| As
if life weren't enough of a coast for celebrities, along comes a
quickie rehab method that allows addicts to sleep through withdrawal
- and drink booze once it's over.
Rapid
detox, the trendiest health fad in Hollywood, sidesteps the traditional
12 steps in favor of what sounds like a medical miracle: weaning
those hooked on heroin and other opiates while they snooze.
Doctors
at the Waismann Institute in Beverly Hills anesthetize patients,
many of them film and music celebrities, and drain their stomachs
and bowels, which helps flush out the drugs.
Patients
are then given shots of an opiate-blocking medication that smoothes
recovery and prevents them from getting high in the future.
Say
good-bye to the image of a junkie curled up and writhing in pain
while trying to beat his habit.
"Sixty
percent of rehab patients will walk out early because they can't
go through the suffering of withdrawal. By the time our patients
wake up, they're very tired, but the detox is over," said
facility director Clare W. Kavin, whose brother Andre, an Israeli
physician, invented the method in 1994.
After
being drained of bodily juices...patients can return to their normal
lives, Waismann said. Some remain hospitalized for up to three days.
Afterward, alcohol is not forbidden.
Waismann
said admissions in the first two months of this year have doubled,
to 70, over the same period last year.
So
far, only fallen 1970s teen idol Leif Garrett has admitted checking
into the institute, in 1999, for heroin addiction. |
"That
was the end of feeling like I needed the drugs," said Garrett,
who came in only weeks after the airing of a VH1 "Behind the
Music" episode that proclaimed him clean and sober.
Garrett,
who performs with his band F8 at the B.B. King's Blues Club Tuesday
night, says he's been off hard drugs for 26 months.
"But
I still drink occasionally," he said. "I like to have
a couple of drinks before I go on stage."
The
Waismann Method is hardly universally accepted, however.
In
fact, seven patients at the U.S. Detox Intensive Treatment Unit
in New Jersey have died in the last five years while undergoing
rapid detox, according to the state medical board.
Board
officials sued in 2000 to yank the license of Dr. Lance L. Gooberman,
who performed the procedures.
Gooberman,
of Merchantville, N.J., claimed the patients died because they had
undetected heart problems or took cocaine. He's still practicing.
Waismann
said those patients might have survived had the procedures been
performed in a hospital.
"This
procedure has to be done by anesthesiologists in a hospital, where
if I need a cardiologist or a neurologist, is there," she
said.
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2002 NYP Holdings, Inc. All rights reserved.
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