Critics say Rockville clinic ‘just doesn’t fit’
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WASHINGTON (Map, News) - A group of Rockville residents who live near a drug rehabilitation clinic want Montgomery County officials to include the methadone treatment center in plans to relocate a host of county offices.

The clinic, which shares space with the county’s board of elections, is run out of the former Broome Elementary School on Twinbrook Parkway. It sits next to Meadow Hall Elementary School and across the street from an upper-middle-class neighborhood.

“It just doesn’t fit with this neighborhood,” said Dainia Langsam, a mother of three who travels to the elementary school and a nearby pre-school as many as eight times a day. Langsam said she’s comfortable walking her elementary-age children in the morning — the county has placed security guards outside the clinic — but she drives to the preschool later in the morning because the guards have left.

Many of the clinic’s 250 patients wait for buses out front, smoking cigarettes and swearing, parents said. And it’s not just the patients, but also their friends who come with them, some of whom residents said they’ve seen picking through trash and some residents believe might be connected to burglaries in the area.

With the County Board of Elections slated to be moved to Gaithersburg as part of a massive overhaul of county facilities, the rehab clinic may also find a new home, Patrick Lacefield, spokesman for County Executive Ike Leggett, said.

Those overhaul plans, announced by Leggett in December, have been met with resistance in some areas. In Poolesville, where the county wanted to build a new Public Safety Academy, it was residents’ fearing increased traffic and damage to the area’s rural character, as well as the off-center location, that pushed the plans back. The academy is now slated for property in Montgomery Village where residents are awaiting a meeting with county officials before weighing in.

Regina DeCarlo, 30, grew up in the neighborhood across from the clinic where she is now raising her 4-year-old son. “I used to play at the Broome playground ... now I won’t go near it,” DeCarlo said.

She and others said they understand and appreciate the county’s efforts to offer rehab services, but they said the facility should be placed away from residential areas and schools.

“This is not the way I want to live,” DeCarlo said.

fklopott@dcexaminer.com


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9:46 PM MST on Fri., Jun. 27, 2008 re: "Drug treatment program switches focus to retention"

Gina said:
I am on this and it is WONDERFUL! LOVE IT! A life saver! I plan to be on it for at least 18 months. I see a private doctor and also go to a suboxone "group" twice a month. I used to take 30-35 10mg Lortab a DAY. I cannot tell you how great I feel now. I am on 12mg a day. It costs me a total of 500.00 a month for this program(doctor, med, etc). No insurance, worth every penny!

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7:29 AM MST on Fri., Jun. 27, 2008 re: "Drug treatment program switches focus to retention"

NancyB said:
Heroin and painkiller addiction help. The naabt.org Patient/Physician Matching System has connected over 11,210 patients with at least one of 1,990 participating buprenorphine-prescribing physicians since 9/06. The naabtList.org free online service lets patients reach out for help 24/7 with complete privacy. Buprenorphine (brandname Suboxone) is a medication, combined with psychosocial therapy, which treats the medical condition of opioid addiction in the privacy of a physician’s office. FDA approved in 2002, this treatment has improved quality of life for patients and provided dignity to opiate addiction treatment. More information: naabt.org

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7:03 AM MST on Fri., Jun. 27, 2008 re: "Drug treatment program switches focus to retention"

Examiner Reader said:
This makes perfect sense. Finally we are treating addiction like the chronic disease we know it is. Addiction alters the brain and it takes time to fix this. No 3 day detoxes will do it (as the science proves)we need to undo these brain changes so treatment isn't a revolving door for patients. Good article!

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6:57 AM MST on Tue., May. 6, 2008 re: "Critics say Rockville clinic ‘just doesn’t fit’"

Examiner Reader said:
This resident clearly hasn't seen the corners of every street filled with teenagers waiting for school buses every morning. There is smoking, swearing, and disposal of empty bottles and food in the most affluent of neighborhoods in MC. It is commendable that parents are supervising their children walking to schools, in light of the many children who disappear into cars with pedophiles, who, by the way, also live in the most affluent areas of their neighborhoods. Parents concerns should be focused on prevention of addiction and drug abuse by at least locking up their personal alcohol collections and prescription drugs, since the schools have been inundated with minors bringing these controlled substances into the schools and distributing them. Addiction and drug abuse does not "fit in" to any neighborhood, but it is prevalent and increasing at an alarming rate due to the residents burying their heads in the sand and keeping them there.

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