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  • EADD Moderators: Pissed_and_messed | Shinji Ikari

Needle Park, Zurich

I agree with it being a harm reduction act for people to know where to get drugs in a city versus wandering around in a high crime area and end up being robbed or killed by local fiends or gang members..I think that no pricing is stupid as well, It must be Bluelights legal advisors that say not to allow loactions and prices, I think prices for small amounts of drugs should be allowed to help people from a certain area who might not know any other users to talk to and make sure they are not being overcharged and so on..lol..but I don't make the rules...of course many people would lie about getting a kilogram of 98% pure #4 white powder heroin for $XX dollars ..lol..like they get it for the price of an ounce and everyone else pays 50 times more, to make themselves look like they are some big time dealers..lol
 
Davis k- I agree with you and you check out other continental formums- they all have different standards for pricing don't know what thats about- wish the admins would explain their rationale. Wish people would share/ wright their harm reduction stories from places that are hotbeds for it on this thread- Jayriddley II shared a suprising one. Alot of youngsters- you and i were old enough to know about the Platzspitz scene, needle park in europe. Alot of people on this site don't know about the Frankfurt resolution in the 90s and that mant Euro cities were signatories- paving the road for HR, needle excheanges, Rx stuff in the Swiss Confederation confirmed by direct democracy (initiatives), it was so successfull. Many don't know that the US was actually pioneering HR principles in the 50s ( and I aint talking about methadone- heroin Rx was indorsed by the American medical association and the American or new York bar association, have to read the big artcile to get the story. The scary thing is that HR seems to be losing ground worldwide in europe, Australia, and in the US sub has bcome the HR darling b/c its profitable and big pharma loves to make money (now that oxy has been reformulated)- I think we'll hear more about Opana in the comming years (probably be a scandal when the patent is getting ready to run out- this plays out historicaly over and over again, going back to the days of dexedrine and barbs, then it'll be in all the papers and it will get reformulated, 10 years from now.

Speaking of dexedrine, one of my friends from Canada was being maintained on dexedrine for meth- with mostly, though not always good outcomes.

Rx Swiss Rx heroin has been an enourmous success, yet scientifically that info is burried for political reasons. The dutch do a study of supplementing heroin for MMT patients that are chronic receitividz- a resounding success. The British Heroin Maintenance system is helpful but addicts are often under Rxed.

In the US, the concept is widely denounced- either big pharma, our puritanical roots, or both.
 
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But Fucking Platzspitz during the Needle park era- if the cops found say coke or gear on you, ect...if your visa staus was square- they would have to return your drugs to you- often to their consternation- imagine a Zurich cop returning an Oz of coke to you- that kind of stuff happened all the time.
 
You certainly ensure BLers have full access to the facts, jspun, or at least those who can read beyond a paragraph with their concentration intact. Addicts are notoriously unpoliticised, which may explain why they have no rights.

It's often forgotten that cocaine was freely available along with heroin on general prescription in the UK up to 1970. '5 and 5' - 5 grains or 300 mgs - was a standard starting dose and addicts on 20/20 (1.2 grams of each daily) scripts were far from unknown. Cocaine prescribing survived nearly ten years more inside the clinic system until (nearly all) users were arbitrarily switched to dexedrine and occasionally ritalin on the grounds the drug was no longer being produced in Peru. The era of treating the drug user as a mental defective continues to this day.
 
And, to personalise a pair of the authors quoted above:

Bing Spear was a lifelong British civil servant with responsibility for drug issues. A truly remarkable man and surely not one for going through the motions. Twice weekly, he'd travel to Piccadilly Circus to buy a feed for and discuss the state of treatment first hand with the motley vagabond junkies of the area, and was on Christian name terms with most. His autobiography pulled few punches and, in retirement, he spoke out bitterly against political interference in medical matters and the manner in which the British Establishment shafted physicians, like Royal doctor Ann Daly, who persisted in prescribing opiates to the lower classes. At his memorial service, speakers reflected here was a rare man who genuinely cared and was greatly loved by whoever met him, however much their opinions differed.

Professor John Strang is the author and editor of numerous tomes on British addiction practice, including the definitive 'A History of the British System', from which the above quotations were taken. In Drug Treatment since the 1970s, he's presently head of the National Addictions Centre and holds the SLAM chair at the UK's most enlightened treatment centre in London's Maudsley Hospital. A survivor of all attempts to discredit him - it happens to pro-maintenance physicians - he continues to advocate for an intelligent addiction treatment service that combines the best of Rolleston and the present 'encouragement to abstinence' initiative. At times obliged to walk on eggshells, he tries to ensure he won't be the last of the independent-thinking British physicians by encouraging the bright young medical minds from across the globe under his charge at the Maudsley ( sometimes salaciously described by opiophobes as the Maudsley Mafia. ) Any challenge to the powerful and ruthless anti-opiate lobby invariably comes from this quarter; without them, UK treatment would be even more of a joke than it is at the moment.
 
Charlie
You certainly ensure BLers have full access to the facts, jspun, or at least those who can read beyond a paragraph with their concentration intact. Addicts are notoriously unpoliticised, which may explain why they have no rights.

It's often forgotten that cocaine was freely available along with heroin on general prescription in the UK up to 1970. '5 and 5' - 5 grains or 300 mgs - was a standard starting dose and addicts on 20/20 (1.2 grams of each daily) scripts were far from unknown. Cocaine prescribing survived nearly ten years more inside the clinic system until (nearly all) users were arbitrarily switched to dexedrine and occasionally ritalin on the grounds the drug was no longer being produced in Peru. The era of treating the drug user as a mental defective continues to this day.

Thanks for your imput Charlie Clean, and thanks for the insight in the British system pre 70s. I have read that in addition to heroin or ccocaine, it was in the MD'd scope of practice to Rx Cannabis formulations too inorder to maintain addicts if it was in their professional opinion. The British system which was contratsed with the American system after drug prohibition in the early part of the century was to maintain iatrogenically induved addicts. The Medical society at the time saw that as a disease to the Chagrin of Bullying US authorities:!, who jailed well intentioned MDs treating adicts and a few successful clinics- in New York and Louisiana, I believe. This policy persited until the government started 2 narcotics farms- in Lexington, Kentucky, I believe, then Dallas Texas. They were lock doown facilities- the federal "Narcotics farms"- the goal was detox and "inmates" would line up for their injections- they were tapered- they would stick their arm out and a Nurse would give them morphine sulfate. This is documented in Burrows Junkie. The addicts would all line up, get a shot, and be talkative/social at first, but then would drift into not socialble early withdrawl.

At any rate- the AMA and NY Board of attorneys (the orginizations word escapes me) actually strongly advocated heroin Rx in the 50s The politicians, predictably the state legislature vehemetly opposed it....then came Methadone, that Nixon, for all his faults expanded the MMT program agressively during his tenure. The cocaine was probaly in short supply because Coca-Cola bought up their supply. They have contracts on the Trujillo strain of coca- the leaves are shipped to New Jersey and remove the cocaine which is sold to pharmaceutical companies- their are still indications for it in this country (severe nose bleeds, ENT surgery- though it is going in disuse. The coca extract, sans cocaine, is used as a flavoring agent.

and:

And, to personalise a pair of the authors quoted above:

Bing Spear was a lifelong British civil servant with responsibility for drug issues. A truly remarkable man and surely not one for going through the motions. Twice weekly, he'd travel to Piccadilly Circus to buy a feed for and discuss the state of treatment first hand with the motley vagabond junkies of the area, and was on Christian name terms with most. His autobiography pulled few punches and, in retirement, he spoke out bitterly against political interference in medical matters and the manner in which the British Establishment shafted physicians, like Royal doctor Ann Daly, who persisted in prescribing opiates to the lower classes. At his memorial service, speakers reflected here was a rare man who genuinely cared and was greatly loved by whoever met him, however much their opinions differed.

Professor John Strang is the author and editor of numerous tomes on British addiction practice, including the definitive 'A History of the British System', from which the above quotations were taken. In Drug Treatment since the 1970s, he's presently head of the National Addictions Centre and holds the SLAM chair at the UK's most enlightened treatment centre in London's Maudsley Hospital. A survivor of all attempts to discredit him - it happens to pro-maintenance physicians - he continues to advocate for an intelligent addiction treatment service that combines the best of Rolleston and the present 'encouragement to abstinence' initiative. At times obliged to walk on eggshells, he tries to ensure he won't be the last of the independent-thinking British physicians by encouraging the bright young medical minds from across the globe under his charge at the Maudsley ( sometimes salaciously described by opiophobes as the Maudsley Mafia. ) Any challenge to the powerful and ruthless anti-opiate lobby invariably comes from this quarter; without them, UK treatment would be even more of a joke than it is at the moment.

I'll have to read about Strang and Spear. In Nursing school we were taught patients are under medicated for pain...that was post Oxy- 04' graduated. They probaly commisioned experiments/ case studies proving this, Lobbyied Congress (Purdue, that is), ect...But they had a point, that data /experimental designs were prety reliable. Anyway, the UK is Lucky to have someone Like Mausley. He will hopefully train physicians, that hopefully, enlightened will train other MDs and the number of opiophobes will hopefully dwindle. Thanks for your posts. Your a polished, well read Gentleman, thanks for taking the time to read the posts (unfortunately the Frankfurt links are broken.)

Rock Monster You staying clean. If not, how is the tar in Phoenix these days? Or what have you heard. Is it still fire?

Good to hear from you compatriot!
 
It's an interesting point you make there, jspun, about how the Swiss experiment is denied what Thatcher called 'the oxygen of publicity' for 'political' reasons. Thatcher used the phrase to justify the blanket ban on anything said by 'IRA men' in the British media. Of course, with Ulster in turmoil, she could hardly deny their existence and Sinn Fein, the IRA political wing, was a legitimate political party with representatives elected as MPs to Westminster. ( although, as a matter of principle, they refused the oath of allegiance and never sat in the House of Commons.) In consequence, UK citizens suffered the absurdity of, say, Gerry Adams speeches only permitted on tv if an actor spoke his words.

30 years later, with Adams an established political figure and Martin McGuiness a serious candidate for the Irish premiership, it all seems very silly. Yet, while the motley 'encouragement to abstinence' 'Purple Gang' lobbies from NA to rehabs receive maximum press coverage, very few Britons - including those receiving or working in Drug Treatment - have much idea about what's happened in Switzerland. The prescription experiment has been a sensational success and welcomed by the electorate. The cantons have gone an awful long way toward solving their drug problem. This isn't news? What kind of politics makes for this strange conspiracy of silence?

A conspiracy in which, sadly, highly unpoliticised UK drug users collude. This is probably the most popular of the British online 'drug sites'. Yet jspun's excellent and highly informative thread has attracted less than 1,000 views. A thread on "chicks I could've fucked if I hadn't been so pissed" attracts over three times that in half the time. Online addict concentration goes on finding the best online pharmacy to buy codeine pills. Most have no thoughts they might, and ought to be entitled to heroin on prescription. Possibly, they're happy to be criminals.

As a wise man once said, what is is what's meant to be. Or, in simpler terms, you get what you deserve. Keep up the good fight, jspun, but remember you battle not only powerful established interests but the overwhelming apathy of our own.
 
Thanks Muvolution. Your average Bluelighter is prety savy, intelligent, and worldly. We have a good thing going on here advancing the concept of HR on a global scale. The Arabs had their spring and in time we will have our mind altering summer. States (like Mexico and Argentina), who had draconian drug laws have moved towards decriminalization, in the latter's case I thought that would never happen.

Charlie, I forgot to say, that though most of us are apathetic (maybe why cops tolerate some drugs)- inspite of that the Canadians in Vancouver started a Junkie union which played a huge role in making HR progress (including the establishment of insite- if I'm not mistaken- first safe injection room in the USA.) This gives me hope for a brave new future.

Prevailing attitudes in the USA are starting to thaw, get more progressive, but they very state to state. In CA and alot of other states there are needle exchanges, the methadone ceiling in CA was raised from 80 mg to much higher (there are people maintained on Methadone in excess of 300 mg.) I had to get to 135 mg before I lost the craving and stoped gear several years ago. now we have bupe in addition that is affordable.
 
I have actually met several Americans who are currently maintained by their doctors on the opiate of their choice, obviously there is no heroin... but same idea. In what I have observed, it seems as if a minority of the medical establishment is not afraid to address addiction as a disease. The difference between the UK and US seems to be the status quo, as the small number of addicts on maintenance in the UK is accurately quantified and seems to shrink, and I would certainly say that the quantity here is obviously not quantified, but is probably an order of magnitude greater - it is simply the status quo that is keeping each situation as it is.
From what I have read, the Swiss story is as suppressed there as it is here.
 
muvolution
From what I have read, the Swiss story is as suppressed there as it is here.

Thats discouraging! I had great hope for their system. I know that Rx heroin is generally limited to swiss residents, though times might have changed.
Do the patients have to jump through hoops? I was under the impression that it was the only Island of sanity in a world of puritanical nonsensence.

In the US, the pain medicine industrial complex is product driven. To use a common example, their are just as many "pain clinics" dispensing ones favorite opiate in Florida as their is Cannabis dispensaries in the California and other western states. And they persist (money buys tolerance in any society- changes public opinion, ect...though our feds have cracked down. This is why if you go to North American Forums you find threads like "why can't I find heroin in the South East USA- because it can't compete with the pharmaceutical shit."

Don't know about the rest of the world but in our capitalist paradise you can buy morality and public perception relating to mind altering compounds.

p.s. , thoose same democratic systems can be exploited by reformers of drug policy, albeit using a different tactic- ballots, initiatives, peaceful demonstrations, and writing ones representatives in an organized fashion. Ultimately reelection preempts PAC (political action commitee) money.

The battle is changing prevailing perceptions. Opportunity to obtain a good education is a fundamental factor- but our educational system is in decay.

I hear about the EU's problems but the USA is suffereing too. However, the Swiss Economy is robust and the people are pragmatic though conservative, considering investors are looking to invest in Swiss Franks as safe havens it is hard to see a bankrupt health system and health rationing as a cause. However, peoples' perceptions change over time. Hence my attempt at obtaining the latest state of Swiss Confederation and EU harm reduction.
 
Some good news fellow harm reduction supporters. Off topic slightly, but I hear that the Canadian Authorities in Vancouver wanted to close insite but the Canadian Supreme court ruled that unconstitutional!%) Win for HR. Any other Platszpitz or current state of the swiss heroin RX, HR in Switzerland? Any Swiss on this forum?
 
Congratulations to Insite and the Canadian judiciary. By all accounts, East Hastings is up there with the world's greatest drug ghettos and its denizens deserve a little security and peace of mind. 4,000 overdoses and no deaths tells its own story; how many would have died outside the centre?

Alas, jspun, BLers remain stubbornly resistant to any post over half a paragraph long. Serious threads just don't seem to be their bag. Kids today eh? All Facebook and the attention span of a gnat on ketamine. Let's hope they're allowed to grow out of it.
 
Alas, jspun, BLers remain stubbornly resistant to any post over half a paragraph long. Serious threads just don't seem to be their bag. Kids today eh? All Facebook and the attention span of a gnat on ketamine. Let's hope they're allowed to grow out of it.

Agreed Charlie, my brother, its a frustrating thing but our job is to keep the HR tourch of hope alive and keep alive stuff like oral history (which they may be receptive too, atleast when they get more mature). But my 4 year old daughter seems to have a bigger attention span. In CEP I posted lots of stuff on the politics of harm reduction and the thread author got pissed off for me providing to much info. I figured surely there people would embrace- but in all fairness I did go overboard that time. But this ADDesque resistance to post longer than a paragraph is somewhat disconcerting, when they grow out of it they will hopefully seek our posts and those of a few others serious about HR, replacement therapy, ect... hopefully our threads and posts will be around for posterity. Charlie, I'm sure glad your a member of BL, it was starting to get lonely.%)

Maybe I'll post the practical method for practical methaqualone synth from cheapskates receipe in Rhodium in one of my posts to test the mods reading comprehesion ability- wonder if that would slip through, burried in the posts.=D
 
I also get super bummed out when the most inane threads on BL have 20,000 views and threads like this only have a thousand... regardless of how many people are seeing it, there ARE people seeing it, which is what counts.
 
Absolutely wonderful thread. The entirety of this thread makes for excellent reading. CharlieClean, your posts have been an absolute delight to read...thank you. Everyone else, muvolution and jspun of course, have made this thread what it is.

I don't have much to say, as I'm simply enjoying reading everything being written.

Keep up the informative, great work lads :)
 
Thanks for the support Muvolution, attempt4, and my friend Charlie Clean, who has also posted informative threads about diamorph Rx in the UK among other substative contributions to BL. Anyway, this is straight from wiki, not the best source...but

Heroin assisted treatment, or diamorphine assisted treatment, refers to the prescribing of synthetic, injectable heroin to opiate addicts that do not benefit from or cannot tolerate treatment with one of the established drugs used in opiate replacement therapy like methadone or buprenorphine. For this group of patients, heroin assisted treatment has proven superior in improving their social and health situation.[1] It has also been shown to save money, despite its high costs, as it significantly reduces costs incurred by trials, incarceration, health interventions and delinquency.[2]

Heroin assisted treatment is fully a part of the national health system in Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark and the United Kingdom. Additional trials are being carried out in Canada and Belgium.

Contents [hide]
1 History
2 Modes of operation
3 Criticism
4 See also
5 References


[edit] HistoryThe British have had a system of heroin maintenance since the 1920s. For decades it supplied a few hundred addicts nationwide, most of whom were doctors themselves. It was de-emphasized considerably during the 1960s-1980s as a result of the U.S. led "war on drugs". Because of the lack of large-scale trials, only anecdotal evidence existed as to the efficacy of the treatment. This changed in 1994 when Switzerland, against strong opposition from U.N. drug control authorities, started large-scale trials on the potential use of diamorphine as a maintenance drug. They proved diamorphine to be a viable maintenance drug which has shown equal or better rates of success than methadone in terms of assisting long-term users establish stable, crime-free lives.[3] These results encouraged countries like Germany and the Netherlands to conduct their own trials and finally to include heroin assisted treatment fully as a part of the national health system. In recent years the British are also again moving toward heroin maintenance as a legitimate component of their National Health Service.

[edit] Modes of operationWhile the British system trusts the patient with weekly prescriptions, other countries had to impose stronger restrictions to avoid deviation to the illegal market. Patients there have to appear twice a day at a treatment center where they inject their doses of diamorphine under the supervision of medical staff. To avoid withdrawal symptoms in between injections, most patients are given an additional daily dose of methadone.

In the Netherlands, both injectable Diamorphine HCl as injectable salt in dry ampoules as well as Heroin base with 5-10% caffeine for vaporisation are available, both are to be taken twice daily in a supervised setting and will be accompanied with a daily take home dosage of methadone for the evening.

In Switzerland patients may be allowed to appear only once a day and receive part of their diamorphine in pill form for oral consumption. This is possible only after a six-month period and is usually granted only if necessary to hold down a job.

[edit] CriticismCritics, such as the Drug Free America Foundation, have criticised heroin assisted treatment along with other harm reduction strategies for allegedly creating the perception that certain behaviors can be partaken safely, such as illicit drug use, claiming that this may lead to an increase in that behavior by people who would otherwise be deterred.

We oppose so-called `harm reduction´ strategies as endpoints that promote the false notion that there are safe or responsible ways to use drugs. That is, strategies in which the primary goal is to enable drug users to maintain addictive, destructive, and compulsive behavior by misleading users about some drug risks while ignoring others.
—"Statement on so-called 'Harm Reduction' polices" made at a conference in Brussels, Belgium by signatories of the drug prohibitionist network International Task Force on Strategic Drug Policy [1]
However in Switzerland the incidence of heroin abuse has declined sharply since the introduction of heroin assisted treatment. As a study published in The Lancet concluded:

The harm reduction policy of Switzerland and its emphasis on the medicalisation of the heroin problem seems to have contributed to the image of heroin as unattractive for young people."
— Nordt, Carlos, and Rudolf Stohler, "Incidence of Heroin Use in Zurich, Switzerland: A Treatment Case Register Analysis," [4]
Also, the notion that patients in heroin assisted treatment are enabled to maintain "destructive behavior" contradicts the findings that patients significantly recover in terms of both their social and health situation. Many participants in the German "Heroinstudie" were able to find employment (~ 40%), some even started a family after years of homelessness and delinquency.[5]

and

The national drug policy of Switzerland was developed in the early 1990s and comprises the four elements of prevention, therapy, harm reduction and prohibition.[17] In 1994 Switzerland was one of the first countries to try heroin-assisted treatment and other harm reduction measures like supervised injection rooms. In 2008 a popular initiative by the right wing Swiss People's Party aimed at ending the heroin program was rejected by more than two thirds of the voters. A simultaneous initiative aimed at legalizing marijuana was rejected at the same ballot

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drug_policy_of_Switzerland#Switzerland

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heroin_assisted_treatment

I will keep searching, I have an excellent power point presentation, alittle dated (08 or before) from the University of geneva med school symposium on harm reduction. If I havent posted it I'll look for it and post...they go beyond heroin Rx to safe drinking rooms in Germany, for instance and have solid evidence confirming the success of the Swiss expirement (thats why they voted for Rx heroin whilst rejecting cannabis- didn't want the Confederation to become a drug tourist destination (but a little aside, only place were you can get the equivalent of mandrax Rx- but have to be a Swiss resident).

At any rate, thanks for the support...hopefully some day I will come across a Bler involved in the Zurich Needle Park scene (met one in person, in Northern California, strangely enough, though...but didn't get any good stories- only that it was in Platzspitz, then moved to a train station, then an underground building, before medical heroin Rx was established. So hopefully, one day, I will get a story. In the mean time,m I will try to post stuff about HR internationally and when I run out, let this thread die a natural death.

Anyway, thanks all for the encouragement.
 
Here is a NY Times article:

Zurich Journal; A Marketplace for Drugs, a Bazaar of the Bizarre
By JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Special to The New York Times
Published: September 27, 1990Sign In to E-Mail

Print

Single-Page

In an oak-shaded park a few hundred yards from Zurich's stately banks and elegant shops, a man named Sylvio carefully worked a hypodermic needle into a vein in his neck, then slowly injected a mixture of heroin and cocaine.

All around him, staggering, wasted young people were openly injecting and smoking heroin and cocaine as police officers looked on.

Zurich's needle park is a place feverishly occupied 24 hours a day with the business of buying, selling and using drugs, a place with the bustle of the bazaar and the spirit and tattered splendor of a 1960's rock concert. Its icon is the needle, an object of constant fascination, endlessly being caressed, readied with drugs or pressed into veins.

The strange scene has been a fixture in Zurich for several years, tolerated by city officials who are convinced that drug use should be regarded as a sickness rather than a crime. Social and medical workers estimate that about 300 to 400 heavy drug users live in the park without shelter, toilets or showers, and that as many as 3,000 others pass through daily to buy and use drugs.


Ads by Google


A Plan to Clear the Park

But now, concerned that their city's image is being blighted, Zurich officials are taking steps to gradually clear the drug users out of the park.

The city government has proposed opening several buildings where addicts would be able to take drugs under medical supervision. The plan also calls for a package of free social and health services for heavy drug users, including housing.

''We don't want the whole world to think that Zurich is the place to buy drugs,'' said Robert Neukomm, the City Council member in charge of the police. ''On the other hand we have to provide an alternative for these people who are taking drugs.''

Zurich's drug policy has evolved over about a decade, beginning with strict police enforcement that drove the illicit market from one part of the city to another and moving to a plan of containment of the problem, out of sight, in a little park called the Platzspitz, a wedge of rose gardens, oaks and firs near the heart of the city, but cut off from neighbors by two converging rivers...
Neighborhoods that had been troubled by petty crime and the sight of blatant drug abuse benefited from the containment plan. But overall crime statistics stayed about the same. A recent survey found, for example, that about a third of the heavy drug users in the park made their money trafficking small amounts of drugs, another third survived by stealing and robbing and the others worked as prostitutes.

The midway of the grotesque carnival is a concrete path along the edge of the Limmat River, lined with makeshift counters covered with neatly arranged spoons, bottles of water and paper cups bristling with slender, disposable syringes.

The crowd thickens as night falls and drug hustlers work their way through the sea of bodies clogging the path, calling out ''Sugar, sugar, fine sugar!'' when they mean heroin, and ''Cokay, cokay!'' for cocaine.

The other night, three men crouched under a park lamppost, dividing a white powdery pancake of heroin with a Swiss Army knife. Next to them, a woman lay in the dirt in a stupor. Four or five men were intensely working needles into their arms. A woman in a striped sweater probed for veins in one hand, blood streaming down her fingers, as a woman in leather pants and stained blouse wobbled past, a bloody syringe dangling from her neck.

Thanks all. Thanks to B9 in particular for posting his impressions living in country a while back during the Platszpitz days....this little expirement impacted the way governments approached drugs in places like Portugal, Neatherlands, Germany, Argentina, Mexico, Bolivia, Colombia, Canada, and a few more enlightened countries, even a handful of US States are comming around so far as cannabis goes, though I wouldn't attribute that to the Swiss Experience which got it's inspiration from the British Experience that used to be very succesful and MDs faced less restrctions than as of late, even allowed to write for cocaine and other maintenance drugs (what was it charlie, did you say 3 grains/ day) at any rate a good amount if pharmaceutical and pharmaceutical coke has way less side effects and health complications (though not as innocous as heroin maintenance)- to bad good clinical studies establishing the utility of this treatment modality weren't carried out on a large scale in the UK.
 
Charlie Clean mentioned Rolleston. I found a copy of the Rolleston Report. By the way Charlie, reponding to what you mentioned about a serious HR thread getting so little hits, my most successful thread is "drugs of choice on a porn set."8(

Anyway, here is an analysis of the Rolleston Report I found online, where the policies instituted ultimately served as a model for the Swiss- though the Swiss didn't make the mistake of under perscribing that latter plagued British Diamorph replacement therapy:

The Rolleston Report of 1926 helped to establish British policy toward OPIATES, COCAINE, and other drugs. It institutionalized a drug policy in which medical expertise and public-health considerations were given importance along with punishment and criminal penalties. The British policies were, in this sense, different from U.S. policies toward drugs that emerged during the same period and in response to similar international agreements. The historical background leading to the formation of an elite committee of British physicians, chaired by Sir Humphrey Rolleston, had four major phases.

ENDING THE COMMERCIAL OPIUM TRADE
During the nineteenth century, the British established commercial opium trading by fighting and winning two Opium Wars with China: Opium grown and sold by monopoly in British-dominated India provided a quarter of the revenue for the British government in India. Prepared opium (for smoking) was exported to Chinese ports by the East India Company, where British authorities collected tax revenues on it for the Chinese government. Missionaries in China and their anti-opium allies in Britain, the United States, and Canada lobbied strongly against profiting from the British-sponsored vice. They also educated the public about opium smoking and commercial opium trading.

The U.S. government stimulated the convening of several international conferences from 1909 to 1914. These conferences reached agreements that all signatory governments would enact legislation ending commercial opium trading and restricting opium and cocaine to "legitimate medical practice." The Indo-Chinese opium trade ended in 1914. These international conventions were included in the Versailles Treaty that ended World War I. "Legitimate medical practice" and appropriate controls and/or penalties were not specified in the international treaties.

OPIUM CONTROLS AND GROWTH OF THE MEDICAL PROFESSION
During the nineteenth century, opiates were the only effective way to relieve the symptoms of many physical ailments (most medicines used today, including aspirin, became available only in the twentieth century). OPIUM and its derivative MORPHINE (Britain was the world's leading manufacturer) were available in patent medicines, in alcoholic solutions, and in other commercial products. The emerging professions of pharmacist and medical physician with advanced training and specialized knowledge were anxious to differentiate themselves from a motley group of healers—chemists, herbalists, barber-dentists, patent-medicine sellers, and others. In the 1850s, such persons could provide opiates to patients since they were not then illegal, and preparations containing opiates provided substantial revenues. Opium eating and LAUDANUM (an alcoholic solution of opiates) consumption were then widespread in Britain.

British pharmacists became eager to restrict sales of opiates to qualified sellers—but only in such a way that "professional" trade would not be harmed and could be expanded. The 1868 Poisons Act restricted opiate sales to pharmacists. This act mandated the labeling of opiates and required pharmacists to keep records of purchasers. (Similar restrictions on opiate sales in the United States did not occur until the 1906 Food and Drug Act.) Pharmacists, however, could continue to sell opiates directly to customers without a prescription from a physician, and physicians could prescribe or sell opiates to patients. In the early 1880s physicians and researchers in Europe, England, and the United States almost simultaneously began to write about the opium habit and morbid cravings for opiate drugs. In 1884 physicians in England founded the Society for the Study of Inebriety, which promoted a disease model of addiction and the need for treatment.

By 1900, physicians emerged as an elite group who defined all aspects of health care and medical practice in British society; pharmacists "policed" the Poisons Act and effectively retained control of dispensing opiates and other drugs. Thus, by 1914, British pharmacists and physicians had almost a half century of experience, professional collaboration, an ongoing professional association concerned with the dispensing of opiates, and attempts to contain opiate consumption and habitual use.

PRESSURE TOWARD CRIMINAL PENALTIES
In 1914, when the international opium convention (Hague Convention) was to go into effect, several British agencies could not decide which one should take responsibility for implementing legislation and regulation of drugs. Then World War I began in August 1914 and Sir Malcolm Delevingne, an undersecretary at the Home Office, took primary responsibility. He suggested using the War Powers Act to stop sales of cocaine and opiates to soldiers unless they were based on a prescription by a doctor that was "not to be repeated" (refilled without further prescription). Violators, however, could be fined only five pounds. Two or three cases were publicized and introduced the British public to "dope fiend" fears, but they continued to be rare.

After World War I, Delevingne argued that drug control was a police responsibility for the Home Office (where it has remained ever since). The 1920 Dangerous Drug Act was vague about two critical issues—whether doctors/pharmacists could prescribe for themselves, and whether doctors could "maintain" addicts. In 1921 and 1924, the Home Office proposed regulations that ignored the rights of professionals and imposed many complex procedures. It also sought powers of search and seizure, higher fines, and longer sentences for convictions. Thus, the Home Office was making regulations that would subject doctors to criminal sanctions and circumscribe their prescribing practices—as was already happening in the United States.

APPOINTMENT OF THE ROLLESTON COMMITTEE
The Home Office needed the cooperation of the medical profession to determine the appropriateness of maintenance dosages for addicts, and it sought to determine whether gradual reduction was the appropriate treatment for addiction. The Home Office and the medical profession each recognized the legitimacy of the other's position. Both realized that a partnership was needed. Thus, these two elite groups began a collaboration to define and resolve problems and appropriate practices regarding narcotics control. All persons appointed to the committee were medical personnel representing government agencies or nongovernment physician-interest groups. The chairman, Sir Humphrey Rolleston, was president of the Royal College of Physicians and a noted exponent of the disease view of ALCOHOLISM. Another member had written the authoritative article on narcotic addiction in 1906. Police and law enforcement officials without medical training were not represented.

Committee Deliberations and Recommendations.
The committee was to consider and advise as to the circumstances, if any, in which the supply of morphine and heroin (including preparations containing morphine and heroin) to persons suffering from addiction to these drugs, may be regarded as medically advisable and as to the precautions which it is desirable that medical practitioners administering or prescribing morphine or heroin should adopt for the avoidance of abuse, and to suggest any administrative measures that seem expedient for securing observance of these precautions.

During a year and a half of deliberations and twenty-three meetings, the committee heard evidence from thirty-four witnesses. The Home Office submitted a memorandum that structured the questions and inquiry. Witnesses represented a wide diversity of opinion, particularly regarding appropriate treatment for addicts. Prison doctors favored harsher treatment, especially abrupt withdrawal of opiates (going cold turkey). Even consultants specializing in treatment rarely agreed on points of procedure and treatment. Most witnesses and commission members accepted the disease nature of addiction.

There was wide agreement, however, that addiction to HEROIN or morphine (both opiates) was a rare phenomenon and a minor problem in BRITAIN. Most addicts were middle class and many were members of the medical profession. Relatively few criminal or lower-class addicts were then known, so criminal sanctions appeared unneeded and inappropriate. The committee report concluded that "the condition must be regarded as a manifestation of disease and not as a mere form of vicious indulgence."

From this conclusion, many recommendations followed. The most important was that some addicts might need continued administration of morphine (or other opiates) "for relief of morbid conditions intimately associated with the addiction." Thus, the committee effectively supported maintenance of an addict for long periods of time, possibly for life.

The committee also made several recommendations for administrative procedures to lessen the severity of the drug problem. Practitioners were mandated to notify the Home Office when they determined someone was addicted; but physicians could continue to provide treatment and prescribe opiates to addicts. Gradual reduction rather than abrupt withdrawal was the recommended treatment, in part to keep addicts in treatment rather than to drive them to illicit suppliers. A medical tribunal was established to promote the profession's own policing of members who became addicted. The committee also opposed banning heroin (which was a useful medication and a very small problem in Britain at the time).

LEGACY OF THE REPORT
Shortly after the Rolleston Report was completed, its recommendations were included in amendments to the Dangerous Drug Act (1926). Although this act has been amended numerous times since then, the provisions adopted from the Rolleston Report remain in effect in the 1990s. Although cocaine was included as a narcotic in this report, separate recommendations for treatment were not made. Cannabis (MARIJUANA) was not included in this report. The Rolleston Report did not address the issue of illegal sales or transfers of opiates; no criminal or penal sanctions were recommended.

The British Medical Journal was content: The medical view of addiction as a disease needing treatment, and not a vice necessitating punishment and penal sanction, had been formally accepted as government policy. Medical professionals, rather than criminal-justice personnel, would be responsible for individual decisions about whether patients were addicts, and prescribe appropriate quantities of opiates, including on a maintenance basis. Any questions about appropriate prescribing practices and physician addiction would be handled by a committee specializing in addiction. As a result, almost no British physician has been arrested and/or tried for opiate-related violations.

The foundations of what is sometimes called the British system of drug policy had been established. From 1926 to 1960, this system worked well. Names of fewer than 1,000 addicts were forwarded to the Home Office each year, most of them medical personnel. Local practitioners could and did prescribe heroin and other opiates to their patients, including registered addicts. Some addicted patients were maintained on heroin, occasionally for years. They received their drugs from a local pharmacy. Addicts were also provided with clean needles and syringes. Drug treatment consisted almost entirely of individual physicians counseling addicted patients and providing drugs. Almost no illicit sales of opiates or cocaine occurred during these years. One staff member at the Home Office was responsible for all registrations and personally knew most of the addicts in Britain; he frequently helped addicts find doctors and/or assistance. The Home Office also covened meetings with addiction specialists to address any policy issues that arose. Thus, the British established what might be described as a system of drug control that gave due weight to medical values and public-health considerations. Most observers now agree, however, that the "system" worked because the problem was limited in size rather than that the problem was small because of the system. It worked well for half a century until the numbers of addicts increased substantially, because of drug dealing on an international scale, the widespread use of drugs during the 1960s-1980s countercultural revolution, and the increased immigration to Britain of former colonial citizens of the crumbling empire. By the 1960s, the upsurge in heroin use and the abuse of cocaine, marijuana, and other drugs left Britain with a drug problem of both licit and illicit substances that outstripped even the British system's handling capabilities.

http://www.enotes.com/drugs-alcohol-encyclopedia/rolleston-report-1926-u-k

If you aren't exhausted, here is an excellent, excellent powerpoint presentation that was presented at the Geneva University Medical Schools or Medical Hospital system- HUG (Hospitaux Universitaires de Geneve), when they hosted a symposium on harm reduction. Very well done!!!

Titled "Harm Reduction at Work": Check it out!

http://addictologie.hug-ge.ch/_library/pdf/ISAM08Harmreductionatwork.pdf
 
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