Methadone-Related Deaths IncreasingThe Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administrations Drug Abuse Warning Network reported that more than 10,000 people turned up in emergency rooms after having abused methadone in 2001, which is double the number from just two years earlier.
Reported deaths from methadone abuse are rising in North Carolina, Florida, West Virginia, Maryland, Montana and Nevada while it has become the deadliest drug in Oregon according to state medical examiners. Meanwhile, profits for the drugs manufacturer and dispensers have increased dramatically as well.
Methadone was developed by German chemists as a painkiller during World War II and has been widely used as drug replacement therapy to get addicts off heroin and other opiates. There are currently more than 1,200 facilities that dispense methadone to addicts, totaling approximately 200,000 patients. While methadone may not produce the same high as heroin or Oxycontin, it is more physically addictive and more difficult to withdraw from.
The Drug Abuse Treatment Outcome Studies (DATOS) issued a report on a multi-city study of status of patients before and after various types of treatment, including outpatient methadone treatment. The results of this study that was done in the 90s showed that there was actually a slight increase in heavy alcohol use among methadone patients, but perhaps the most obviously overlooked flaw in this type of treatment is that the addicts are still on drugs, and this cannot be considered rehabilitation.
© 2009 Drug-Free Alliance