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$html_title = "Methadone Madness";
$description = "Methadone Madness";
$keywords = "";
$body = <<Methadone
Madness
The AP recently reported the
acceptance of nearly a dozen methadone clinics in Appalachia.
In towns such as Paintsville, KY, where the rampant spread of
Oxycontin(r) addiction has left communities in disarray, a
lack of workable solutions has lead to drug substitution
instead of solving the problem at hand. The façade of
methadone maintenance programs through for-profit clinics
brings about a hope that individuals addicted to the
prescription opiate can function on once-a-day doses of a
synthetic opiate, but it doesn't handle the physical
addiction.
Given the history of opiate
addiction, spanning back more than a century, a clear cycle
of ineffective patch treatments using another similar drug is
showing itself again in as an old practice in a new game.
Morphine was used to treat opium addiction. Heroin was used
to treat morphine addiction. Methadone was, and still is,
used to treat heroin addiction and now is being applied to
forms of oxycodone addiction.
According to J.J., a 28 year-old
former heroin addict, "I was on methadone for 5 years and it
was much harder to get off than the heroin. You can't skip a
day going to the [methadone] clinic or you immediately get
really sick. It's a trap either way." In the case with
Oxycontin(r), it is actually listed in the same
classification as methadone according to the United States
Drug Enforcement Agency as a Schedule II Narcotic.
Referencing the Pharmacists Manual, "Substances in Schedule
II have a high abuse potential with severe psychological or
physical dependence liability," showing that it in fact is
not a solution to the problem. The madness of it all is the
seemingly never-ending question: Will this vicious cycle ever
end?
The truth is that a drug-free
alternative is not only available, but successfully helping
opiate addicts fully recover from their addiction. The
Narconon(r) Drug Rehabilitation and Education Program is
based on the secular research and discoveries of L. Ron
Hubbard pertaining to drug addiction and consists of a
uniquely effective withdrawal phase, confront and
communication exercises, a dry heat sauna detoxification
program and a series of life skills courses to not only fully
rehabilitate individuals but also to prepare them for life
after drugs.
Next Story©2003 Narconon of
Oklahoma, Inc. All Rights Reserved. NARCONON is a registered
trademark and service mark owned by Association for Better
Living and Education International and is used with its
permission.
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