To ask the Scottish Executive how many (a) people have been prescribed methadone and (b) prescriptions for methadone have been issued in each of the last eight years, broken down by NHS board.
(a) There is currently no national routinely collected information on the numbers of people receiving methadone prescriptions in Scotland. This data has never been available. The Scottish Government is currently collecting information from pharmacists to give a more up-to-date snapshot of the number of people receiving a methadone prescription in each Health Board area during April 2011.
The development of a follow-up reporting system for the Scottish Drug Misuse Database (SDMD), which is currently being rolled-out across specialist drug treatment services in Scotland, will allow patients to be tracked through the treatment system and will give us more information on the numbers of people engaging with treatment provision at any given time, what interventions have been delivered and treatment outcomes. This will include information on the numbers of people receiving specialist prescribing interventions related to the treatment of their drug use. Data will be collected from individuals at a three month follow-up session and subsequently annually thereafter. NHS Information Services Division Scotland anticipates that follow-up data for 2011-12 (the first full years worth of data) will be reported from December 2012, but plans to release interim reports in 2011.
The Drug Treatment Waiting Times Information Framework (NHS Information Services Division Scotland) collects data on the range of drug treatments and support which are offered to individuals accessing specialist drug treatment services in Scotland. For the last quarter (Jan – Mar 2011), the following offers of appointments for treatment were made:
Structured preparatory and motivational interventions – 1,936
Community based support and/or rehabilitation – 1,795
Prescribed drug treatment – 1,055
Residential Detoxification and rehabilitation – 108
The total number of items dispensed in Scotland for methadone mixture and solution (1mg/ml) for each of the last eight years (2003-04 to 2010-11) is shown in the following table.
Total number of items dispensed for methadone mixture1, Items dispensed in Scotland by NHS Health Board - Financial year: 2003-04 to 2010-11
Dispensing NHS Health Board
|
2003-04
|
2004-05
|
2005-06
|
2006-07
|
2007-08
|
2008-09
|
2009-10
|
2010-11
|
Ayrshire & Arran
|
45,684
|
47,210
|
56,597
|
65,817
|
57,114
|
46,439
|
47,068
|
55,901
|
Borders
|
1,146
|
1,121
|
1,308
|
1,791
|
1,970
|
2,333
|
2,348
|
2,809
|
Dumfries & Galloway
|
11,396
|
12,241
|
12,250
|
12,841
|
14,026
|
14,545
|
15,530
|
15,733
|
Fife
|
13,855
|
13,664
|
13,588
|
14,962
|
18,715
|
20,287
|
20,634
|
20,569
|
Forth Valley
|
6,772
|
8,720
|
9,159
|
10,515
|
11,410
|
11,476
|
12,102
|
13,308
|
Grampian
|
29,811
|
34,687
|
38,076
|
41,243
|
45,315
|
49,731
|
54,641
|
59,579
|
Greater Glasgow & Clyde
|
167,132
|
171,911
|
190,749
|
203,525
|
209,215
|
212,886
|
215,464
|
213,327
|
Highland
|
6,203
|
7,802
|
9,137
|
9,534
|
11,410
|
14,047
|
16,125
|
16,623
|
Lanarkshire
|
38,500
|
40,445
|
50,684
|
50,096
|
41,844
|
39,150
|
37,942
|
39,899
|
Lothian
|
41,253
|
50,207
|
56,868
|
62,399
|
64,320
|
62,760
|
65,150
|
68,764
|
Tayside
|
22,688
|
19,429
|
16,962
|
14,791
|
15,808
|
18,351
|
21,219
|
25,760
|
Orkney, Shetland, & Western Isles
|
910
|
773
|
857
|
990
|
821
|
722
|
727
|
1,461
|
Scotland
|
385,350
|
408,210
|
456,235
|
488,504
|
491,968
|
492,727
|
508,950
|
533,733
|
Notes:
1. Data relate to methadone mixture and solution (1mg/ml) which are recognised as being the standard products for methadone programmes.
2. An item is an individual product prescribed. A prescription normally contains up to three items.
3. Data refer to methadone dispensings held centrally and exclude the supply of medicines to patients treated in hospitals and clinics.
4. Methadone is also used as a strong analgesic and a cough suppressant. These data are not included in this analysis.
5. Data exclude items dispensed in England.
Source: NSS NHS Information Services Division Scotland (IR2011-01468).
It should be noted that individuals may have more than one prescription and therefore the number of dispensed items does not equate to the number of individuals in receipt of methadone treatment.
The increased number of dispensed items may be due to the increased numbers of individuals coming into treatment of which methadone may be a component of a package of care, treatment and recovery. The increase may also be due to increased pharmacy supervision in line with good practice and the Drug Misuse and dependence UK guidelines on clinical management.