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Please
read this preface before reading the rest of the book as there are some important notes about things that are missing, should
be changed, or are not covered to the extent to which they would be if
I was writing the book today.
The methadone briefing
was written some time ago now, between 1994 and 1996, while I was working
as a CPN for a community drug team in West Dorset. I began writing with
the aim of developing my understanding of the history and pharmacology
of, and the research into, methadone prescribing in order to develop my
practice. I figured if having all that information in one place would
be useful for me, then it would probably be useful for everyone else.
An assumption that turned out to be true with 12,000 copies of the book
sold in the UK, an adaptation for New Zealand, and translations into several
Eastern European languages, including Russian.
At the time there weren't really any other books that attempted to pull
together the theory, research and the day-to-day practical realities of
treatment. This gap has now been addressed by a number of authors and
editors, in particular the work of Ward, Mattick and Hall who have produced
a number of authoritative literature reviews, including 'key issues in
Methadone Maintenance treatment' which systematically address the major
clinical issues in prescribing to people who are opiate dependent. Also
of great value are books like 'community treatment of drug misuse: more
than methadone' by Nick Seivewright.
I am grateful to the
other authors who collaborated on the book and reviewed the manuscript
- without them the book wouldn't have been anything like as authoritative
or influential as it was.
As time has passed
I haven't been able to find the time nor the funding to produce a second
edition of the methadone briefing, and in early 2003 the last copies were
sold by DrugScope, and the book went out of print.
It would not be right
to simply reprint it when things have changed so much since publication
- National Treatment Outcome Research Study (NTORS), supervised consumption,
buprenorphine prescribing, clinical guidelines, DTTO's and Models of Care
are just a few of the important developments that have had to be absorbed
by the field since the first publication of the methadone briefing.

Also
in need of greater emphasis than is given in the book, is the importance
of:
- adequate
dose (increases to between 60mg and 120mg should be the norm for those
who do not stop using heroin on top of their prescription);
- retention
in treatment and the inadvisability of compulsory detox, or detox for
'non-compliance' in people on sub-therapeutic doses;
- the
inadvisability of long drawn out detoxes (for more on this, click
here); and
-
the fact that not everyone metabolises methadone in the way described,
and that some people require larger doses and/or more frequent dosing
to remain stable on methadone.
These shortcomings
made charging people to buy a copy of a straight reprint untennable, but
offering it free on the website, with the above qualifications will hopefully
be useful to both practitioners and drug users as the underlying principles
of the book of harm reduction and humane practice remain the same.
The book has been
available online for sometime on drugtext, but
there were some problems with the formatting and navigation and with the
book now out of print we have decided to overhaul the formatting and
navigation.
If you spot any mistakes
or problems or have suggestions for improvements/changes that need to
be made to the online or any possible second edition, please
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
to send me an email.
Andrew Preston
March 2003.

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