by Edward M. Brecher and the Editors of Consumer
Chapter 14.
Enter methadone maintenance Dr. Vincent P.
Dole, specialist in metabolic diseases at the Rockefeller
University, came to an interest in heroin addiction through his
studies of obesity, which in some respects might be considered
addiction to food. During the 1950s, when most experts were
saying that obesity results from overeating and that people get
fat because they eat too much and "lack the will power"
to cut down, he launched at the Rockefeller Institute (now the
Rockefeller University) a series of studies of metabolism in
obese people. He soon discovered that many obese people
metabolize food quite differently from other people. His
technique was to hospitalize obese patients for substantial
periods, place them on a scientifically formulated diet, and
study their metabolic processes before, during, and after weight
reduction. Dr. Dole's work, along with that of Dr. jean Mayer at
Harvard and of others at other centers, has profoundly altered
scientific views on obesity. No longer is "weakness of
will" an accepted cause. The craving of
his obese patients for food struck Dr. Dole quite early in his
obesity research as remarkably reminiscent of a cigarette
smoker's craving for cigarettes--or a narcotics addict's craving
for narcotics. The tendencv of obese patients to relapse after
dieting also resembled the tendency of cigarette smokers and
heroin addicts to relapse even after prolonged periods of
abstinence. His obesity studies led Dr. Dole to conclude that,
far from being due to weakness of will, relapses among some obese
patients have a metabolic, biochemical origin. In 1962, Dr.
Dole began planning a similar metabolic study of heroin. His
initial step, of course, was to review the existing scientific
studies. He found a substantial medical literature, both in
English and in other languages-but one very serious gap. Almost
all of the American studies concerned opiates in the test tube,
or in laboratory animals, or in nonaddicted volunteers, or
imprisoned addicts. American physicians in general had divorced
themselves from the problems of the addict in the street ever
since the early waves of physician arrests under the Harrison
Narcotic Act. Both the Stevenson study of British Columbia
addicts and the O'Donnell report on Kentucky addicts were
unpublished. The most significant published account of addiction
under American street conditions that Dr. Dole could find was a
book by Dr. Marie Nvswander, a Psychiatrist, entitled The Drug
Addict as a Patient. A graduate of
Sarah Lawrence and of the Cornell University Medical School,
Marie Nyswander had been commissioned a lieutenant (junior grade)
in the navy late in World War II, assigned to the Public Health
Service, and posted at the United States Public Health Service
hospital for addicts in Lexington. Her experience with addicts
there led her, unlike many psychiatrists, to accept addicts as
patients when she entered private practice. In 1957, in a New
York City storefront, she had launched a service project for
addicts, with a team of New York psychiatrists and psychoanalysts
offering their services to the city's addicts. Thus Dr. Nyswander
had had experience with multiple approaches to the treatment of
addiction-the Lexington approach, her own approach as a therapist
with addicted patients, that of her storefront project, and the
efforts of other psychotherapists and psychoanalysts.' She
recognized that none of them accomplished very much. Like so many
others during the 1950s and 1960s, she was thus eventually forced
to the conclusion that maintaining addicts on legal opiates was
the only feasible solution. She was beginning to think about
risking her reputation, and perhaps even her freedom, by
launching private research-a narcotics-dispensing clinic of her
own, using her personal funds-at just the time when Dr. Dole
turned his attention from obesity to heroin addiction. Dr. Dole read
The Drug Addict as a Patient, and in October 1963 invited Dr.
Nyswander to the Rockefeller Institute for a conference. Early in
1964, he invited her to join his new research project. (In 1965
they were married.) The two made a Very nearly ideal team. Dr.
Dole knew nothing about addicts, and Dr. Nyswander knew little
about the complexities of biochemistry and human metabolism; each
brought to the project precisely what the other lacked. As in the case
of his earilier obesity project, Dr. Dole's first step was to
bring into the Rockefeller Hospital sufferers from the disease be
was studying. "The first patient," Dr. Nyswander later
recalled, "was a 34year-old single male of Italian
extraction, and the second, a 21-year-old male of Irish
background. Both had a history of drug use for eight years, had
spent several years in prison for possession of drugs and theft,
and had made numerous efforts to get off drugs by detoxification
in voluntary hospitals and in the federal hospital in Lexington.
. . . Both patients had tried psychotherapy." 2 Both were
still "booked," and were delighted to participate in a
project in which they were to receive narcotics without having to
steal and evade the police. * Dr. Nyswander,
though she had not herself taken opiates, also had a clear
personal insight into the nature of addiction, cravin,,, and
relapse after "cure." In 1960 she stopped smoking
cigarettes. "The craving for cigarettes," she later
reported, "exists as an entity, separate from pleasure. Nor
did the craving diminish with time. After six months, I'd still
have drea m-s in which I'd surreptitiously cop a cigarette. . . .
If it's this hard to stop smoking, think what it must be to
stopheroin." ' After eight months of abstinence, Dr.
Nvswander relapsed and started smoking again. Both were
started on small doses of morphine, a quarter of a grain (15
milligrams) four times a day. As in the obesity project, which
began with patients being allowed to cat as much as they wanted,
these patients were allowed to increase their doses as they
pleased; within three weeks they were requesting and getting
eight shots totaling 600 milligrams (10 grains) a day. Morphine
became their whole lives. "Much of the time they sat
passively, in bathrobes, in front of a television set. They
didn't respond to any of the other activities offered them. They
just sat there, waiting for the next shot." In this sense
they were good patients; "they cooperated beautifully and
honestly"3 in the many metabolic tests to which Dr. Dole
subjected them. But they demonstrated the major problem faced by
all morphine-dispensing and heroin-dispensing programsthe problem
of dosage. In this respect, indeed, they closely resembled the
obese patients in the earlier Dole study. In Britain, in
Kentucky, and in other places where legal opiates are dispensed,
the dosage problem takes several forms. If a physician gives an
addict less than he wants, the addict may obtain more from a
second physician, or may buy additional drugs on the street. If
the physician gives the addict as much as he asks for, the addict
may share his large dose with others, or sell a part. The problem
is solved in various ways. After staving for a time on a given
dose-even an enormous dose-an addict becomes "tolerant"
to that dose, and functions quite well on it; this no doubt would
have happened to the two Dole-Nyswander patients if the work with
them had continued. Some patients, moreover, are able and willing
to stabilize themselves on quite moderate doses. Still others
"bounce" up and down. In the case of their first two
patients, however, Drs. Dole and Nvswander were not really trying
to solve the American heroin problem; they were only seeking to
determine the metabolic pathways that morphine follows inside the
human body. When the metabolic tests on morphine were completed,
their plan called for detoxifying and then discharging the two
addicts. Indeed, Federal Bureau of Narcotics regulations required
this. The approved
technique of detoxification in most hospitals today was developed
in Lexington during the 1950s. The first step consists in
transferring the patient from morphine or heroin to methadone, a
synthetic narcotic developed by the Germans during World War II.
The daily methadone dose is then progressively reduced over a
period of ten days or so until a zero dose is reached. Most
authorities agree that this methadone detoxification treatment is
preferable to direct withdrawal from morphine or heroin because,
even though it takes longer, it reduces the suffering. Drs. Dole
and Nyswander placed their patients on methadone as a step toward
withdrawal. Instead of reducing the methadone immediately,
however, they decided to keep the patients on high doses of
methadone for a considerable period while the same metabolic
tests were rerun. Thus they would be able to compare morphine and
methadone metabolism in the same patients. While the
patients were on methadone, however, surprising changes began to
occur. "The older addict began to paint industriously and
his paintings were good," Dr. Nyswander later told Nat
Hentoff of the New Yorker. "The younger started urging us to
let him get his highschool-equivalency diploma. We sent them both
off to school, outside the hospital grounds, and they continued
to live at the hospital ." 4 They also continued to take
their methadone daily. So far as Dr. Dole and Dr. Nyswander could
see, they had become normal, well-adjusted, effectively
functioning human beings-to all intents and purposes cured of
their craving for an illegal drug. When the same
results were procured with the next four "bard-core"
addicts placed on methadone maintenance, Dr. Dole went to see
Commissioner of Hospitals Ray E. Trussell, the New York City
official most fully informed about narcotics problems. It was Dr.
Trussell who had closed down the disastrous Riverside Hospital
program and had established the voluntary detoxification program
at Manhattan General. He now became the godfather of the
Dole-Nyswander program as well. "Dr. Dole
came to see me at the Department of Hospitals, and he had six
pieces of paper with him," Dr. Trussell later recalled.
"Each was a summary protocol on each of six patients on whom
be had demonstrated with Dr. Nyswander his breakthrough on how to
apply methadone in such a way as to ... allow an individual,
after a brief period at the hospital, to start doing something
about his life and become a self-sustaining member of society. "Dr. Dole
just wanted six beds, and all we had was about 20,000! We were
very glad to accommodate him. We arranged for Dr. Dole to go to
Manhattan General . . . and he replicated there, together with
Dr. Nyswander, the same findings." 5 In addition to
housing the new program, Dr. Trussell found money to finance it.
"The mayor [Robert F. Wagner] gave me $80,000 one day on a
car ride," he recalled in 1969, "and Dr. Perkins gave
me $300,000 of Mental Health money and the Deputy Mayor gave me
$1 million of anti-poverty money because addicts are certainly
impoverished and we put together a budget and took a calculated
risk that this program would go. 7 * Manhattan
General Hospital was subsequently taken over by a voluntary
hospital complex, the Beth Israel Medical Center, and it became
the Morris J. Bernstein Institute of Beth Israel-today one of the
world's leading centers of narcotics addiction research. Dr.
Trussell, by coincidence, is now General Director of Beth Israel,
and the former Manhattan General unit on East Eighteenth Street
is his pride and joy. "We admit approximately 9,000
admissions a year for detoxification alone," he told the
Second National Conference on Methadone Treatment in October
1969. "We have a lovely new waiting room with a separate
nice entrance off Eighteenth Street exclusively for patients
coming into the hospital for one of our three classes of
addiction services. [it is] the hospital with a welcome sign on
the mat for addicts." ' Most of the early work on methadone
maintenance was carried out here; the world's pioneer methadone
maintenance program is still tinder way here; and satellite
methadone maintenance clinics have been established under Beth
Israel's auspices in other parts of the city. During the years
since 1964, methadone maintenance has continued to work. One of
the first two Dole-Nyswander patients-the twenty-oneyear-old
Irish addict, "hooked" on heroin at the age of
fourteen, a school dropout at fifteen, twice imprisoned for
narcotics violations-earned his high-school-equivalency diploma
while on methadone. He also earned a full college scholarship.
Still on methadone, he graduated from college with a degree in
aeronautical engineering. "He . . . has a full-time job
now," Dr. Dole told the United States House of
Representatives Select Committee on Crime on June 29, 1970; and
at the age of twenty-eight, after six years on methadone, he
"is going to night school to get a master's degree." 11 The other
initial patient followed a quite different path. Like many young
people today, he had no interest in climbing onto the career
escalator and "making a success." He has been described
as "a quiet introspective fellow who has intermittent jobs
and is active in the groups concerned with social reforms."
" In January 1971 he was still taking his methadone daily,
and "having no problems with drugs or alcohol." 10 Dr. Dole
recently commented on these two cases and countless others:
"The interesting thing about methadone treatment is that it
permits people to become whatever they potentially are. Whereas
addicts, under the pressure of drug abuse and drug-seeking look
very much the same, when they are freed from this slavery they
differentiate and become part of the spectrum of humanity."
11 The second
patient illustrates another highly significant fact about
methadone. After he had been taking it for five years, this
patientthen thirty-nine-decided be no longer needed the drug and
left the program after tapering off his daily methadone dose. He
had then been abstinent from heroin for five years; he was fully
rehabilitated; be did not associate with addicts-so why continue
to take methadone? Alas, as in
other cases, the postwithdrawal anxiety, depression, and craving
returned as soon as he discontinued methadone treatments craving,
not for methadone, but for heroin. He relapsed. Readmitted to the
Dole-Nyswander program, he went back on daily methadone and, Dr.
Dole reports, "has bad no problem since." 12