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April 12, 2000
It
is a pleasure to be with you today to discuss addiction and the progress
we have made with methadone as well as our policy challenges and vision
for the future. We applaud each of you who participated in this conference
for your commitment and perseverance in ensuring that America implements
an effective, science-based strategy for treating opiate addicts. Despite
a lack of understanding by many, you continue to fight for what you know
is right. The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) commends
your strength and courage. Opiate addiction is a chronic, recurring brain
disease. The awful plight of opiate addicts deserves our firm, compassionate,
immediate response.
Thanks to the leadership of the American Methadone Treatment Association,
methadone treatment has been placed on our nation's agenda. There is still
considerable progress to be made, but we are heading in the right direction.
AMTA has set the precedent for change.
At this stage in the debate, we need to examine our policy challenges
and outline a vision for the future. We must act on current knowledge
and continue working toward our goals. Our responsibility is to inform
the public about scientific research in this arena so that the proper
medical and political decisions will be made.
Our primary challenge is to expand treatment availability. Currently,
five million people in the United States are chronic drug abusers and
20% are opiate addicts. Only 2.1 million receive treatment and 179,000
of this 2.1 million are in opiate treatment. Closing this gap, from both
sides, is our goal. Sound science, which leads to enlightened policy,
is helping us achieve it. We must reduce ignorant skepticism on the importance
of treatment. Expanding opiate treatment is a critical step in overcoming
our challenge. The methadone treatment community - those of you who are
here today and your colleagues - can be the rising tide that lifts all
ships.
Part I of this speech highlights those who have been visionaries in the
methadone field - individuals who informed the discussion on opiate addiction
through trailblazing efforts. They are responsible for the advent of methadone
clinics in forty-two states. Part II examines what we know about addiction.
Part III looks at the status of drug treatment and what we are doing to
make it more available. Part IV provides an update on our past-year progress
in implementing a new system of federal oversight for treatment programs,
particularly methadone. Part V outlines policy issues that currently define
the methadone debate. Part VI articulates our vision for the future of
methadone treatment.
I.
The Methadone Visionaries
In order to understand our progress with methadone, we must acknowledge
the individuals who first broke social and policy barriers to introduce
methadone treatment. In the fifties, Dr. Vincent Dole and Dr. Marie Nyswander
were scientists instrumental in the reformulation of methadone as an opiate
addiction medication. Dr. Mary Jeanne Kreek, who continues to work in
her laboratory at Rockefeller University, later joined them. Over the
past 40 years, the groundbreaking work of these 3 scientists has made
methadone the most studied medication on the market - a medication of
proven effectiveness. The work of these scientists continues through Dr.
Kreek and numerous other researchers at some of the most outstanding universities
in the U.S. and around the world.
It is also necessary to acknowledge Dr. Avram Goldstein for his benchmark
science on the neurobiology of opiate addiction and Dr. Charles "Chuck"
O'Brien for his research and scholarly contributions to training development
for the education of medical students on addiction. Finally, we must recognize
Mark Parrino, an outstanding leader of AMTA who has enabled our progress
in this field.
II.
Research on Addiction
Scientific research and clinical experience have increased our understanding
of addiction. Consequently, what was once a sterile policy debate is now
one based on science. Over 25 years of research by the National Institute
on Drug Abuse (NIDA) shows that because of the chemical structure of opiates
(and heroin in particular) these substances are able to rapidly enter
the brain. Heroin crosses the blood brain barrier and attaches to natural
opioid receptors. By binding to these receptors the drug initiates multiple
physiological effects, including pain reduction, depression of heart rate,
and slowing of respiration. The effects that heroin has on respiration
are what lead to lethal outcomes in the case of an overdose. Heroin also
acts on the brain's natural reward circuitry to produce a surge of pleasurable
sensations. It is, of course, the pleasurable effects that cause people
to take drugs. And, NIDA research shows that prolonged drug use can actually
change brains. These changes are thought to play an integral role in the
development of addiction. Powerful technologies are giving us greater
insight into these dramatic brain alterations.
Understanding the neurobiology of addiction has led to the development
of effective tools to treat opiate addiction and help manage physical
withdrawal symptoms that accompany sudden cessation of drug use. We now
know that withdrawal and physical dependence are only a minor part of
the problem that must be addressed when treating opiate addicts. In fact,
withdrawal symptoms can be effectively managed through the use of modern
medicines. Recognizing that addiction is, at its core, a consequence of
fundamental changes in brain function means that a major goal of treatment
must be to compensate for brain changes through medication or behavior
modification.
Addiction is not just a brain disease. The social context in which drug
dependence expresses itself is critically important. The case of thousands
of returning Vietnam veterans who were addicted to heroin illustrates
this point. In contrast to addicts on the streets of America, many of
the veterans who became addicted did so in a totally different setting
from the one to which they returned. At home in the United States, veterans
were exposed to very few of the conditioned environmental cues that had
been associated with drug use in Southeast Asia. Conditioned cues can
be a major factor in causing recurrent drug cravings and relapse even
after successful treatment.
Addiction is not an acute illness. For most people, it is a chronic relapsing
illness with an increasingly volitional dimension as recovery proceeds.
Total abstinence for the rest of one's life is relatively rare following
a single experience in treatment. Relapses are not unusual. Addicts suffer
setbacks, just as a diabetic or arthritis sufferer does. Thus, addiction
must be approached like other chronic illnesses, requiring management
and monitoring. This approach has serious implications for how we evaluate
treatment. Viewing addiction as a chronic illness means that a good treatment
outcome is no drug use over long periods of abstinence. Behavioral and
psychosocial interventions must be implemented in conjunction with pharmacological
interventions to maximize successful treatment outcomes for addiction.
III.
Status of Drug Treatment
A significant treatment gap - defined as the difference between individuals
who would benefit from treatment and those receiving it - exists. According
to recent estimates drawn from the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse
(NHSDA), the Uniform Facility Data Set (UFDS), and other sources, approximately
five million drug users needed immediate treatment in 1998 while 2.1 million
received it. Certain parts of the country have little treatment capacity
of any sort. Likewise, some populations - adolescents, women with small
children, and racial as well as ethnic minorities - are woefully under-served.
According to the Child Welfare League of America, in 1997 only ten percent
of child welfare agencies were able to locate treatment within a month
for clients who needed it. According to Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (SAMHSA), 37 percent of substance-abusing mothers
of minors received treatment in 1997. Some modalities, namely methadone,
fall short of needed capacity; only 179,000 patients were in methadone
treatment at the close of 1998. Furthermore, while treatment should be
available to those who request it, society also has a strong interest
in helping populations that need treatment but will not seek it. Drug-dependent
criminal offenders and addicts engaging in high-risk behavior are important
candidates for treatment.
Ultimately, calculations of the treatment gap should include both actual
demand and populations that society has a special interest in treating
due to the high social cost associated with their drug abuse. Starting
in 2000, a new methodology, based on clinical criteria, will be employed
in the NHSDA. This approach will provide improved national estimates by
August 2001. More precise numbers will be helpful in determining the magnitude
of the treatment gap and targeting resources to the areas where the gap
is greatest.
Limited funding for substance-abuse treatment is a major factor that restricts
the availability of treatment. Over the last decade, spending on substance-abuse
prevention and treatment rose to an estimated annual level of $12.6 billion.
Of this amount, public spending is estimated at $7.6 billion. The public
sector includes Medicaid, Medicare, federal agencies like the Veterans
Administration, the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment (SAPT) Block
Grant, and other state and local government expenditures. Private spending
is estimated at $4.7 billion and includes individual out-of-pocket payment,
insurance, and other non-public sources. One of the main reasons for the
higher outlay in public spending is the frequently limited coverage by
private insurers. The lack of coverage and recent changes in payment structures
affect attitudes, resources, treatment plans, and the quality of treatment.
Private and public insurers are not working collaboratively; thus, more
public resources are utilized, and government funds - which were intended
to be a safety net - have become a primary option for many individuals.
In addition to resource limitations, other factors confine treatment,
including restrictive policies and regulations, incomplete knowledge of
best practices, resistance to treatment on the part of certain populations
in need, and limited information on treatment at the state and local level.
Action in the following areas can make treatment more available:
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Increasing
Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment (SAPT) Block Grant funding
to close the treatment gap. |
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Using
funding under SAMHSA's Targeted Capacity Expansion program; expanding
services to vulnerable and underserved populations; reaching out to
those at risk of HIV/AIDS; and increasing community options for sanctions
among criminal and juvenile justice clients. |
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Using
regulatory change to make proven modalities more accessible: reforming
regulation of methadone/LAAM treatment, maintaining and improving
program quality; training treatment professionals and physicians to
employ the proper administration of opiate agonists and emerging pharmacotherapies;
conducting demonstrations of administration by doctors of opiate agonists;
and providing comprehensive evaluation of the impact of regulatory
reform on treatment access, quality, and cost. |
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Continuing
to examine possible changes in policy to remove barriers, such as
lack of parity in insurance coverage. For example, the President recently
announced that the Federal Employees Health Benefits Plan (FEHB) would
provide parity for both substance abuse and mental health services. |
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Reviewing
policies, practices, and federal statutory requirements, such as the
statutory exclusion of Medicaid funding for Institutes for Mental
Disease (IMD), which may affect access to residential treatment services
for substance abuse. |
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Prioritizing
research, evaluation, and dissemination - including state-by-state
estimates of drug-treatment need, demand, and treatment resources;
dissemination of best treatment practices; guidance on ways to increase
retention and reduce relapse; and foster progress from external coercion
to internal motivation. |
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Reducing
stigma associated with drug treatment. |
IV. Update on Federal Oversight of Treatment Programs
To improve treatment accountability, ONDCP is piloting an information
system with treatment programs around the country that will be expanded
by the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) into the National
Treatment Outcome Monitoring System (NTOMS). Under NTOMS, treatment performance
will be measured and compared. In addition, an agreement has been negotiated
with the states to establish a common set of outcome measures to be applied
to programs receiving federal funding. In addition, "A Notice of
Proposed Rule Making" - published in the Federal Register on July
22, 1999 - proposed a new system of federal oversight for opioid treatment
programs. This approach would transfer regulatory oversight from FDA to
SAMHSA, provide greater flexibility to practitioners, and require program
accreditation as a means of implementing best practice guidelines.
Treatment services are being fostered through: manuals created by NIDA,
Treatment Improvement Protocols and addiction curricula by the Center
for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT), clinical guidelines by the Department
of Veterans Affairs (VA), and a comprehensive curriculum for treatment
by the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP). State and local treatment programs
with promising results are applying these resources. CSAT has joined with
the Certification Board for Addiction Professionals of Florida and a number
of national stakeholder organizations to develop core competencies for
substance-abuse counselors. Ultimately, these efforts will lead to a body
of certified professionals equipped with manuals reflecting the most advanced
approaches to treatment.
V.
Policy Issues
The most significant policy issues confronting the future of methadone
treatment in this country are: 1) Buprenorphine, 2) office-based opiate
therapy, and 3) accreditation. We must concentrate our efforts on these
critical challenges and be cogniscent of them as we define, adjust, and
implement our vision.
Buprenorphine
In an effort to give treatment providers another effective tool to combat
heroin addiction, the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) is working
with other HHS agencies, including the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment
(CSAT) and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), and the pharmaceutical
industry to bring to market Buprenorphine-naloxone. This medication has
the potential for administration in less traditional environments, thereby
expanding treatment to populations who either do not have access to methadone
programs or are unsuited for them, such as adolescents. Buprenorphine
would not be a replacement for methadone or LAAM, but rather another treatment
option for both physicians and patients.
We must continue addressing the laws and regulations that limit physicians
from using narcotics to treat narcotic diseases. We have an opportunity
with Buprenorphine to reduce the stigma of addiction by incorporating
drug treatment into regular medical practice. This medication can be instrumental
in normalizing drug treatment. With educated practitioners and accepted
standards of training, Buprenorphine can set a precedent for the social
acceptance of opiate addiction treatment.
Office-Based Opiate Therapy (OBOT)
Drug addiction is a disease. As such, its treatment should be part of
medical practice. Consequently, drug treatment should be available in
physicians' offices. Mainstreaming opiate-based treatment by offering
office-based opiate therapy will help eliminate the stigma associated
with opiate addiction and treatment, while encouraging the inclusion of
addiction education in medical school curricula and physician training.
Office-based opiate therapy will ensure that the training and clinical
standards applied to mainstream medical practice will be applied to drug
treatment. The regulations that govern physicians' clinics should be the
same that regulate opiate-based treatment. In addition, OBOT will enable
physicians to conduct comprehensive assessments of patients to determine
what treatment is best rather than supporting a preferred or available
modality. The resources for curing other medical diseases should be available
to addiction. The most efficient way for this shift to occur is through
office-based opiate therapy.
Accreditation
Today, accreditation is being pilot-tested in approximately 170 programs
across the United States. We are seeking data about the impact of accreditation
on the quality of care in methadone treatment programs. We can hypothesize
that granting credentials to clinics and workers will improve the level
of care and ensure high standards of treatment. If accreditation can improve
methadone delivery in treatment programs and facilitate mainstreaming
drug treatment, it should be a fundamental component of methadone policy
in this country. Research currently underway will direct our actions.
VI.
Vision for the Future
The future of methadone treatment can be separated into two areas: program
and policy. Our programmatic concerns focus on where programs must be
started and how they should be developed. Our policy vision examines how
policies can enable mainstreaming drug treatment.
Programmatic
The most recent data available reveals that 179,000 patients were in methadone
treatment at the end of 1998. However, 980,000 individuals are addicted
to heroin. The primary way to close this gap is to mainstream opiate addiction
treatment. We must be able to provide treatment to anyone who needs it
by offering needs-based services in medical clinics nationwide. We should
also enforce user and program accountability to ensure that the quality
of treatment is not compromised.
Finally, we must unify all programs. Treatment facilities must offer comprehensive
services. Programs can, of course, specialize in certain kinds of treatment,
but a patient should have access to all modalities to ensure that that
individual is receiving the best choice for him.
Policy
Our first mission, from a policy perspective, is to challenge the eight
states that do not offer methadone treatment - Idaho, Mississippi, Montana,
New Hampshire, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, and West Virginia
- to do so. Methadone should be accepted in every state and we are in
the process of reaching out to the leadership of these states to make
this change happen. Addiction is a relapsing brain disease. There is no
reason why treatment for this ailment should be isolated from other types
of care. Methadone can be critical for an addict's reentry into society.
Restricting methadone erects unnecessary barriers to recovery. As policy
makers, we bear responsibility for removing obstacles to individual and
communal health.
The second issue on our policy agenda is to review policies, practices,
and federal statutory requirements, such as the statutory exclusion of
Medicaid funding for Institutes for Mental Disease (IMD), which may affect
access to residential treatment services for substance abuse. At the National
Assembly on Drugs, Alcohol Abuse, and the Criminal Offender this past
December, Donna Shalala asserted that she would review the IMD exclusion.
We commend her initiative. No disease should be excluded from coverage.
VII.
Conclusion
At the Office of National Drug Control Policy, we are committed to reducing
demand, specifically through prevention and treatment. Prevention spending
has increased 52 percent since FY96 and funds for treatment increased
32 percent since FY96 to a record $3.15 billion in FY01. We are leveraging
our resources to accomplish our goals and our efforts are paying off.
We are making significant progress toward mainstreaming drug addiction
treatment. Our hope is to offer addicts the same level of care as individuals
afflicted with other diseases. Administration of opiate-addiction therapy,
including Buprenorphine, in physicians' offices, as well as accreditation
of clinics offering drug treatment, will help this country integrate drug
treatment into the medical approach to all diseases.
Our primary challenge is expanding treatment availability. Increasing
the accessibility of opiate treatment is a crucial step in helping us
achieve our goal. Because twenty percent of the addicted population in
this country is opiate addicts, the standards established with opiate
treatment can set a precedent in this field of drug treatment. We must
work to dispel the misunderstandings surrounding treatment, as well as
ensure that opiate-addiction therapy is a standard component of all medical
practices. Thank you for your dedication and commitment. The tireless
efforts and hard work of this community are making all the difference.
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