Dooley, run a "confidential and
non-judgmental service".
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