This
News Report is being published at a time of momentous change for
our field. The Office of National Drug Control Policy(ONDCP) in
conjunction with the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT)
within SAMHSA released the Notice for Proposed Rule Making (NPRM)
on July 22, 1999.
On
July 30, 1999, only one week after the release of the NPRM, Congressman
Bliley of Virginia, who chairs the House Commerce Committee, convened
hearings in Washington, DC on the Drug Addiction and Treatment
Act (S.324) (H.R. 2634). This Act would allow physicians in general
medical practice to prescribe Schedule IV and V Narcotics to treat
opiate dependence, making it possible for doctors to treat such
individuals after 75 years of being prohibited from treating opiate
dependence with opioid medications. This edition outlines our
Association’s concerns about this legislation.
There
has also been increasing interest in treating methadone maintained
patients in physician offices. Our Association’s recommendations
have been included in this News Report, reflecting recent changes
made by the Policy Committee and the Board of Directors on September
23, 1999.
This
Report will present the findings of our Association’s 1998 Survey
among methadone programs and State Methadone Authorities in the
United States. Brigid Doherty’s article will highlight that more
than 179,000 patients were registered in the nation’s methadone
treatment programs, representing a startling increase in the number
of patients reported in treatment by the federal government.
This
edition of the Report also details our Association’s primary reasons
for supporting the change in federal oversight to accreditation
and our response to the NPRM, which was presented at the November
1, 1999 interagency hearing. We believe that accreditation will
bring greater legitimacy to methadone maintenance treatment and
will also improve the quality of patient care throughout the nation’s
methadone treatment programs. Our principal concern is about the
cost of accreditation and its effect on patient care and the treatment
programs.
Readers
will receive a progress report on the Drug Enforcement Administration/American
Methadone Treatment Association’s Best Practice Guidelines, which
have been expanded by the DEA/Association Committee. They are
expected to be made available to participants at the April 9-12,
National Methadone Conference 2000, which will convene in San
Francisco.
We
are certain that our members and associates will agree that this
represents enormous activity in the field of methadone maintenance
treatment services, with the potential to change the nature of
how opiate dependence is treated in the United States.