The Front Steet Clinic has received a grant to begin out-patient treatment for drug addicts.

The Front Steet Clinic has received a grant to begin out-patient treatment for drug addicts.

New addiction treatment program for Juneau

Juneau’s downtown community health center will soon start offering an outpatient addiction treatment program.

Front Street Community Heath Center board president Carl Heine said treatment will be a combination of behavioral health counseling and medical assistance.

“There isn’t a magic pill and just talking about it doesn’t fix the problem. It’s kind of a combined approach and one of the things we’re trying to do at the clinic is have a behavioral health clinician that specializes in addiction counseling and couple that with — if it’s appropriate — medical treatment for addiction,” he said.

Heine said the health center envisions prescribing Narcan and Vivitrol, among other medicines used to manage addiction. Narcan is an overdose-prevention medication for someone who is suffering from an overdose of heroin or opiates, and Vivitrol is a shot that blocks the effects of alcohol and opiates. He credits Sen. Johnny Ellis (D-Anchorage) for Senate Bill 23. The bill, passed this session by the legislature and signed by the governor, makes it easier for people to get and administer Narcan.

[Opioid prevention bill nears finish line]

“There is a huge need for that in town and we are happy to try to provide some of the services,” Heine said. “Addiction is race-blind, income-blind, social status-blind. It’s amazing how it touches every part of the community, every age range.”

As previously reported in the Empire, the heroin death toll in Alaska has quintupled since 2008, according to Alaska Bureau of Vital Statistics. In 2015, 31 people died from heroin (either as an underlying or contributing cause) in the state, seven of them in Juneau.

[This is what it takes to get into treatment]

Front Street Community Health Center, previously known as Front Street Clinic, has traditionally catered to Juneau’s homeless and other vulnerable populations. Since transitioning from being under the Southeast Alaska Regional Health Consortium to becoming its own nonprofit organization, the health center is open to anyone, including people with private insurance.

Still, most of its 300 patients are on expanded Medicaid, which has led to the health center’s financial stability. Front Street gets new patients every week and Heine hopes to ultimately serve between 500 and 600 people.

The health center currently provides primary medical care, behavioral health and case management. Heine said Front Street will start addiction treatment “as soon as we can” — it’s a matter of staffing and finding room in its existing downtown location.

[A comeback story: Front Street Clinic fundraises for a stable future]

With the help of a federal grant from the Health Resources and Services Administration, the health center is looking to hire an additional medical care provider, behavioral health clinician and case manager for the addiction treatment program, said clinic coordinator Allison Hourigan.

“Our ability to provide primary medical care, medically-assisted treatment and behavioral health services all under one roof, and coordinate care in that way, could be a good advantage for folks who are coming to us for that need,” she said.

Front Street soon offering outpatient treatment is part of an effort among many community agencies — including Bartlett Regional Hospital, Rainforest Recovery, Gastineau Human Services and several others — to work together in fighting addiction and provide a continuum of care.

“Outpatient medical management for addiction was a hole that was identified and we’re trying to fill that,” Heine said. “That’s getting regular counseling along with medication, or whatever else is needed, to try to help people get through addiction issues.”

Juneau recovery coach Christina Love said Front Street offering medically-assisted treatment is “huge.”

“I think that it serves a great community need. There has been a gap for a long time,” she said.

While there are private doctors and medical providers in Juneau who provide medically-assisted treatment, Love said most of their case loads are full and they don’t often take new patients. The health center is a welcome new choice for addiction treatment.

“Part of being a recovery coach is empowering people and there’s nothing more empowering than giving people options, so we can say these are the different places you can go if you have money, if you don’t have money, if you have this much money,” she said.

Love said “it’s beautiful” to watch the community connect the dots between incarceration, mental health and substance abuse with different funding sources.

“There’s been a lot more community collaboration and figuring out how to serve this group of people that are falling through the cracks,” she said.

• Contact reporter Lisa Phu at 523-2246 or lisa.phu@juneauempire.com.

 

Related link:

Front Street Community Health Center website

More in News

The Norwegian Cruise Line’s Norwegian Encore docks in Juneau in October of 2022. (Clarise Larson / Juneau Empire file photo)
Ships in port for t​​he Week of April 27

Here’s what to expect this week.

Juneau residents calling for a ceasefire in Gaza put on t-shirts with slogans declaring their cause before testifying on a resolution calling for “a bilateral peace agreement in Israel and Palestine” considered by the Juneau Assembly on Monday night. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Juneau Assembly fails by 2-5 vote to pass resolution seeking ‘bilateral peace’ between Israel and Palestine

Members question if declaration is appropriate at local level, angering residents favoring ceasefire

Nils Andreassen and his sons Amos, 7, and Axel, 11, pick up trash in the Lemon Creek area during the annual Litter Free community cleanup on Saturday morning. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
Annual community cleanup is its own reward — and then some

Nearly 800 people pick up tons of trash, recyclables and perhaps treasures

Debris from a home that partially fell into the Mendenhall River sits on its banks on Sunday, Aug. 6, 2023, after record flooding eroded the bank the day before. (Mark Sabbatini/Juneau Empire file photo)
Alaska Senate unanimously OKs increasing maximum state disaster relief payments and eligibility

Bill by Jesse Kiehl, D-Juneau, raises limit to $50K instead of $21K, makes condo residents eligible

Kaxhatjaa X’óow/Herring Protectors wearing robes, which will be part of the exhibit “Protection: Adaptation & Resistance” at the Alaska State Museum on Friday. (Photo by Caitlin Blaisdell)
Here’s what happening for First Friday in May

Exhibit by more than 45 Alaska Natives at state museum features protector robes, MMIP Day preview.

The Matanuska state ferry, seen here docked when it was scheduled to begin its annual winter overhaul in October of 2022, has been out of service ever since. (Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities photo)
State awaits report, cost estimate on repairing Matanuska state ferry — and if it’s worth the effort

Full-body scan of vessel, out of service for 18 months, will determine if ship should be scrapped.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Saturday, April 27, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

(Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
Police calls for Friday, April 26, 2024

This report contains public information from law enforcement and public safety agencies.

Lon Garrison (center), executive director of the Alaska Association of School Boards, presides over a Juneau Board of Education self-assessment retreat Saturday at Dzantik’i Heeni Middle School. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire)
School board president says she won’t run again at meeting where members assess their response to crisis

Deedie Sorensen says it’s time to retire as board members give themselves tough grades, lofty goals.

Most Read