SICK The cure is sicker than the sickness
Dose of reality fuels  new initiatives to help addicts
 Long-term addicts to get two free  doses of heroin a day in a Danish scheme that could be replicated across the  
State-funded heroin is becoming a  reality in Denmark, the  latest in a small, but growing, number of European countries – including the  
Since 1 January, hundreds of drug  addicts in the Nordic country have the right to receive two free doses of heroin  a day, paid for by their health system. The offer is only for adult, long-term  users for whom substitutes such as methadone and subutex have not  worked.
"The aim is to improve their state  of health, help them avoid committing crimes and stabilise their lives,"  explains Dr Anne Mette Doms at the Danish Board of Health, which supervises the  project. "Quitting altogether is not a realistic option for most of these  patients. For them, this will be a chronic treatment, as if you were treating a  chronic disease."    Addicts will need to attend one of five specialist drug  clinics across the country, where they will inject diamorphine –  pharmaceutical-grade heroin – under doctors' supervision. The drug will not be  available on prescription so as to avoid resale on the  street.
Danish authorities are in the  process of setting up the clinics, registering the doctors who will work there,  and finding out which drug companies they will source the heroin from. The £7.2m  project is expected to be up and running by March.
The initiative was adopted by  overwhelming consensus in February 2008, after all but one of the parties  represented at the Danish parliament voted in favour of the policy – the only  one against it was a tiny far-left party that did not oppose the project per se,  but the way it was funded.   Among those in favour was the far-right Danish  People's Party, a movement not usually known for its progressive views: at the  last general election in 2007, it described some Danish Muslims as  benefit-scroungers and fifth columnists who threatened Danish  democracy.
Some might think this initiative  is not surprising in a country with a historical tradition of progressive,  social democratic policies. But, just as in the 
"Five years ago I decided I would  not participate in yet another debate on drugs," recalls Preben Brandt, the  chairman of the Council for Socially Marginalised People and an advocate of the  policy. "It was too emotional, with different groups being very  aggressive."
"The counter-argument was always  'you kill people by giving heroin' or 'with this initiative, you are telling  people that taking heroin is OK'," he says. "It is very difficult to have a  rational debate when you are arguing against  beliefs."
The turning point came when  results became available from experiments trialling the policy in other European  countries, including 
Attitudes towards drugs addicts  improved too. "Drug addicts in 
Could a similar initiative be  possible in the 
Crimes committed by the addicts  involved in the scheme dropped from about 40 to six a month after six months of  treatment, Professor John Strang, the head of the National Addiction Centre at  the Maudsley hospital, told the Independent newspaper. A third of addicts  stopped using street heroin and the number of occasions when the rest used it  dropped from every day to four or five times a month, on  average.
It remains to be seen whether  
Source: www.guardian.co.uk  5th  Feb.2009

 
 
 
 


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