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Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 1994. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.
Methadone Recommendations
Washington Post (12/29/94) P. A23
A panel of experts from the Institute of Medicine, an arm of the National Academy of Sciences, has recommended that the government relax restrictions on the heroin substitute methadone because it reduces drug abuse, AIDS, and crime. The FDA-approved chemical is used to wean addicts from heroin. The government, however, has restricted methadone's use to specially licensed doctors in special clinics out of fear that methadone, also an opiate, would be abused. Individual states have added their own restrictions--some have even banned the chemical. In a report released last week, the panel concluded that methadone significantly reduced heroin use and related crime and HIV infection caused by infected needles. The panel urged the Department of Health and Human Services to relax methadone restrictions and require states to follow the same rules.
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