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The implant should increase the number of people successfully completing heroin therapy. "The primary reason for patients wanting to get out of methadone treatment is the inconvenience," says George Bigelow, director of the behavioural pharmacology research division at Johns Hopkins. The implant will also cut the cost of treating addicts. This is between $3500 and $4500 a year, though methadone makes up only 7 per cent of the total.
However, the researchers do not recommend the implant for people who need counselling, such as those beginning treatment. Counselling is often coupled with the daily dose of the substitute drug, and such addicts might relapse without it.
Heroin addicts may have to wait several years for the implant. The researchers are first considering using the implant to relieve the pain of cancer before they study it in heroin addicts.
Kate 0'Rourke, Baltimore
| Last Modified - Fri, Mar 31, 2006 | Used by Erowid without permission of author |
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