|
The
starting point is supporting the improvement of the quality of methadone
treatment services through accreditation. It is also necessary to
increase points of referral through drug courts, probation departments
and prison facilities.
In addition it is also critical to provide training for physicians,
managers, and program staff through conferences and symposia in
addition to specialized on-site training and distance training initiatives.
Educating America concerning the value of methadone maintenance
treatment is a long-term initiative that will bind all of these
elements into a successful blueprint for a long-term future for
methadone treatment in the United States.
1.
Accreditation (2001-2005)
CSAT implemented new federal standards for accrediting methadone
treatment programs on May 18, 2001.
The primary rationale for AATOD's support for accreditation was
to increase the legitimacy for methadone maintenance treatment,
simultaneously improving treatment quality. Patients would be treated
with greater integrity on a "case-by-case" basis.
Need for Technical Assistance
CSAT has committed to offering technical assistance to programs
and state agencies throughout the country. The Final Rule alluded
to this technical assistance being provided to such entities over
the course of the next three to five years. In addition, CSAT has
also committed resources to paying for accreditation surveys.
AATOD has been advising State Methadone Provider Associations to
work with the designated single state authorities (block grant recipients)
to access technical assistance to determine the comprehensive needs
of methadone treatment programs within each state's jurisdiction.
Illustratively, some states may have methadone treatment programs
requiring greater physical plant improvement than others. Other
states may have more restrictive regulations without providing resources
to pay for such regulatory adherence.
Statewide Technical Assistance would be able to identify the needs
of methadone treatment programs within a particular state, providing
an action-oriented blueprint and funds, which would be necessary
to meet accreditation standards.
AATOD's support for accreditation has been consistent throughout
the approval and implementation process. It is also the basis for
building an improved treatment system, which will have greater legitimacy.
It builds on the principles of the State Methadone Treatment
Guidelines and is essential in any long-range plan to create
a renaissance in methadone maintenance treatment.
2. Educating Drug Court Judges (2001-2005)
The Office of National Drug Court Policy approved the publication
of a Drug Practitioner Methadone
Fact Sheet, which was distributed by the National Drug Court
Institute to its 12,500 members during April 2002. AATOD developed
this Fact Sheet on behalf of AATOD, drawing from references including
the State Methadone Treatment Guidelines, CSAT's Community
Education Kit and COMPA's "Regarding
Methadone Treatment".
The National Drug Court Institute and AATOD have agreed to
cross-train their respective members.
Partnering with other Organizations
AATOD has been speaking with representatives from the American Bar
Association and the Legal Action Center to support such initiatives.
It is possible that we will work with these organizations to educate
Drug Court judges and attorneys regarding the value of methadone
treatment practices.
3. Changing the U.S. Department of Probation's
Anti-Methadone Guidelines (1997-2005)
The Federal Guide to Judiciary Policy Procedures - Probation Manual
contains anti-methadone statements. Accordingly, a number of probation
officers in different parts of the country are able to force methadone
maintained patients to terminate their treatment or be in violation
and returned to jail.
AATOD has been working with a number of federal agencies to change
this anti-methadone policy. This was one of the major policy points
contained in the July 26, 2000 correspondence to ONDCP. Once again,
other affiliated organizations, including the American Bar Association
and the Legal Action Center, may be helpful to AATOD in changing
this policy.
4. Expansion of Methadone Treatment Services
in Jails and Prisons (2000-2005)
AATOD is committed to expanding access to methadone treatment services
in jails and prisons of the United States, building upon the success
of the Rikers Island experience (KEEP program). Mark Parrino published
an article in the May/June 2000 edition of American Jails Magazine,
reporting on the success of this program.
We will work with various federal and statewide entities to increase
access to this option so that inmates who are opiate dependent and
in need of methadone treatment services will get access to care.
They will need to be referred to methadone treatment programs upon
release, based on the outreach initiative that has been used through
Rikers Island.
5. Educating America about Methadone Maintenance
Treatment (2000-2005)
We began educating communities about methadone maintenance treatment
through the development of the video "The Joy of Being Normal"
and the publication of the Methadone Community Education Kit. The
Association's Public Relations Committee developed this Kit for
CSAT, which was released during the April 2000 National Methadone
Conference.
Both educational tools have been used in educating communities about
the value of methadone treatment programs. Some treatment programs
have also reported success in getting programs sited as a result
of these educational tools.
We have already submitted a funding request to foundations in order
to develop three ten-second public service announcements on methadone
maintenance treatment, which could be pilot-tested on different
cable networks in the Northeastern corridor.
We will work to expand on these educational initiatives, informing
Americans that methadone maintenance treatment is a valuable treatment
option in responding to opiate dependence. The message will be positive
and consistent.
6. Increasing Access to Medical Maintenance
Treatment
(1998-2005)
AATOD developed criteria in referring stabilized methadone maintained
patients from treatment programs to off-site physician practice
settings. The final version of these criteria was published in the
December 1999 AATOD News Report. CSAT's Final Rule on Accreditation
referenced the fact that medical maintenance treatment would be
based upon a hub referral site concept, where stable methadone maintained
patients would be referred from methadone treatment programs to
off-site practice settings.
AATOD will work with treatment providers and state agencies throughout
the United States over the course of the next several years to increase
access to this treatment option.
It will offer an option to stable methadone maintained patients
while admitting new individuals in need of treatment. Finally, it
will establish methadone treatment programs as critical hub sites
within an integrated network.
7. Expansion of Physician Training Initiatives
(2001-2005)
AATOD began its initiative of training physicians about best clinical
practices in methadone maintenance treatment during the National
Methadone Conference of 1994. We began this initiative in conjunction
with the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) and later
included the American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry and the American
Osteopathic Academy of Addiction Medicine.
We have increased the frequency of this training opportunity with
the support of NIDA and CSAT to convene in different regions of
the United States. The primary thrust of this expansion occurred
in 2001 and we plan to produce these training events over the course
of the next several years.
In this regard, we also provide physicians who have not been part
of methadone treatment programs access to critical information as
a means of encouraging physicians to enter our field and be included
in the roster of medical maintenance physicians.
8. Management Training Initiatives (1998-2005)
AATOD began training program managers during the December, 1998
Training Symposium in DC. The primary thrust was to offer risk management
information to methadone program managers in addition to preparing
for accreditation.
We will seek corporate funding to increase such management training
opportunities over the course of the next several years, focusing
on the need to improve staff attitudes towards methadone maintenance
treatment and improving the overall structure of methadone treatment
programs as accreditation is implemented.
9. Staff Training Initiatives (2002-2005)
Our Association is committed to providing on-site and distance training
to methadone program personnel in meeting new challenges to our
patient population.
HCV is affecting a significant number of patients within our treatment
programs. Accordingly, we are working with the Hepatitis C education
and training groups to provide on-site education for treatment personnel
in order to treat HCV infected patients more effectively.
As other treatment challenges come to surface, AATOD will work with
the Board and treatment providers throughout the country to offer
similar training opportunities in addition to our National Methadone
Conferences. In this way, we will keep treatment personnel informed
through on-site training and distance education (Internet) by using
other training vehicles, including the Addiction Technology Transfer
Centers.
10. Organizing the Methadone Treatment
Community
(1984-2005)
AATOD will continue to organize treatment providers in the United
States and throughout the world over the course of the next five
years.
AATOD will encourage methadone treatment providers to organize State
Methadone Treatment Associations where viable. We will continue
to build our organization upon new member states while continuing
to respond to the needs of current member states.
AATOD has also embarked on an aggressive initiative to recruit individual
methadone treatment providers as members of AATOD in non-member
states.
These two initiatives are linked since an increasing number of methadone
providers in any given state might lead to the development of a
new statewide Association as more individual programs join AATOD
from a particular state. This will evolve over the next several
years and we will encourage such growth.
We will also work with our Conference International Committee to
increase the coordination among methadone treatment providers in
a number of designated countries. Initially, we will work with EUROPAD
to broaden our organizing initiatives that have evolved during the
course of our National Methadone Conferences.
Other critical countries will be identified over the course of the
next two years as we develop a worldwide federation of methadone
treatment programs.
|
|