Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Enabling Through Prescriptions - A Scourge on our Nation

I’ve worked in the addictions/mental health field for over 17 years as an addictions counsellor, housing first worker (trying to house chronically homeless people), outreach worker and a mental health crisis worker. The majority of clients I run into have a combination of addiction and mental health issues.

As is common these days a great deal of people are dealing with opioid addictions. In the brilliance of our modern medical industry a great number of physicians feel that the solution is providing methadone – which is harder to get off than heroin. Their reasoning is that methadone reduces cravings for opioids (e.g. – fentanyl; oxycontin; oxycodone; etc.) and the person will not use. Sounds good in theory – right?! However, in my experience I’d say of the 50 people I’ve met that were perscribed methadone only two of them actually stopped using opioids and then stopped taking methadone. Those two people I met as a member of a 12 Step Fellowship and I’d wager that it wasn’t the methadone that got them clean/sober (although, I’ll concede it probably helped) but the 12 Step Program.

Not only does methadone not help the majority of people stop but it’s prescribed even when someone continues to use opioids and any other drugs (e.g. – crack; meth; cocaine; etc.). To me that’s plain insanity.

More recently I’ve noticed that not only are physicians prescribing methadone they are combining it with Kadian. Kadian is basically morphine - another type of opioid. That’s like prescribing whiskey to an alcoholic. Everyone I’ve encountered who takes Kadian has also continued to use opioids.

Does anyone see the logic in any of this? I sure don’t. As a recovered alcoholic/addict I know that the only thing that helped me change my life was pain. I consider methadone and Kadian another way to enable addicts. Enabling is a hindrance to someone getting clean/sober.

I live in the province of Ontario. Many of the clients I encounter on methadone receive Ontario Works which covers the cost of methadone. I fully believe that OW should not cover this drug. Millions of dollars could be saved and would be better used if it were put towards supportive housing and free addiction treatment. Supportive housing is housing that teaches people how to live independently or supports them if they cannot reach that stage. Most people, experiencing homelessness, that I’ve worked with, did not have the skills to remain independently housed. Many people I helped get a place to live lost that place within three to six months.

If we want to solve our homeless and addiction issues, we have to make a lot of changes and getting rid of methadone and Kadian would  be a good first step.

Dave the Dude