Although Prohibition ended 70 years ago, a new agenda of temperance is alive and well and growing at an incredible rate. With the advent of the internet the development of new citizen groups loosely modeled after “Mothers Against Drunk Driving” we find
Methadone maintenance, highly structured with almost 50 years of proven efficacy, at the center of a new debate. In the media and online a lot of scary claims are being thrown around. The most dangerous of these are not those that are false; we who are reliant on Methadone assisted treatment are quick to debunk those. Rather, the dangerous ones are those that are true or partially true when there is no research clearly showing the cause and effect and that’s being implied.
These groups are hell bent on perpetuating the myth that methadone is “trading one addiction for another” or that it’s a “number #2 killer” all the while portraying the professional working men and women who have found a new life thanks to the availablity of methadone maintenance programs as people who use your tax dollars to feed their addictions and support their immoral lifestyles. They paint a picture of uneducated, mentally unstable street thugs driving recklessly between the clinic and the ghetto, robbing little old ladies and running over unsuspecting school children, a trail of dead bodies in their wake.
Noone escapes their judgemental criticism. The Doctors and clinicians are no better than the evil street pusher, derelict doctors out for money randomly give away free drugs at ridiculously high doses, supplying the community with such a glut of free methadone that it’s almost forced upon the young innocent children in our communities. How else can these people come to terms with the thought that their loved one may have had some responsibility in their own death?
This newest group, HARMD (”Helping America Reduce Methadone Deaths”) is fueled by anger and grief. Their apparent spokesperson, Melissa Zuppardi, constantly makes misleading statements about the number of people killed in methadone related deaths in an apparent effort to exaggerate the extent of the problem and enhance fundraising and legislative lobbying efforts. There is simply no legitimate reason to insist falsely that methadone related deaths are a growing epidemic. In many of these cases methadone is scape-goated, pointed to as the “cause” of death regardless of what other drugs or factors exist.
Methadone maintenance treatment gives those of us who have struggled with opiate and heroin addiction a fighting chance to take our lives back. Some stay on maintenance for the rest of their lives. Others slowly titrate down after years, even decades, of treatment. Studies done by Dr. Kreek and others have shown that Methadone heals damage done by heroin use and when taken over the long term can reinstate endorphin function making it an ideal medicine for some. There is, unfortunately, never a shortage of people in this world who are just “out for a high” and these few who contintue to take illicit drugs and drink alchohol while participating in a methadone program unfortunately give Methadone a bad name. Addiction knows no class boundries, and just as there are the "invisible" patients that hold professional jobs, there are also those that go to clinics who struggle with mental health issues, and some, especially in the inner cities that are homeless. No, Methadone patients are not all Boy Scouts or always the best of citizens, but most are good people who deserve to use a medication that has worked for us and many before us.
Another popular misconception is the idea that long term addicts on a maintenance dose are "getting high". To an opiate tolerant person there is no “high” whatsoever when maintained on a theraputic dose of methadone, regardless of the “number” of milligrams. There is the relief and feeling of well being that is the benefit of being released from the grips of craving illicit opiates; and for most that it the best feeling one could wish for. For the first time in our lives we are released from the grip of addiction, and we are able to function in society, accomplish things in our lives, be there for other people and not be enslaved to addiction. It's the same state that for most folks comes naturally: for us feeling normal is almost a kind of "high" - some of us haven't felt normal in years.
Granted, methadone is NOT for everyone. Just because it doesn’t work for you, or because someone wasn’t careful doesn’t mean you have to put all your energy into a senseless War On Drugs, putting MORE restrictions on a drug that people are using to save their lives with. Neo-prohibition is NOT the answer. Putting the spot-light on the minority of MAT patients that fit the sterotypes only helps to perpetuate the stigma and is misleading. We are also lawyers, teachers, students and every day working people. We serve you in the restaurants and bars. We are your neighbors and co-workers. Methadone maintenance treatment has had clear benefits in reducing heroin abuse and its medical and psychosocial complications, it is medically safe to use on a long-term basis, and may have broad benefits for the disrupted biology that is associated with heroin abuse. Do not buy the fake science, pumped up statistics and misleading rhetoric of these groups. Stricter laws will only make treatment less accessable, more lives will be lost, and those loved ones we all have lost will not be brought back.
Methadone Patients Against Hysteria and Further Restrictions
PLEASE SIGN THE PETITION
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takea...360731625/sign