VINCENT P DOLE, MD, DIES AT AGE
93
August 2, 2006
Dr. Dole (an internist) and his late wife, Marie
Nyswander, MD (a psychiatrist), began their
collaborative research with
methadone with a handful
of long-term heroin-dependent individuals in 1964.
They did so in the face of overt threats of harsh
criminal and civil action by federal narcotics agents.
Their courageous, pioneering work demonstrated that
methadone maintenance is a medical treatment of
unparalleled effectiveness – a superlative description
that is as applicable
today as it was four
decades
ago. As a result, well over three-quarters of a million
people throughout the world are able to lead healthy,
productive, self-fulfilling lives - over 200,000 in the
United States, an estimated 530,000 in Western
Europe, and many tens of thousands more in Eastern
Europe, Middle East, Central Asia, Far East, Australia
and New Zealand.
After the remarkable transformation they observed in
their first few patients, Dr. Dole and Dr. Nyswander
went on to provide direct supervision of the
first “methadone maintenance treatment program” at
Beth Israel Medical Center in New York. In so doing
they demonstrated that it was possible to replicate
on a large scale the therapeutic success they
achieved in the small, controlled, research
environment of the Rockefeller Institute (now
Rockefeller University). Dr. Dole was also responsible
in the early 1970s for convincing the New York City
Department of Corrections (at the time headed by
Commissioner Ben Malcolm) that detoxification of
heroin-dependent inmates in the city’s main detention
facility at Rikers Island was imperative to save lives
and lessen suffering (there had been a wave of
suicides at the time that had been attributed to
severe opiate withdrawal). The detoxification program
continues to this day, and has become a model for
enlightened corrections officials in other countries.
Dr. Dole and Dr. Nyswander’s contributions, however,
transcend the life-saving clinical impact on patients
and the enormous associated benefits to the
community as a whole. They had prescience to
hypothesize, years before the discovery of the
morphine-like “endorphine system” in the human
body, that addiction is a metabolic disorder, a
disease, and one that can and must be treated like
any other chronic illness. What was at the time
brilliant insight on their part is today almost
universally accepted by scientists and clinicians alike,
and remains the foundation upon which all rational
policies and practices in the field rest.
In his mid-80s Dr. Dole traveled to Hamburg to be
present at the naming ceremony of the “Marie
Nyswander Street”; in less than ten
years Germany moved from methadone being illegal to
having over 60,000 patients in treatment! His efforts
during recent years were devoted to fighting the
stigma that, tragically, remains so widespread
against
the illness of addiction, the patients and the
treatment.