News (Media Awareness Project) - US IN: PUB LTE: We Need To Look Ahead |
Title: | US IN: PUB LTE: We Need To Look Ahead |
Published On: | 2006-07-08 |
Source: | Times, The (Munster IN) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-14 00:36:43 |
WE NEED TO LOOK AHEAD
Note: Title by MAP Editor
QUESTION: What should be done about the drug problem in Porter and
LaPorte counties?
RESPONSE
I read your editorial on heroin use in the county. I have lived with
opioid addiction my entire life, but it's been 25 years since I've
done any dope, for whatever that's worth. I made it through
methadone. I'm still on it -- although I once endured eight years
without it -- and probably will be until I die. If you quit, all
you've got is a deadly untreated addiction on your hands. Until
science comes up with a cure, a real cure that doesn't depend on
willpower, this will continue.
But we not only need expanded and easier access (methadone is the
most highly regulated medication in the United States) to methadone,
we need to look ahead. The new buprenorphine that Congress backs
doesn't work for a heroin habit, although it should be available for
milder cases.
What else can be done, since we've had methadone for more than 30
years? Switzerland has shown the way.
After enduring a heroin epidemic, the Swiss have found dispensing
pharmaceutical heroin coupled with counseling is superior for the
recalcitrant addict. It's being called the "Swiss Fix," and its
record is phenomenal.
Crime levels, poverty, and disease all dropped so fast that
forward-thinking countries the world over, including Canada, are
making it available and watching the addicts come in, where they can
address other issues. I knew a lot of people who would be alive today
if such a treatment were available.
This is the only thing the big dealers fear. They sure don't fear
drug war point man and U.S. Rep. Mark Souder.
Everything he so vehemently espouses puts money in their pockets.
Prohibition got us into this mess.
Dave Michon
Cadot, Wis.
Note: Title by MAP Editor
QUESTION: What should be done about the drug problem in Porter and
LaPorte counties?
RESPONSE
I read your editorial on heroin use in the county. I have lived with
opioid addiction my entire life, but it's been 25 years since I've
done any dope, for whatever that's worth. I made it through
methadone. I'm still on it -- although I once endured eight years
without it -- and probably will be until I die. If you quit, all
you've got is a deadly untreated addiction on your hands. Until
science comes up with a cure, a real cure that doesn't depend on
willpower, this will continue.
But we not only need expanded and easier access (methadone is the
most highly regulated medication in the United States) to methadone,
we need to look ahead. The new buprenorphine that Congress backs
doesn't work for a heroin habit, although it should be available for
milder cases.
What else can be done, since we've had methadone for more than 30
years? Switzerland has shown the way.
After enduring a heroin epidemic, the Swiss have found dispensing
pharmaceutical heroin coupled with counseling is superior for the
recalcitrant addict. It's being called the "Swiss Fix," and its
record is phenomenal.
Crime levels, poverty, and disease all dropped so fast that
forward-thinking countries the world over, including Canada, are
making it available and watching the addicts come in, where they can
address other issues. I knew a lot of people who would be alive today
if such a treatment were available.
This is the only thing the big dealers fear. They sure don't fear
drug war point man and U.S. Rep. Mark Souder.
Everything he so vehemently espouses puts money in their pockets.
Prohibition got us into this mess.
Dave Michon
Cadot, Wis.
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