October 1, 2009 10:44 PM

Half of Addicts Quit After Treatment?

(AP)  About half of heroin and crack cocaine addicts in England's treatment programs quit the drugs after six months, a new study says.

Experts warned, however, that the danger of relapse means permanently kicking the habit probably requires ongoing care. A senior U.S. White House official said the results validated England's approach to treating drug addicts and called for similar efforts to evaluate American drug addiction programs.

British researchers monitored more than 14,600 patients across England addicted to either heroin, crack cocaine, or both. Heroin addicts were treated with oral methadone for at least six months between January and November 2008. Some patients also received counseling.

Since there is no recommended substitute drug treatment for crack, cocaine addicts only received the psychological therapy. The researchers did not compare the treated addicts to addicts who tried to quit on their own.

After six months, 42 percent of heroin users reported they had stopped injecting the drug. Among crack users, 57 percent said they had stopped. About half of the people addicted to both drugs said they had either quit or cut down.

The study was paid for by Britain's National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse. On average, it costs the government up to >5,000 ($7,991) per person per year to provide addiction treatment.

Experts said the results were encouraging, but drug addicts would likely need more than six months of care. "It is quite possible that many of those with a positive outcome experienced relapse," said Jeffrey Parsons, an addiction specialist at Hunter College in New York who was not linked to the research.

Dr. Thomas McLellan, deputy director of the White House's Office of National Drug Control Policy, said treating heroin and crack cocaine addicts was similar to managing patients with diabetes or high blood pressure. Just as diabetes patients wouldn't only be treated for six months before being released without medication, McLellan said drug addicts needed continuing care.

"Addiction is best thought of as a chronic condition," McLellan said. "There is no cure, but we can manage it."

McLellan said Britain's approach was an advance over similar programs in the U.S., where substance abuse treatments mostly focus on an acute period.

He said ongoing treatment would ultimately lower the medical and social costs of drug addiction, including crime and lost productivity. "The cost savings will be astronomical," he said.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by new2forum October 3, 2009 1:44 PM EDT
Methadone is extremely addictive. How do they get the addicts off that? Of course, it's way cheaper and (I assume) the people have to come to the clinic to get their daily dose. So maybe that's how you give them ongoing counseling.

Addiction is a terrible waste of the human spirit.
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by sjc_1 October 3, 2009 6:44 AM EDT
If you want to stop the drug trade, reduce the number of customers. If no one bought heroine, there would not be a market for it. People would improve their lives and maybe we would save money spent on the DEA.
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by Sloughfoot October 2, 2009 9:59 PM EDT
Numbers and studies have been corrupted to tell the story the story teller wants told since the time of sanskrit.
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by ericthesharg October 3, 2009 12:07 PM EDT
Recent studies produced these same finding regarding people who comment on news article. What an amazing coincidence!
by rwsmith29456 October 2, 2009 4:27 PM EDT
I don't believe any "studies" announced until further proof but if half the people are getting off the stuff, that's great news.
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by hologram5 October 2, 2009 11:31 AM EDT
These "Studies" and the people that create them need to realize that the addict needs to "Want" to quit. It all starts in their hearts and minds. If the person doesn't want to quit then it wont happen no matter what the study says.
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by babooph October 2, 2009 1:27 AM EDT
"HALF" about 20% more than we ex republicans,after the Bush -Rush -Evangelist treatment-the rest seem hopelessly delusioned.
Reply to this comment
by Ichabod09 October 3, 2009 6:18 AM EDT
babooph,

Republicans again?. Gee I wonder how many identities babooph goes by?-Snicker.
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