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Needle Park, Zurich

jspun

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In 1986-1992, the authorities of Zurich made a novel decision, they decriminalized the use of all hard drugs in a park called Platszpitz near the center of the city. The idea, a departure from their authoritarian approach, was accepting that addicition was a disease, and in line with their neat and tidy reputation, to decriminalize the use of hard drugs in this park and centralize the addicts. Where the population of Needle Park was a couple hundred, it swelled into the thousands with many more thousands comming to score (and moving from other parts of Europe). There are pictures, which i have in my evolution of the Swiss Harm Reduction thread of dealers setting up tables and selling coke and heroin in the open. Also open use- people injecting on the adjascent street. The authorities finally closed it in 92, whereafter it moved to a abandonded trainstation called Leiten. This convinced the Swiss to institute a heroin Rx scheme and came close to Rx Cocaine, though that seems to be tabled- which has been highly succesful. I have pictures and stories about this in my Evolution of the Swiss Harm reduction Thread. Will try to big this up. But anyway, for a couple of years, there was tolerated use- I have one story of a cop being pissed off because he had to give back an addict his coke, because his papers were in order. Anyway, just looking for stories, anyone ever been part of the Needle Park Scene, out of historical curiosity, please share!?

Then the pragmatic Swiss instituted Rx Heroin, by referundum (direct democracy), the Rx scheme was so successful, whilst voting down legal cannabis (prob scared of drug tourism a la Amsterdam). I guess their neat and tidy image was more important. First dispensary, i think, established in Bern (where the legal age is 16, unlike 18 in the other dispansaries.) As an aside, wonder if the Rx scheme continues to thrive- please share in my other thread which i will post shortly (there is even a post comparing the Swiss, British, and American systems- the US almost legalized RX heroin but methadone came along,)

Stories, stories, stories.... I'm trying to keep the oral history of this forgotten part of history survive. Frankfurt and hamburgh had more tolerant scenes but not on the scale of Zurich. I'll try to dig up my older thread.
 
Prescribing diamorphine is only common sense. Under Rolleston, heroin addict numbers stayed under 1200 for 40 years. There were no drug gangs, no 'drug money' corruption of other sectors, no syringes underfoot in urban residential areas blighted by the crimalisation of addiction and no need to privatise prisons to accommodate 40,000 non-violent drug offenders. The decision to abandon it must rank as one of the biggest disasters of modern history. But, because only drug users and, latterly, criminals are involved, questioning voices have been few and far between. We have to wait for Switzerland to show us how it's done. Shame on us.

What's stopping us starting to rectify the damage now? Is it because of all the useless jobs created as consequence of the 'drug problem'? Is the powerful rehab industry concerned it'd lose business if it only treated people with a pharmacological problem and not confused refugees from criminalised lifestyles? Is it the preposterous hysteria of the right-wing press peddling fear and prejudice? Or more of that corruption? The number of nogoodniks making money in one form or another from hapless users is huge and scandalous and to define otherwise lawabiding UK citizens as "criminals" simply because their drug of choice is not alcohol is quite insane.

Time for change, no doubt about it. Thanks for the link, jspun. Let's hope people check it out and learn.
 
Time for change, no doubt about it. Thanks for the link, jspun. Let's hope people check it out and learn.

Amen to that Charlie Clean. Lets hope people learn. The prison- rehab- industrial complex is very strong and influencial.

Shame on us!

The US Academy of Addiction Medicine finally proclaimed that addiction is a disease of the brain after all these years and all this research. Its all inane politicized B.S.
 
Brimz, I agree with you. The people in power are corrupt and their aligiances bought and sold...democracy for the highest bidder.
But the people still do retain the power, their just too apthetic to do anything about it, like CC pointed out. Look whats happening with the "Arab Spring",
people in Syria and some other totalitarian regiemes are willing to face firing squads, snipers, ect... they're so sick of being pushed around. We have a special problem in that in most of the world we are looked at, despite declerations from medical academies, as being morrally deficeint degenerates- not sick in need of help and compassion. Were major income makers for the prison/ treatment/ industrial complex- majore reforms would really f-up their hustlel. We got to try, babie steps. Her Royal majesty's subjects in Vancouver, BC, have had an addicts alliance or union which has significantly impacted politics including the continents firsts safe injection room and I think trials with diamorph or hydromorphone (I may be wrong about this). The important thing is that we keep the dialogue open and do small things like tell our friends. Its also important to conduct ourselves as Ladies and Gentelmen, adhering to non violence so we have the superior morale cause. So we can change perceptions. Unfortunately our detractors have us nailed, as under the current regieme, people are pressed by an overwhelming force to do what they normally wouldn't do to maintain their habits. If their is one leasson from the 10'-11' drought, it is that prohibition doesnt work for a significant portion of the population- just makes them desperate, less productive, and discontent. Total abstinece is a disarable goal, but from the Swiss experience, if we are to learn a leasson- it is better fascilitated by Heroin meaintainace, at the least, it decreases criminality. Total abstinece seems to be facilitated by the Swiss model- when you are dope sick and wainting to get right it reinforces a behavioral addiction, not being sick and desperate increases your chances of total abstineces. Worst case, criminality decreases, not a bad outcome- But the masses are brainwashed. To quote Kinky Friedman of The Texas Jewboys, a Jewshish artist from texas "people usually go with Bernabas not Christ." In other words, the masses are easily influenced and make the wrong decision.

In Switzerland, their model of democracy is exemplary, they seem to be doing somthing right. Maybe thats why investors are purchasing Swiss francs alongside Gold in the current economic downturn- stability and downright pragmatisim- a place were private interst groups have less sway than The People.

But anyway, my main goal is to hear stories from people of the Needle Park Scene in Zurich- but most of the people on BL were probably too young anyway. Maybe Opiophile would be the place to ask if I can get membership ( I think its available for a cost now). I am interested in presevering history and 25 years ago Needle Park was a huge departure from world wide prohibition. The Dutch weren't willing to go that far- they were all about tolerance for "soft drugs" being tough on "hard drugs". From that time period, I heard from more than one person that the Dam' outdoor scene was mostly a ripoff, near the train station, ect... not so in Zurich were the open air scene was legendary, sound, open, and dopefiends from around Europe and to a lesser extent, other continents flocked there.

So Anyone with any Zurich "Needle Park" stories please share. In the interest of posterity.
 
Some pictures:

and text about the Zurich 80's outdoor scene with a description having trouble cutting and pasting the pictures. Good link!:


http://picturesandperspectives.blogspot.com/2009/04/switzerland-platzspitz-or-needle-park.html

I may not agree with the authors conclusions, but good pictures and introduction to the Zurich scene in Platzspitz during the years hard drugs were tolerated by the authorities.

more cool pictures from back in the day courtesy of Skate Punk magazine:

http://www.skatepunk.com/featured/needle-park-zurich-1992

Wonder if anyone even remembers the Zurich "Needle Park" expirement on BL. Again, if you have any stories first or second hand, would love to here them.

By the way, for Rx heroin's detractors, Switzerland has only 3% unemployement and investors are buying up Swiss Franks alongside Gold, so confident are they about the countries economic stability which is actually starting to hurt their economy.

But after 15 years of Rx Heroin, harm reduction clearly hasn't had a detrimental effect on the Swiss economy- quite the oposite it would seem.
 
I like hearing about this stuff... it is cool to go back and see the pictures. Just wanted to let you know your thread is appreciated.
 
I've been in that park more than once, its right next to the train station if I remember correctly. Its really hard to imagine what it was like back then especially considering it was in Zurich of all places, one of the cleanest cities I've ever been to.
 
Thx mr jspun, the links were a good read, really interesting. I wish i was about then, never started using til 17 in the mid nineties. I remember hearing about a news story about ppl can go shoot up gear in a room provided by the local authorities. Does anyone remember or did i gear wrong. I'm sure it was in camden, north london.
 
I was in Switzerland while that was up & running, I was staying with relatives & the general feeling was that the park had been a disaster because as you say half of Europes junkies moved to Zurich which was not what they'd planned for - which was a little unimaginative of them tbh -but despite that I got the vibe that if it was handled correctly the Swiss were ok with drug use - they just didn't want their pet dogs or poor little Lars to prick themselves upon a heap of discarded syringes when they went to feed the ducks.
 
muvoltion a picture speakes a thousand words, as they say. Thanks for the kind words! been working the last couple of days so haven't gotten to respond. Now a days, sans the open markets in North America (Baltimore, Newark, Jersey City, Vancouver, Montreal, cet...) in North America, the only equivalent of Needle park, in an open air sense is Tijuana, BC, Mexico, were often the police protect drug spots. In Zurich it was harm reduction. In Mexico its corruption under the banner of harm reduction. On a whole, I'd rather be in Zurich. B9 and chainsaw willimas, thanks for your input Thank you too China white. On my Evolution of the Swiss harm reduction link There was an awsome Norwegian link translated into English by Google but Now its broken. Esentially it said that the Swiss had Rx heroin and went into detail giving a graphic candid picture of what life at one of the safe injection rooms was like. The age of consent according to tha article was 18 in all Cantons with such programs except for Bern (were I believe trials started- the legal age there was 16). But again the link is broken. The abandoned train station Letten was were the dope fiends migrated after Platzspitz. The authorities rolled that up but started expirements in Rx heroin. A program so successuful Swiss Voters voted in as the law of the land in a referedum (direct democracy.) My link has alot of info. Again thanks for the Kind words Mvolution, and China, and the imput B9 and Chaisaw Williams. When they cleaned up Needle park, apparently they had to remove several cm of soil because their was thousands of burried discarded syringes. Still it was an area of tolerance for hard drugs when the more famous Amsterdam really wasn't (often a disapointing ripoff if you didn't know someone.)

At any rate the Swiss were toying with the idea of cocaine Rx which never materialized (but I think trials were initiated), this info is somewhere in my provided link. Hopefully I can dig up some history about the Frankfurt Decleration and the story of the evolution of harm reduction there (which the christian democrats, I believe, finally supported back in the 90s.) Pre- Platzspits the authorities in Swisstzerland had a very authouritarian view on drugs but they did a 180, apparently out of pragmaticism. My evolution link has a treajure trove of HM info pertaining to the Swiss HR scene.

Thanks all!!!

To my knowledge, the ceiling is 750 mg diamoph which is usally decrased to the 400 range per shot (b/c the receptors are probably saturated). 1/3 on the program eventually move on to other treatment modalities inclusing abstinece. I firmly believe that when you brak the cycle of waking up sick and hustling cash for dope daily, you increase your chances of total abstinece. Dope sick- desperate- then complete relief after the connection shows up makes it harder to get clean. However, being on heroin maintenace and never having to wake up sick or be at the mercy of a dogy connection increases your probability of total abstinece. This is my theory, but I've seen it in practice in my self with substitution therapy. But this latter modalility (sub and methadone) doesn't work for everyone.

Thanks B9, still looking for stories.
 
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Not a platzspitz story but here is an Australian story:

with Norman Swan
Safe Injecting Rooms
Monday 3 August 1998

Summary: This is part one of a two part special on Heroin. Norman Swan looked at the situation in Switzerland when he was there recently. There are about 15 places in that country where heroin users can take their drugs and inject them in a clean and safe environment. In this programme we go on a tour through a safe injecting room in the Swiss city of Berne.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Norman Swan: Welcome to the program. Today, the first of two Health Reports on alternative ways of dealing with the heroin problem in our suburbs and in our prisons.

In Australia we have around 80,000 to 100,000 heroin users, maybe only a quarter of whom are on a methadone program. 70% or 80% of women in our prisons are there because of drug related offences. In many of our suburbs burglary rates are linked to drug use.

The fact that we haven't had a major break-out of HIV here is thanks to innovative policies such as needle exchanges but nonetheless we've probably failed to contain Hepatitis C infection in the community.

So we have a large group of people whose behaviour is a risk to themselves and to you and I, as well as a $4-billion expense when it comes to theft. Many experts believe we need far more ways of dealing with the problem than we have. That's why when the Prime Minister blocked the heroin prescribing trial many specialists in the field were disappointed.

This week and next, I'm going to take you through some of the things that are happening in Switzerland, which is recognised internationally as having some of the world's most interesting and effective heroin policies, from heroin prescribing, to needle exchanges in prisons, to what have been called safe injecting rooms.

These are places under professional supervision where drug users can take their street heroin and inject it in a clean, safe and warm environment.

There's been a lot of interest in safe injecting rooms here. I understand for example, that soon in Melbourne a decision may be made to proceed with a room. And in the last few days, South Sydney Council, clearly frustrated with the wimpish approach of the New South Wales State Government, has received legal advice that the regulations which allow needle exchanges may permit local councils to set up safe injecting rooms independently.

Anyway rather than wonder in a knowledge vacuum what safe injecting rooms are really like, I went to visit one of Switzerland's first, in Berne.

The centre's just on the edge of the national capital's Old City, and near the main shopping centre as well as both the train and police stations.

It was a rainy day about three weeks ago, and the centre's manager, Anita Marxer, met me at the door which takes you immediately down a small flight of stairs to a land.

Anita Marxer: OK, so people come in here and this is the place where they exchange their needles, syringes and all the material they need to inject the drugs. We change one-to-one, the syringes: they bring a dirty one, we give them a clean one, but everybody gets one clean syringe for free; this is because of HIV prevention.

Norman Swan: It's actually like your starter pack, your first free syringe, and then you go from there.

Anita Marxer: Yes, your first one is always free. And you can also buy them for a very low price, so there are people who come here to get their syringes because they don't come every day, so they buy, let's say, 20 syringes, and go back home and bring them back maybe in a week or so.

In a month, altogether with the automat we have in town, we need about 45,000 syringes.

Norman Swan: So, just to explain, we've come in off the street here which is not far from the railway station, and as we walk down the stairs there is this ledge where somebody's got the needle exchange, just off this stairwell.

Anita Marxer: Yes, and there is one man or woman who is sitting here from 2 o'clock to 10 o'clock at night every day, except Sunday; it's only for two hours from 1 o'clock to 2 o'clock.

OK, the next room we come to is the cafeteria, so people eat here, they play games, you have table football.



Norman Swan: I should just say my thought at coming here, 'This is going to be a dump', but it's not, it's actually a very pleasant little cafeteria that you wouldn't mind having a cup of coffee in.

Anita Marxer: Yes, - what we try to do, I'll explain you later, is to show the people, I mean this should be a room where they feel at ease, and where they know or get to know that there is something else than the stress in the street. So I'll explain you later the concept and everything. So to the right you see, there is a room where there is a shower and a washing machine so they can give us their laundry, we wash it for them and they can have a shower and we have also clothes, used clothes, people bring them when they don't need them any more. So that's one point which is very important too, that they change their clothes from time to time and that they get a shower just to look better, just to feel better.

We have a kitchen, and we cook every day. It means that we have someone who cooks for the clients. There is one day, it's a Thursday, they have the opportunity to cook. That means that one client can cook for the other clients. He gets SFr80, which is not much; we go with them shopping and they have to cook for 25 people. So without cans, no cans, nothing, all fresh.

They also have the opportunity to work at the non-alcoholic bar. We don't sell alcohol here, like just to get a little bit of money, so that's it.

Norman Swan: So that's part of rehabilitation, if you like, or just feeling as if they're part of mainstream life.

Anita Marxer: Yes, it's very important for them sometimes just also to feel or to know that they are still able to work and that they work for a couple of hours and they get their money, also for like to feel better for their self-confidence I think, it's very important.

Norman Swan: So we've gone through the cafeteria now, the door at the other end.

Anita Marxer: Now we go to the injecting room. You see, people enter here, there is a door which is closed when the place is open, and they wash their hands, they should wash their hands, and they enter the injecting room here.

Norman Swan: We've come through a narrow corridor here, and we're in what's a reasonably large room, with stainless steel benches which are at chair height, with, what? ten chairs around the room.

Anita Marxer: So people come in here, there is always one person sitting here because this room, people are not left alone here. So all the time someone is sitting here from the people who work here, and looking what's happening and controlling and everything. So people enter here, they get a clean spoon, they get clean filters and all the material they need to inject their drugs. Not the drugs of course, they have to bring their own drugs. We don't distribute drugs here. Also we have very strict rules in here; they can stay for half an hour and they are not allowed to sell or to buy dope in here, not even to make a present to someone. So if they do this, we sanction them, they're not allowed to enter this room for another two days or something like that.

So there you see ten seats, and they get as many syringes as they need, as many needles as they need; it's important that they do it in a clean way. So maybe hope that also in the street, in a way, like something rests in their brains.

Norman Swan: So there's a little tray here with spoons on it, and a little bit of cotton wool, and they heat up the heroin on here?

Anita Marxer: They put the heroin into it, a little bit of water, they heat it up and then they take it through the filter and inject it.

Norman Swan: And that's the little blue thing, the cotton wool sitting in the spoon is actually a filter.

Anita Marxer: That's a filter, yes. Because you know, when you buy the drugs in the streets it's not clean at all. I mean everybody knows it. Sometimes there are a lot of things in it, I mean it doesn't clean it really but a little bit, the biggest parts of dirt will rest in the filter.

Norman Swan: What happens if they have trouble finding a vein? It's their problem?

Anita Marxer: It's their problem. They can help themselves among them, but we don't help them. This is a strict rule; when they don't find their veins, there are people who help other people, clients help clients, but we don't help them. It's very strict.

Now it starts so, we'll go through the medical.

VOICES

OK this is room for medical care here. I'll close the door, it will be more quiet.

Norman Swan: We had to get out of there because the clients were starting to come in after you opened the doors. And do you only open in the afternoon, I mean it's 2 o'clock now that we're doing this interview.

Anita Marxer: Yes, we open from 2 o'clock till 10 o'clock from Monday to Saturday. It's closed on Sundays because we think it's very important to close one day because there are people who stay at home maybe on a Sunday, or who don't come to Berne, so we think it's important that we don't have open like 24 hours a day every day.

Norman Swan: And what happens if somebody comes into strife that they overdose here, do you get many overdoses?

Anita Marxer: Not so many, it depends much on the stress and the quality of the drugs, but we have oxygen, so that's why always someoneÆs in the injecting room. We help them.

Norman Swan: You have Narcan to reverse it if they're going to overdose?



Anita Marxer: No, we don't give medication, we just, not re-animate, how we do?

Norman Swan: Resuscitation.

Anita Marxer: Resuscitation, yes, that's it. We do this for ten minutes and if they don't come back, we call the police and they bring them to hospital. So they are just opposite the street and it only takes them three minutes. So we try for ten minutes to 15 minutes. And in 12 years we have this place I think in the whole of Switzerland nobody died, never, ever. Touch wood.

Norman Swan: So tell me more about the culture of this injecting room here. What goes on in it.

Anita Marxer: The point is that it should be very quiet. It means that for many people this room is the possibility, because many people have very bad veins, and in the industry they're always under stress, under pressure. So for many people it's a possibility to inject in rooms in a clean way. Usually it's very quiet, it should be quiet.

Norman Swan: It's not a rule, it just happens.

Anita Marxer: Yes, it's a rule, because we tell them 'Be quiet', we tell them to be quiet because there are some people who will have difficulties to find their veins and they need a quiet atmosphere. It's not always that quiet, but we try to keep it quiet. And people come in, they do their injection and they go out. And they buy their drugs and they come back. That's the way it works.

Norman Swan: And you were saying to me before I interrupted you that what happens if they stay too long in there, they stay more than half an hour?

Anita Marxer: When they stay more than half an hour, we tell them five minutes before they have to leave, we tell them, 'Look, your time is up, so please finish'. Because sometimes they are, we call it, 'flashing around' when they have their cocaine and heroin they're just hanging in their chairs and we don't want that. So we tell them to go out please, because other people are waiting. So if they don't go out and if they don't have really bad veins, I mean if they are finished with their injection, they get a sanction. We tell them maybe for one day they are not allowed to come to the injecting room. Because we think, and I will explain that later, that there are certain rules they have to stick to, because we respect them and they have to respect us. So we are a very low threshold agency, but still it's not the street, it's the difference, and that's very important for us.

Norman Swan: How many people come through?

Anita Marxer: We counted the injections, we do it four times a week in eight hours from 2 to 10 o'clock, this week there were around 300 injections in eight hours. Which means if you counted up in a hear, it's about 90,000 injections a year.

Norman Swan: Representing how many individuals?

Anita Marxer: That's difficult to say. I think maybe 300 different people come in here, but not everybody in the same frequency you know. There are people, the very hard core of the very, very, very addicted people, they come maybe once an hour, maybe twice an hour when we are open. But it's the cocaine, I mean when people take a lot of cocaine, they consume a lot, they consume more than - because we don't have people any more who take only heroin, it's all cocktail, they mix it. And sometimes they put some Rohypnol as well in it, and then it's flying high, or rather lying flat.

Norman Swan: Let's say they've had a speedball and they're really out of it, and they leave here after half an hour, are they allowed to go into the cafeteria, or have they got to go into the street?

Anita Marxer: No, I mean sometimes they go to the cafeteria, they eat something, they drink something. Sometimes they go back in the street, they make their deal in front of the door. I mean they have to get new drugs. But sometimes they rest. Also sometimes people come here at 2, 3 o'clock and lie down on the floor in the cafeteria on a mat and sleep until 9 o'clock. I mean they're all different kinds of people here. But they can stay as long in the cafeteria, they can stay as long as they want, and also they don't have to drink anything if they don't want to, they can just come and be there.

Norman Swan: And I'm interested in the fact that they do deals at the door.

Anita Marxer: Outside the door.

Norman Swan: Yes, I understand that. But even so, that would be people's kind of worst fear for instance in Australia, is that OK it makes sense to have a shooting gallery, safe injecting room, if you want to use the less inflammatory term, but that you're going to actually have a honeypot where drug dealing is going to happen round the injecting room.

Anita Marxer: I mean there is a little bit of drug dealing going on in front of the door, but in front of our door there is no big deal. I mean there are no people around here who are not addicted themselves. So that means we call it the -

Norman Swan: Internal selling, if you like.

Anita Marxer: Yes, it's like the people among themselves, and it's also very difficult with the police, because the police in a way, it's not legal, but if they can't buy their drugs, there's no way to have an injecting room. So it's very low, the amount of drugs sold in front of the door. It's not that there is someone selling it in kilos or 100 grams, these people are somewhere else. Also we don't want the people, the clean people, the clean dealers, we don't want them in front of our door. This is all addicted people, and it's not a big scene. We have a security guard, and he's just looking that people don't inject their drugs in front of the door, it's all clean.

Norman Swan: Which was a long way of getting to the place we're in, which is the medical room, and this is just for emergencies or do you have doctors who do clinics here?

Anita Marxer: No we do, I mean we treat abscesses, I mean this is the most --

Norman Swan: Common complication.

Anita Marxer: Yes, because of the dirty drugs, abscesses. And we also give them something against their toothache, and we look how in what condition they are. Sometimes we accompany them to the hospital when we see that an abscess is very, very bad, we accompany them to the hospital as well. So we do the little things here, but when we see it's above our competence, we tell them to go to the hospital.

Norman Swan: So do you never have a doctor here?

Anita Marxer: Yes, on Tuesday evening from 5 to 6, there is a doctor coming here from the Contact Foundation. It's for one hour, and our nurses, because the team consists half of nurses and half of social workers so the nurses, they make like a selection and they say, 'Look, it would be good for you to come to the doctor.' Sometimes they come, sometimes they don't.

Norman Swan: And I should say we can't go back into the injecting room just now but there's tourniquets there and I notice things that look as if they're sitting in vinegar bottles on the powder.

Anita Marxer: That's ascorbin; they need it to -

Norman Swan: It's not antiseptic.

Anita Marxer: It's not antiseptic, it's just to --

Norman Swan: To dissolve the heroin.

Anita Marxer: Yes.

Norman Swan: Ascorbic acid.

Anita Marxer: Ascorbic acid, sorry. And the others are things --

VOICES

Anita Marxer: These are alcohol swabs, there's everything they need. You see it's quiet. If it's not quiet the workers, the men or women who work, usually it should be quiet otherwise he will look for it.

Norman Swan: Now we're coming back through the cafeteria which is now full, well almost full.

Anita Marxer: Not yet, but it's busy. But sometimes we have up to 30 people in here, so quite a lot.

Norman Swan: Do they pay for food and coffee or is this all free?

Anita Marxer: No it's not free, they have to pay for their drinks but only SFr1 for a drink and they have to pay for their meals as well because we think it's part of the concept. We don't want to give them everything on the plate you know, they have to pay something. If there are people who are definitely so poor, have no money, or who are in a very bad condition, we offer maybe a meal or something, but this we pay privately not from the Foundation. But usually they have to pay.

Norman Swan: And the people who are working behind here are social workers as well, so that you take your turn on a roster, the staff do?

Anita Marxer: Yes, we have our team consists of 16 people at the moment, eight people are social workers, eight people are nurses, and men and women is also half-half. Everybody does a service one hour or two hours in the injecting room, works in the cafeteria, does the laundry, it's all like they rotate. But important is that everybody has one turn at the injecting room.

Norman Swan: So it's evenly spread. Is that an unpopular part of the roster?

Anita Marxer: It's not unpopular, but sometimes it can be difficult because when people are in bad conditions and people are difficult, sometimes they are difficult or in a bad mood, and you have to stay there and you have to take everything directly. You can't move, I mean you're there and you are alone. I mean you can call someone, but usually it's just very difficult, because you are alone, that's why.

Norman Swan: You're feeling under stress most of the time.

Anita Marxer: Not most of the time, but I think there are days when it's more difficult than others. When somebody makes an overdose this can go very quickly. I mean this goes within seconds, and then they have a bell to ring, and when they ring the bell two people from here will run to the injecting room and help with the resuscitation.

For us, we accept the people how they are. We don't tell them to become clean, but when they want to become clean we help them to the next station. But first of all we accept them the way they are, and also they have to be, when they want to come here, they have to be older than 16 years old. And the first injection is not allowed here. This is important.

Norman Swan: How do you know when it's the first injection?

Anita Marxer: I mean people know people here, and people behave strange. I mean I don't say that doesn't happens, that it never happens, but usually you see it because of how people behave and how people are.

Norman Swan: Because you don't want this to have a reputation that this is where you got into the use of drugs.

Anita Marxer: This is written down. I mean we have a special - there was a study made by a lawyer, this was not legal to have an injecting room, so it's written there that first consumation, first injection is not allowed here, it's really forbidden.

Maybe we can go into the kitchen, it's more quiet.

Norman Swan: So we've moved into the kitchen which is a spic and span modern kitchen.

Anita Marxer: Yes it is; it's not a dump, it's a clean kitchen, yes.

Norman Swan: Tell me how long this has been going?

Anita Marxer: The idea of these kind of agencies with an injecting room came up in the mid '80s because then a lot of people were infected with HIV and they were in a very bad condition, but you couldn't find a way to talk to them. So people had the idea when you offered them the possibility to inject their drugs, you get them, you can talk to them. So 1986 the first agency in Switzerland, I think worldwide, with an injecting room opened in the city of Berne. It wasn't located here, it was located in the Old City which was sort of problematic because of the people hanging around there. This agency here is the only one we have at the moment for Berne; it opened in 1990. So for the last 12 years we have these kind of low threshold agencies.

Norman Swan: How many throughout Switzerland?

Anita Marxer: I think all over Switzerland there are about 15 with injecting rooms.We have seven in Zurich I think and one in Berne, and check all the cities, because we are the last city when you go more west, like to the Suisse Romande.

Norman Swan: Geneva doesn't have one?

Anita Marxer: No, not injecting rooms; not Lausanne, we are the last station in the west.

Norman Swan: And is that a decision of the local Canton not to do it? What's the reason?

Anita Marxer: I think the reason is, I mean they're talking about it, but it's always the same, they have the same problem that they say when you open these kind of rooms people take more drugs, and this is not true. I mean you don't change anything. If you offer them a room for a clean way to inject their drugs, maybe you give them the possibility to not infect themselves with Hepatitis C or with HIV if they get it into their heads that you need clean syringes and so on. I don't think that people take more drugs when you have injecting rooms.

Norman Swan: Do you know that, or is that just the feeling?

Anita Marxer: What you see in Switzerland that since 1990 the people who became clean and the people who started to take illegal drugs, it's always about the same, it's like a wave. So it hasn't become more people becoming intravenous addicts because of the rooms.

Norman Swan: And because Berne is the last place west with an injecting room, has Berne become a honeypot, to use the term?

Anita Marxer: I think it's not really a honeypot. We have people from Freibourg of course, because it's very close, and people from Freibourg work in Berne as well. But I don't think it's actually a honeypot, not really. We have people come in here to buy drugs and sell drugs, but it's not like --

Norman Swan: When you say 'here', you're talking about Berne rather than the injecting room.

Anita Marxer: Yes, not in the injecting room. I talk about Berne, about the city.

Norman Swan: What proportion of the city's intravenous drug using population would use this centre?

Anita Marxer: We made a survey in the street last year, and of 100 people I think, around 70 people come here regularly. So, two-thirds come regularly.

Norman Swan: What benefits do you think there have been, tangible benefits, of having this injecting room.

Anita Marxer: I think it's not only the injecting room but it's the whole agency. I think for people coming here, it's still a place where they find people listening to them. Also when they're in a very bad state I mean it's the physical condition in one way, we treat their abscesses, it's the psychic condition, where we bring them to the hospital if necessary, and I think also the injecting room is something where they are able to inject their drugs for once in a clean way, which means that maybe when they stop, when they end the career, they will have one abscess less or they will be in a better condition. That's what we do, we try to accompany them through this time of their life, and to look that they are when they stop, when they give up, that they're still like not very ill or that they have the chance to start a new life.

Norman Swan: I found it interesting earlier when you said that the sanction, the punishment for infringing your rules is not being allowed to come, which suggests that coming here is actually quite attractive for the people who attend.

Anita Marxer: I think for some people it's even important to come here. Because it's mainly the injecting room, I'm honest in that way because it's very important for the people, the injecting room. But there are people coming here, sitting here, talking to us, talking to the people who work here. I think for some people it's even important, this place here. Not for all of them, but some people live in the street. I mean it's the only way to have a shower, it's the only way to have a meal. So I think for some people it's important.

Norman Swan: And what about for the city? Because the argument in Australia, places that were thinking of having safe injecting rooms, is that 'Look, it stops people injecting in street tunnels, or around the place. It focuses on a clean place for people to do it.' Has that happened? Is there less random injecting around the city?

Anita Marxer: When we are open, of course. You can be sure. I mean you can ask the police. When we are open there are much less people in the streets. And that's it, and then our people are mostly here. This is true. That's why we get the money for it, I think. If everybody would hang around all the same, if people wouldn't come here, we wouldn't get the money.

Norman Swan: And the police attitude towards it? What's their attitude?

Anita Marxer: I think the police have learned and changed a lot. We have found a sort of a co-existence. It means that they have a different ideal of working, and they have a different philosophy. But I think they in front of the door here, they are very tolerant, I mean sometimes they really come with one open eye, one eye closed here, and I think they treat the people (normally they treat them in a, not respectful but) I mean in a decent way. And I think in the last couple of years what we also learned here is that we have to work together, not in all ways, we can't do that, but to get sort of a dialogue or a coexistence, we work more together than we did a couple of years ago.

Norman Swan: The other worry people would have would be if it was in the suburbs that you'd start getting IV drug users living round the injecting room, so that you actually have a concentration of people around that area.

Anita Marxer: It's not the case here, it's not. Because if you think that people coming here first of all, you have to, for some people it's clear, they're addicts, people know them, the police know them, but some people come here, they work the whole day. So they want to be anonymous, they don't want to be known to come here. So I don't think so. I mean in this area here, nobody lives, I mean no junkie lives in the area near here, no.

Norman Swan: How long to people manage to work here before burning out?

Anita Marxer: People don't work 100% here. We are from 50% to 80% and they work like two or three times a week in here. You can't do more, because it's a very difficult job.

Norman Swan: Given that you've seen a rise in cocaine use in the area, and therefore that means that if they're on crack, they're taking it a lot, they're taking it every hour or two as you said earlier; has that increased stress on staff?

Anita Marxer: I think sometimes it does, because the overdoses are different. I mean when you have a heroin overdose people just don't breathe any more; if you have a cocaine overdose sometimes they have paranoia, they have psychoses, they get like these epileptic fits, and sometimes they are very afraid of something, so it takes maybe one person for more than half an hour just to calm down someone. I can imagine that sometimes it puts more stress on the people who work here, yes.

Norman Swan: Does it ever become violent?

Anita Marxer: Physical violence we have very, very rarely.

Norman Swan: If I stopped somebody in the street at the Bahnhof, at the railway station, and asked them, would they know that the needle exchange existed, that this place existed? Is there much awareness of it?

Anita Marxer: I think they would now. Not everybody of course, but I think a lot of people know that this place exists.

Norman Swan: Do they mind the fact that it exists? What's the general community opinion do you think?

Anita Marxer: I think what they mind is when people hang round outside and when they inject the drugs outside. What they don't mind is when they don't see these people around any more. So it doesn't matter where they are.

Norman Swan: Out of sight, out of mind, as we say in English.

Anita Marxer: Yes, that's it, the same in German.

BUZZER

That's an overdose.

VOICES

Norman Swan: So two of the workers, as you said, have just gone off to the injecting room.

Anita Marxer: Yes.

Norman Swan: How many times a day would that occur?

Anita Marxer: Not every day. We have days when it happens three times a day, but sometimes it doesn't happen for a week. So it's different, it's very different. I mean how we work, it's not that we think that one person is addicted, once addicted always addicted. We think for many people here, it's sort of a career, sort of a couple of years, a couple of months, they go through and we know of people getting away from the drugs. I mean it's not that we think that everybody who is addicted once is addicted forever.

Norman Swan: Anita Marxer, who's Manager of what's called the Low Threshold Agency run by the Contact Foundation in Berne.

Next week, the second part of this series where we close look at Swiss heroin prescribing, and what some might think is an enlightened policy on heroin in prisons. Like us, a huge percentage of their prison population is inside for drug related offences.
Guests:

Anita Marxer
Manager of the Low Threshold Agency
run by the Contact Foundation
Berne/Switzerland

http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/8.30/helthrpt/stories/s11569.htm

Intreresting what the Needle park phenomena lead to. Anyone know how the current harm reduction regieme is and heroin Rx- if things have changed lately (Switzerland is still a wealthy nation despite whats happening in the economy of other countries.)
 
Gosh but the Swiss are sensible people. And you can see why Norman Swan is big in Oz, he's a real cobber. Not for the tl;dr set but an interesting interview, thanks as ever for posting it, jspun
 
Thanks for appreciating the article Charlie Clean. Here is some info on the pilot cocaine Rx or substitution programs (near the bottom):

http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/front/Zu...35306000&ty=st

Zurich revises its drugs strategy

Image Caption: Ten years ago, Zurich authorities were preoccupied with the open drugs scene in Letten (Keystone)Related Stories
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Ten years on from Needle Park
The city of Zurich says its pioneering drugs strategy has been a success but must now be adapted to meet other challenges.
Authorities in Switzerland’s largest city admitted on Thursday that they had been so busy tackling the open heroin scene that other areas of addiction had missed out.



The assessment comes ahead of next month’s vote in Zurich on whether to maintain the city’s heroin prescription programme.

After concentrating on the heroin problem for the past ten years, the city now wants to be more active in other areas, including encouraging the reintegration of drug addicts.

In a report entitled “Zurich city policy on drugs and addiction”, the city government analysed the results of its strategy since the end of the open drugs scene around the disused Letten station in 1994.

The report, which was demanded by the city parliament, also outlines future strategy.

“We concentrated our efforts so much on the problems linked with the open [drugs] scene that we neglected other aspects,” commented social affairs director Monika Stocker.

She added that even though the strategy had been successful, bringing about the disappearance of places where heroin was sold and injected, it had to be brought up to date.



Disappearing drug scenes
The city of Zurich has a four-pillar strategy, which includes prevention, repression, survival help and therapy.

Support, in particular, should now be given to heroin addicts across the city, said the report.

Zurich wants to put the accent on reintegration. But this is considered difficult in a climate in which companies continue to close their doors to addicts, and in which the city has SFr3.1 million ($2.46 million) less at its disposal from the canton's coffers because of cost-cutting measures.

The authorities are also going to keep a closer watch on other drugs. While heroin consumption is on the decline, the use of cocaine and ecstasy is on the increase.

Cannabis users, who have until now been under scrutiny by the police and the law, are also to be supervised more closely.



Advice centres
“In order to face the changes in consumption, advice centres have to become more multipurpose,” explained Robert Neukomm, who is responsible for health matters.

The idea is that every addict, whether a consumer of cocaine or alcohol, should be able to get advice.

“We really have to stop differentiating between legal and illegal drugs,” he explained.

Neukomm argued that new solutions had to be found for cocaine addicts who were unemployed and living on the fringe.

“For these addicts, we are at the same point as we were with heroin ten years ago,” he said. But he pointed out that Zurich could not act alone.



Pilot project
A pilot project for the distribution of cocaine under prescription is underway in the city but it is not being supported for the time being by the Federal Health Office in Bern.

However, the office is backing pilot projects in Bern and Basel distributing a substitute drug, Ritalin.

The Zurich authorities also plan to step up prevention measures with young people, particularly those who are jobless.

As far as repression is concerned, the city government is in favour of banning addicts, from certain districts, whatever their nationality, if they are a public nuisance.

swissinfo with agencies

and

Doctors push for cocaine prescription

Image Caption: Could doctors one day be prescribing cocaine? (swissinfo C Helmle)Related Stories
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A national conference on cocaine has discussed whether the drug should be prescribed to long-term addicts.
Switzerland has had a programme of heroin prescription for the most hardened addicts for ten years and some doctors believe cocaine addicts could benefit from a similar treatment.



But others have their doubts. Officials from the Federal Health Office are especially concerned about the political impact of introducing cocaine prescription.

There are an estimated 90,000 cocaine users in Switzerland. However, most of them use the drug only on a recreational basis and would not be included in any prescription programme.

The conference, which ended in Bern on Friday, brought together Switzerland’s leading addiction specialists, as well as officials from the Health Office.



" The mortality risk among [cocaine addicts] is quite high. Without treatment many of them will die in the next 10 years. "
Daniel Meili, doctor Multiple dependencies
Daniel Meili, who heads Zurich’s heroin programme, says a typical candidate for cocaine prescription would be an addict with multiple dependencies.

“Of the 150 heroin patients I have here, perhaps a third of them could also benefit from cocaine prescription,” Meili told swissinfo. “They come here to get the heroin, but they are also addicted to cocaine, which they buy on the illegal market.”

“They can spend between SFr10,000-20,000 a month to feed their habit, which means they are often involved in crime.”

Supporters of the programme point to evidence that patients on the heroine scheme have improved health and more stable lifestyles, including proper accommodation and even regular work.

But Meili says that patients who continue to be addicted to cocaine don’t reap any of these benefits.



High mortality
“The mortality risk among these patients is quite high,” he said. “Without treatment, many of them will die in the next ten years.”

But Switzerland’s Federal Health Office is not convinced that introducing cocaine prescription is the answer.

“There’s just no evidence that such a scheme would be successful,” said Markus Jann, head of the drug addiction department.

“We would be very hesitant about trying such a thing, and anyhow we have more important addictions to tackle, such as alcohol or tobacco.”

The Swiss government also feels that this is not the ideal time politically to start talking about something as controversial as cocaine prescription.

Later this month parliament is due to vote on a much-delayed revision of Switzerland’s narcotics law, which if approved, would decriminalise cannabis.

The Federal Health Office – which spent months drafting the legislation and lobbying for it – fears that a rash move towards cocaine prescription could encourage opposition to the law.

But Thomas Zeltner, the department’s director, recently said there would no legal impediment in the way of a pilot project of cocaine prescription. This is a softening of his earlier position, when he insisted cocaine would never be prescribed in Switzerland.



" We have more important addictions to tackle, such as alcohol or tobacco. "
Markus Jann, Swiss Federal Health Office Financial support
Ultimately the decision on a pilot project rests with cantonal authorities. In Zurich there is strong support for such a scheme, although officials there had been hoping for some financial support from the government.

“If Zurich wants to try, we won’t be against it,” Jann told swissinfo. “We will follow it with interest, but there’s no reason for us to finance it.”

“There are many different options for treating cocaine addiction without working with cocaine itself. We haven’t tried everything yet.”

At the conference, Zurich doctors and social workers are expected to unveil a plan for a trial project of prescription involving around 20 patients.

Half of them would be people already on heroin prescription who remain addicted to cocaine, and the other half would be very heavy cocaine users whose health is seriously at risk.

“Obviously it would run in a similar way to heroin prescription,” explained Athos Staub, president of ARUD, a group dedicated to reducing the risks of drug taking.



Party drug
“Just because cocaine is called the party drug doesn’t mean we’d be handing it out on a Saturday night. People would have to come to us and take the drug at our centre,” Staub continued.

Both Staub and Meili are insist that cocaine prescription is worth trying.

“People said ten years ago that heroin prescription wouldn’t work,” said Meili. “In fact it has helped a lot of people.”

“Over the past ten years the problems with cocaine have been getting worse, and based on what I see now, I think legal prescription of cocaine could… help people to live rather than to die.”

swissinfo, Imogen Foulkes


http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/Home/Archive/Doctors_push_for_cocaine_prescription.html?cid=3918910
 
CC,
You know about the RIOTT trials right? [See http://www.iop.kcl.ac.uk/projects/?id=10114]

So a while back I was looking into the prescribing of diamorphine to addicts and although it isn't widely used, I found out that in 2008, the treatment of addicts where all of the traditional treatments have totally failed them and they have an extremely large habit that results in them committing other crimes to fund their habit and/or are massively putting their health at risk by using the street heroin (due to vein damage thanks to impurities in the heroin found on the street) was ADDED to the drugs policy:
* UK Drugs Strategy 2008 (http://www.erpho.org.uk/Download/Public/8340/1/national-drug-strategy-2008.pdf)
In specific, the second bullet point in the right hand column on page 30 refers to this treatment of addicts with pharmaceutical heroin (diamorphine hydrochloride)

This is still a part of the 2010 strategy:
* UK Drugs Strategy (2010) (http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/publications/drugs/drug-strategy/drug-strategy-2010?view=Binary)
In specific, see page 18 in the 'Recovery is an individual, person-centred journey' section. The exact wording is "We will continue to examine the potential role of diamorphine prescribing for the small number who may benefit, and in the light of this consider what further steps could be taken, particularly to help reduce their re-offending. "

I didn't bother to clarify that it was in the 2009 strategy as I made the assumption if it was in both 2008 and 2010, it is probably also in the 2009 strategy. However, the 2009 strategy document *may* be a useful read as the information provided in the 2008 and 2010 strategy documents is a little vague and the success from the start of the trial in 2008 *may* be detailed in here (I will update this post with information on this shortly, after I make myself some food)
I haven't looked into the 2011 strategy but someone told me that it is still in there.


Also, I am currently going through addiction treatment and have been since early July. I am currently just on a maintenance program and I'm not in anyway being forced to reduce. Obviously the doctors want me to reduce but their view is that I have taken a huge step to enter treatment and if they forced me to reduce it could make me leave the treatment and move back to using street drugs.
Personally, their attitude is really good and I find it super useful. They haven't pressurised me or even as much as mentioned reductions. However, at my fortnightly check-up with the doctor... I decided that I wanted to start reducing (just slowly). So now instead of receiving 3 injectable ampoules of morphine sulphate each day... I am prescribed 2 amps and 6 tabs (6 x 20mg Sevredol).
That may not seem like a reduction and you'd kind of be correct. In terms of the actual quantity of morphine sulphate I am prescribed each day... it has increased from 180mg to 240mg.
However, I have moved from 180mg of injectable morphine to 120mg of injectable morphine and 120mg of oral (instant release) morphine.
Due to the bio-availability of morphine via the oral route... 120mg oral morphine is roughly equal to 60mg of injectable morphine.
So effectively, what I have done is replaced one of my injections with tablets that are of an equal dose.
It isn't a reduction but it is a step in the correct direction and when I feel ready again, I will make a similar change so that I only inject once a day and take the rest orally.

All this is great and I'm so happy that I did it BUT it isn't accessible to everybody as it is a private addiction clinic. With the cost of the medication and the cost to see the doctors (and a short amount of included time with a psychologist), it comes to just under £100/week (approx) or £420/month (approx).
You have to be able to prove your income to them and you have to be able to prove you can afford both the cost of treatment AND the cost of your medicine. If you can't do that, they won't take you on as a patient. Oh and benefits are not accepted. However, you can have somebody 'sponsor' you and pay for it (they would have to prove ability to pay).
It is a massive shame that it is that way and so inaccessible to most as it would help so many addicts in ways that the free drug clinics have repeatedly failed to do.
However, the fact that I am spending so much of my monthly income on the treatment helps me in two ways:
  1. it reminds me how important I feel it is to get treatment
  2. it gives me the extra drive to try and reduce and get clean as soon as possible
As soon as I have fully reduced and am down to no opiates at all... I will be using them to get a naltrexone implant (costing about £600 and lasting 3 months). That will be perfect as unless I open up my arm and remove it.... I won't be able to use gear and that will be a huge reason to not even buy any gear!
 
Wow...Thanks for sharing your story Jay, moirphine Rx is a step in the right dirction.

A long post but the link is broken. It discusses the British model and compares it to the Swiss and Asmerican:

HEROIN MAINTENANCE: IS A U.S. EXPERIMENT NEEDED?*
Peter Reuter1
Robert MacCoun2

Introduction
Methadone maintenance has repeatedly been shown as the most effective available
treatment for a large fraction of heroin addicts3. Given that fewer than half of entrants stay in the
program for as much as one year and that most continue to use illegal drugs, the disappointing
implication of that statement is that the United States has a weak armamentarium for dealing with
the problem of heroin addiction4. Given that heroin addiction appears to be very long lasting,
with so many addicts from the 1970s still frequently dependent on the drug and involved in high
risk health and crime behaviors5, it is hardly surprising that there is a continuing interest in
finding alternatives that would bring some surcease to both the user and society.
* Paper prepared for conference “One Hundred Years of Heroin”, Yale Medical School,
September 1998. This work is excerpted from our book: MacCoun and Reuter Drug War
Heresies: Learning from Other Places, Other Times and Other Vices Cambridge University
Press. Financial support for the research reported here was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation through a grant to RAND’s Drug Policy Research Center. We also have benefited
from discussion with Michael Farrell and Wayne Hall.
1 School of Public Affairs and Department of Criminology, University of Maryland; RAND.
2 Goldman School of Public Policy and Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California,
Berkeley; RAND
3 Indicative of methadone’s global reach, at least among wealthy nations of predominantly
European origin populations, the best book length review of methadone treatment is an Australian
volume: Ward, Mattick and Hall (1992)
4 For example, Hall, Mattick and Ward (1998; p.46) cite studies showing no more than 50 percent
in treatment even six months after entry. The classic study of methadone programs, showing the
wide range of services delivered and outcomes achieved, is Ball and Ross (1991).
5 Hser, Anglin and Powers (1993) report on a 24 year follow-up of a cohort of heroin addicts
recruited in 1962-1964. They found that of those interviewed in 1986, only 20 percent reported
having been heroin abstinent during the previous three years.
2
Heroin maintenance has long been one of those alternatives. Maintenance clinics were
part of the initial response to the Harrison Act and famously were shut down (a process of some
years during the 1920s) after a close fought legal battle was resolved in favor of the hawkish
Treasury. Some historians have pointed approvingly to the Shreveport and New Orleans clinics;
others have focused on the mismanaged New York clinic to suggest that they did little good and
much damage6. But the idea of providing heroin to addicts as a humane harm reduction measure
has reappeared from time to time in the US drug policy debate, and, largely because of European
developments, is moderately prominent once again in the mid-1990s.
So far attention has been on the possibility of conducting a demonstration or trial here;
immediate implementation of heroin maintenance on a large scale is not being discussed. Yet,
even the notion of a trial has been highly controversial. It is not merely drug hawks,
unsympathetic to the plight of dependent drug users, who believe this notion is both morally and
pragmatically flawed; even researchers, long involved in drug treatment and clearly very
concerned about addicts’ wellbeing, have been antagonistic. The prospects are bleak indeed.
We believe that a reasonable case can be made for a US trial. The recent Swiss trials, for
all the methodological weaknesses of their evaluation, provide evidence of feasibility and a prima
facia case for effectiveness. The downside risks of a trial in the United States seem slight and the
potential benefits substantial. However the Swiss evidence does not provide an adequate basis to
make a decision about the desirability of heroin maintenance as a policy option in the US.
Extrapolating from foreign experiences is difficult in any field of social policy and it is easy to
identify characteristics of programs, patients and context that render the Swiss trials weak
evidence for projecting what would happen here. Hence, the need for US based trials.
That is not to say that the critics are without a case. Some issues can be resolved without
a field trial. Heroin maintenance raises fundamental normative concerns; for some these trump
6 Musto (1987: Chapter 7) provides a good account of the operation of these clinics and the
3
any possible public health gains. Swiss pragmatism and American idealism may derive different
conclusions from one set of results about the effects of providing a highly addictive drug to those
who already crave it. In this paper, we identify some ethical issues, generally resolving them in
favor of allowing for the possibility of adopting heroin maintenance if it proves to be
substantially better than other modalities for a significant fraction of America’s 600-800,000
heroin addicts. There are also important political arguments that have been raised as objections to
a heroin maintenance trial; we see those as having more power. Finally, we consider
programmatic arguments, identifying the limits of small scale experiments to answer fundamental
questions.
The next section provides a brief review of Britain's long experience with heroin
maintenance, highlighting the fact that British doctors have made very little use of their right to
provide the drug in the last quarter century. The following section summarizes the
implementation of the Swiss field trials and describes the reaction to it, in Switzerland, the US
and elsewhere. That is followed by a discussion of normative and political issues. Finally, we
identify the potential for a heroin trial in the US.
The British Experience
In a 1926 report, the blue-ribbon Rolleston Committee concluded "that morphine and
heroin addiction … must be regarded as a manifestation of disease and not as a mere form of
vicious indulgence, Thus, if repeated attempts to withdraw a patient from cocaine or heroin were
unsuccessful, "the indefinitely prolonged administration of morphine and heroin (might) be
necessary (for) those (patients) who are capable of leading a useful and normal life so long as
they take a certain quantity, usually small, of their drug of addiction, but not otherwise." (as
quoted in Stears, 1997; 123). This led Britain to adopt, or at least formalize, a system in which
physicians could prescribe heroin to addicted patients for maintenance purposes (Judson, 1973).
federal efforts to close them.
4
With a small population of iatrogenically addicted opiate users (numbering in the hundreds) the
system muddled along for four decades with few problems (Spear, 1994).
The system was not very controversial through most of that period. When the Tory
government in 1955 considered banning heroin completely, in response to international pressures
rather than because of any domestic complaints about the system, the British medical
establishment fought back effectively and the government eventually abandoned the effort.
However, in detail the incident seemed to say more about the power of the medical establishment
and its dedication to physician autonomy than about the success of heroin maintenance (Judson,
1973, pp. 29-34).
Then, in the early 1960s, a very small number of physicians began to prescribe
irresponsibly and a few heroin users began using the drug purely for recreational purposes,
recruiting others like themselves (Spear, 1994). The result was a sharp proportionate increase in
heroin addiction in the mid-1960s, still leaving the nation with a very small heroin problem; there
were only about 1500 known addicts in 1967 (Johnson, 1975). In response to the increase, the
Dangerous Drugs Act of 1967 greatly curtailed access to heroin maintenance, limiting long-term
prescriptions to a small number of specially licensed drug-treatment specialists7. General
practitioners were not unhappy to be rid of the responsibility for dealing with a population of
long-term patients who were difficult to manage and showed only modest improvements in health
over the course of treatment.
Addicts could now be maintained long-term only in clinics. At the same time oral
methadone became available as a substitute pharmacotherapy. British specialists proved as
enthusiastic about this alternative as did their US counterparts, though initially they did not
7 The British have long complained about foreign descriptions of their system and in particular
the nature of the 1967 changes (Strang and Gossop, 1994). The nuances of a system largely
dependent on informal social controls are difficult to capture. Pearson (1991) provides a succinct
version; Stimson and Oppenheimer (1982; Chapter 6) provide a fuller account. For current
practice, see Strang et al. (1996).
5
expect long-term maintenance to be the norm and injectable methadone played a significant role.
The fraction of maintained addicts receiving heroin fell rapidly. By 1975, just 4 percent of
maintained opiate addicts were receiving only heroin; another 8 percent were receiving both
methadone and heroin (Johnson, 1977). That reluctance to prescribe heroin remains true today;
less than 1 percent of those being maintained on an opiate receive heroin (Stears, 1997). The
strong and continued antipathy of British addiction specialists to the provision of heroin is a
curious and troubling phenomenon for those who advocate its use8.
British research on the efficacy of heroin maintenance is quite limited. One classic study
(Hartnoll et al., 1980) found that those being maintained on heroin did only moderately better
than those receiving oral methadone. "[W]hile heroin-prescribed patients attended the clinic
more regularly and showed some reduction in the extent of their criminal activities, nevertheless
they showed no change in their other social activities such as work, stable accommodation or diet,
nor did they differ significantly in the physical complications of drug use from those denied such
a prescription" (Mitcheson, 1994; p.182). There was moderate leakage of heroin from the trial;
37 percent of those receiving heroin admitted that they at least occasionally sold some of their
supply on the black market. An important factor in explaining the relatively weak results for
heroin maintenance may have been the effort to limit doses; the average dose received by the
patients, who had to bargain aggressively with their doctors, was 60 mg. of pure heroin daily9.
Mostly though there has been indifference in Britain for the last twenty-five years. This
may in part reflect the much greater cost of providing heroin to a maintained patient; NHS
reimbursement rules make this more difficult for the practitioner. The claims of one British
practitioner (John Marks, operating in the Liverpool metropolitan area) as to the efficacy of
heroin in reducing criminal involvement aroused controversy and hostility but little curiosity in
8 Trebach (1982; Chapter 7) provides an interesting account of why the shift to oral methadone
occurred, emphasizing the discomfort of medical personnel with supporting the act of injection
itself.
6
the British establishment. Observers from other nations, including Switzerland, were more
interested (Ulrigh-Votglin, 1997).
The Swiss Heroin Maintenance Trials
The Zurich government had attempted to deal with the city’s severe heroin problem in the
mid-1980s by allowing the operation of an open-air drug market behind the main train station.
The Platzpitz was intended to minimize the intrusiveness of drug markets and to allow the
efficient delivery of services, such as syringe exchange, to those who needed it. The city closed
the Platzspitz in 1992 as a consequence of the migration of large numbers of heroin users from
other parts of Switzerland and its sheer unsightliness (MacCoun and Reuter, forthcoming;
Chapter 12).
Zurich authorities still sought an innovative approach and in January 1994 they opened
the first heroin maintenance clinics, part of a three year national trial of heroin maintenance as a
supplement to the large methadone maintenance program that had been operating for at least a
decade. In late 1997 the federal government approved a large scale expansion, potentially
accommodating 15% of the nation’s estimated 30,000 heroin addicts (AAP NEWSFEED,
December 25, 1997).
The motivation for these trials was complex. Two federal officials (personal
communication) suggested that it was partly an effort to forestall a strong legalization movement.
In their view the Swiss citizenry were unwilling to be very tough about enforcement but were also
offended by the unsightliness of the drug scene. Heroin maintenance was likely to reduce the
visibility of the problem, arguably an important consideration in Swiss drug policy. A 1991
survey found that only about 10 percent favored police action against all drug users but 57
percent favored suppression of open drug scenes (Gutzwiller and Uchtenhagen, 1997). For other
9 On the struggles between patient and doctor see Edwards (1969)
7
policy making participants, it was an obvious next step in reducing the risk of AIDS, which was
very prevalent among IV drug users in Switzerland.
The decision was taken after very public consultations at the highest levels. An unusual
“summit meeting” was held, at which the Swiss president10 and the heads of the cantonal
governments approved an experiment to test whether heroin maintenance would reduce heroin
problems. Public opinion was generally supportive; in a 1991 poll, 72 percent expressed approval
of controlled prescription of heroin (Gutzwiller and Uchtenhagen, 1997)11. The experiment was
widely discussed in the media before implementation. An elaborate governance structure was
established, including very detailed ethical scrutiny by regional ethics officers (Uchtenhagen et al,
1997). As an example of the care that was taken to protect the public health, enrollees were
required to surrender their drivers license, thus reducing the risk of their driving while heroin
intoxicated. Similarly, it was decided that once the government has provided heroin addicts with
the drug, it incurred a continuing obligation to maintain those addicts as long as they sought
heroin.
The original design involved three groups of patients receiving different injectable
opiates: 250 receiving heroin, 250 morphine and 200 methadone. The early experience with
morphine was that it caused discomfort to the patients and it was abandoned. Patients were
reluctant to accept injectable methadone. As a consequence the final report focused on injectable
heroin.
Participants in the trials were required to be at least 20 years old, to have had two years of
intravenous injecting and to have failed at two other treatment attempts. These are hardly very
tight screens. In fact most of those admitted had extensive careers both in heroin addiction and in
10 The Swiss presidency is not such an august position, being occupied in six month rotations by
each member of the 7 person cabinet elected by parliament. Nonetheless, the president does
represent at least temporarily the leadership of the federal government.
8
treatment; for example, in the Geneva site the average age was 33, with 12 years of injecting
heroin and eight prior treatment episodes12.
A decision to allow addicts to choose the dose they needed was critical; it removed any
incentive to supplement the clinic provision with black market purchases and eliminated a
potentially important source of tension in the relationship with clinic personnel13. A patient could
receive heroin three times daily, 365 days of the year14. The average daily dose was 500-600
milligrams of pure heroin, a massive amount by the standards of US street addicts15. Faced with
no constraint with respect to the drug that had dominated their lives and which had always been
very difficult and expensive to obtain, patients initially sought very high doses. However they
quickly accepted more reasonable levels that still permitted many of them to function in every
day life, notwithstanding the relatively short acting character of heroin16.
The patient self-injected with equipment prepared by the staff, who could also provide
advice about injecting practices as they supervised the injection. A daily charge of 15 Francs (ca.
$10) was charged to participants, many of whom paid out of their state welfare income. No
heroin could be taken off the premises, thus minimizing the risk of leakage into the black market.
11 Interestingly, the same survey found a noticeable increase in the percentage opposing
controlled prescription between 1991 and 1994 (from 24 to 30 percent); this was a period when
the trials were being debated publicly.
12 As of this writing, only one document describing the full three year multi-site evaluation has
been published. It is an 11 page "Summary of the Synthesis Report", which provides little
quantitative detail. Hence we use here more detailed data from specific sites.
13 British doctors prescribe less than one third of this on average.
14 Some patients were permitted to inject more than once in a single session.
15 At $1 per milligram, a low street price in recent years outside of New York, that would amount
to $500-600 per day in heroin expenditures alone. The actual figure is about one tenth of that.
16 Interesting comments on these dynamics are provided by Haemmig (1995). “People in the
project tend to take too much of the drug. Many seem to have a concept that their only real
problem in life is to get enough drugs. In the projects, for the first time in their lives, they can
have as much as they need. In the course of time it gets depressing for them to realize that they
have problems other than just getting enough drugs.” (p.377)
9
Initially enrollment in the trials lagged behind schedule but after the first year enthusiasm
among local officials increased sharply; consequently the trials ended up enlisting more than the
initial targets and in a greater variety of settings than expected. Small towns (e.g., St. Gallen) and
prisons volunteered to be sites and were able to enroll clients. Nonetheless some sites, such as
Geneva, were never able to reach their enrollment targets (Perneger et al., 199.
The project certainly demonstrated the feasibility of heroin maintenance. By the end of
the trials, over 800 patients had received heroin on a regular basis without leakage into the illicit
market. No overdoses were reported among participants while they stayed in the program. They
had ended up choosing dosage levels that allowed them to improve their social and economic
functioning17. A large majority of participants had maintained the regime that was imposed on
them, requiring daily attendance at the clinic. For example, in Geneva 20 out of 25 patients
received heroin on more than 80 percent of treatment days (Perneger et al., 199.
Outcomes were generally very positive; we address the question of the appropriate
controls below. Retention in treatment, a standard measure of treatment success, was high
relative to rates found in methadone programs generally; 69 percent were in treatment 18 months
after admission18. About half of those recorded as drop-outs in fact moved to other treatment
modalities, some choosing methadone and others abstinence based modalities. One observer
suggested that having discovered the limitations of untrammeled access to heroin, these patients
were now ready to attempt quitting. Crime rates were much reduced as compared to treatment
entry; self-reported rates fell by 60 percent during the first six months; this was supported by data
from official arrest records. Self-reported use of non-prescribed heroin fell sharply and the
percentage with jobs that were described as "permanent" increased from 14 percent to 32 percent
and unemployment fell from 44 percent to 20 percent. Self-reported mental health improved
17 The Geneva site reported that they reached stable dosages within the first month.
10
substantially. Only three new HIV infections, probably related to cocaine use outside of the
clinics, were detected. One interesting finding is that though many addicts were able to detach
themselves from the heroin subculture, they were unable to develop other attachments. Given
their weak labor force performance and estrangement over previous decade from non-addicts, this
in retrospect is hardly surprising but points to the long-term challenge for psycho-social services.
Cocaine use remained high during heroin maintenance.
The evaluation carried out by the Swiss government was led by Ambros Uchtenhagen, a
leading Swiss drug treatment researcher. The trial design, primarily a comparison of before and
after behavior of the patients and lacking a well-specified control group (Killias and Uchtenhagen
1996) limited the power of its findings. In the absence of a control group or random assignment,
the natural metric for assessing the program was the success of methadone programs with similar
patients, yet the heroin maintenance trial participants also were targeted with substantially more
psycho-social services than the typical methadone patient. Critics asked whether the claimed
success was a function of the heroin or the additional services (Farrell and Hall, 199. The
evaluation relied primarily on self-reports by patients, with few objective measures.
Only at the Geneva site was there random assignment between heroin and other
modalities19. As compared to the controls, experimental subjects in Geneva were substantially
less involved in the street heroin markets, were less criminally active generally and showed
improved social functioning and mental health. On a number of other dimensions the two groups
did not differ, though both improved; drug overdoses, precautions against AIDS and overall
health status. Unfortunately the meticulous evaluation of that site was limited by a small sample
size (25 in the experimental group and 22 controls) -- which biases analyses against rejecting the
18 Eighteen months was chosen as the assessment period because only a modest fraction had
entered treatment more than 18 months before the agreed upon termination date for the trials as
such.
19 Two sites apparently ran double blind studies but no results have yet been reported for those
sites.
11
null hypothesis of “no difference”-- and a lack of detail on the treatments received by the
controls.
It is difficult to know what is an appropriate control group to use for assessing these
results in even a crude sense. The Swiss trials involve experimental programs which are likely to
be undertaken by the higher quality program operators with more staff esprit and to be
administered with greater fidelity than routine methadone maintenance. Possibly it is most
appropriate to compare their outcomes with those of methadone when it was a new
pharmacotherapy in the early 1970s. Hall, Mattick and Ward (1998?) note in the same spirit that
programs which participate in Randomized Control trials of methadone maintenance show
substantially higher retention rates than other programs.
Unsurprisingly, heroin maintenance turned out to be far more expensive than methadone
maintenance. It required three times daily attendance and provision of injecting equipment, while
methadone is dispensed typically on a three times a week basis, with take-homes being allowed to
most experienced patients. Moreover the Swiss researchers report that it has, so far, been
expensive to provide sufficient quantities of pure heroin, given that there has previously been
only a tiny legitimate market for the injectable form. The evaluators estimated total daily cost per
patient per day at about 50 francs ($35), roughly twice the daily cost for a standard methadone
programme. Though the initial estimates are that the benefits per day of enrollment are 96 Swiss
francs (including only savings on criminal investigations, jail stays and health care costs), this
hardly settles the matter of whether these additional costs are justified, particularly since most of
the benefits accrue to a different government sector.
The Response
Since political considerations are so central to this issue, we briefly describe here the
response engendered by the Swiss trials both at home and abroad.
12
Domestically the trials became the focus of the two wings of Swiss opinion, which used
the very open referenda process20. One group (“Youth Without Drugs”) obtained enough
signatures to place on the ballot a measure that would “exclude further controlled prescription
experiments and methadone, end attempts to differentiate between soft and hard drugs and focus
prevention programmes on deterrence only.” (Klingemann, 1996; p.733). Shortly after the
launching of the Youth Without Drugs initiative, an opposing group was created (with a
cumbersome name [“For a reasonable drug policy – tabula rasa with the drug mafia”]),
advocating a new Constitutional article stating that “the consumption, production, possession and
purchase of narcotics for individual use only is not prohibited.” They also obtained the 100,000
signatures necessary for putting their proposal on the ballot.
The federal government opposed both initiatives. In the vote on the abstinence initiative
in September 1997, almost four years after the “Youth without Drugs” group had gathered their
signatures, 70 percent of voters were against the proposition21. This strong majority provided
important support for the government in its decision on extending the trials into a second phase.
A second referendum on the legalization initiative was handily defeated in November 1998.
The heroin trials also proved controversial internationally. The International Narcotics
Control Board, a UN agency which inter alia regulates the international trade in legal opiates,
very reluctantly authorized the importation of the heroin required for the trials (Klingemann,
1996). The INCB required, when approving the initial importation of heroin, that the Swiss
government agree to an independent evaluation by the World Health Organization but that
evaluation had still not appeared by December 1998, even though the trials themselves were
completed in December 1996 (McGregor, 199.
20”The Swiss vote in more referendums than anybody else. Each year they are asked three of four
times to take part in national votes – not to mention referendums in the cantons and communes..”
The Economist, October 17, 1998; p.58
13
The INCB expressed its concern about the proposed expansion of the trials (INCB,
199. Its officials used unusually strong language for a United Nations agency, especially when
dealing not with a pariah country such as Afghanistan or Burma but a veritable bulwark of
international respectability, the home of the World Health Organization among many UN
agencies. The director general of the INCB said “Anyone who plays with fire loses control over
it.” He also claimed that it would send “a disastrous signal to countries in which drugs were
produced”; these nations were asking why they should cut back cultivation “when the same drugs
were being given out legally in Europe.” The Board's annual report more diplomatically regretted
the proposed expansion of the scheme before the completion of the WHO evaluation.
The Swiss trials sparked interest in other wealthy nations. The Dutch government
committed itself to launch a trial of injectable heroin for purposes of addiction maintenance
(Maginnis, 1997). This came after almost fifteen years of inconclusive discussions about such
trials, following a rather murky episode in which the Amsterdam municipal health authority had
attempted to maintain about 40 addicts on morphine (Derks, 1997). That Switzerland was willing
to take on the disapproval of the international community was undoubtedly helpful in pushing the
Dutch government to launch a trial involving 750 addicts.
In Australia, the trials also helped spark interest in a feasibility study in Canberra, which
has a substantial heroin addiction problem (Bammer and McDonald, 1994). Only the personal
intervention of the prime minister in 1997, overriding a decision by a council of state and federal
ministers, prevented the study from moving to the next pilot stage. There have been expressions
of interest from Denmark as well.
21 An earlier referendum confined to Zurich and focused merely on the continuation of funding
for the pilot scheme was also approved by over 60 percent of the vote (Associated Press “Swiss
Voters Approve Heroin Distribution Programs”, December 1, 1996)
14

Heroin Maintenance in The United States (post 1950)
Surprisingly, there was some discussion of a heroin maintenance trial during the period
1950-1970, when heroin dependence was a fairly invisible, and probably minor problem. Indeed
in 1957, the Interim Report of the joint Committee on Narcotic Study of the American Medical
Association and the American Bar Association recommended exploring the possibility of an
experiment in outpatient heroin maintenance (Bayer, 1976). However the most significant
episode of modern times occurred in the early 1970s, near the height of the US heroin epidemic,
when serious consideration was given to a trial of heroin maintenance in New York City. Though
the incident occurred 25 years ago, it is worth briefly describing because it illustrates the
continuity, perhaps even stagnation, of drug policy debates22.
The Vera Institute, then a young but already well respected social policy research
institution with its roots primarily in criminal justice, initiated plans to test heroin maintenance in
the United States, having been impressed by the apparent success of the British in keeping its
own heroin addict population to manageable numbers23. It proposed a pilot program for New
York City in which heroin would be provided to addicts for an initial period of perhaps three
months, before switching them to methadone or an abstinence regime. The rationale was to use
the heroin as a means of persuading recalcitrant addicts to enter programs. If a first batch of 30
patients performed well in this regime, then a second set of 200 patients would be selected and
randomly assigned to either the same regime or to methadone maintenance. Only then would a
large scale implementation be tried.
Though far from a long-term heroin maintenance scheme, this generated extremely
hostile reactions from all quarters. Harlem's Congressman Charles Rangel said: "t is
22 A lengthy informal description, emphasizing the politics, can be found in Judson (1973;
pp126-140).
15
imperative that we dispel some of the myths about the British system of drug treatment so that the
American people will open up their eyes and recognize heroin for what it is--a killer, not a drug
on which a human being should be maintained…" The head of the predecessor agency to DEA
asserted: “t would be a virtual announcement of medical surrender on the treatment of
addiction and would amount to consigning hundreds of thousands of our citizens to the slavery of
heroin addiction forever." Vincent Dole, one of the two developers of methadone, published a
Journal of the American Medical Association editorial attacking the notion on many grounds,
such as the impossibility of finding stable doses or the implausibility that a small scale
demonstration could establish the feasibility of providing services to 250,000 heroin users. Even
the reliably liberal New York Times published negative stories, for example citing a Swedish
psychiatric epidemiologist as suggesting "you could easily get up to three or four million addicts
in five years. Heroin maintenance? Only those who don't know anything about addiction can
discuss it."24
Each of these critics could be discounted for representing a specific interest group or bias.
Rangel represented the most hard hit population group, African-Americans, who had a deep
suspicion that drugs were being employed to reduce black anger following the urban riots of the
late 1960s. Law enforcement agencies are notoriously conservative. The researcher responsible
for developing a substitute medication for heroin was hardly likely to be an enthusiast for
returning to the original drug. Sweden was, as a nation, harshly anti-maintenance, even against
methadone. But with so many different enemies, ultimately the proposal had no friends. It
simply disappeared.
23 Judson reports that originally a Vera research group had viewed the British maintenance
regimes as unsuccessful and had projected very large increases in the number of addicts. When
those increases were not realized, they changed their view of the British programs.
24 All cites taken from Judson (1973, pp.131-132).
16
A few years later the National League of Cities considered endorsing trials of heroin
maintenance in several cities. After much debate, the NLC reaffirmed its support for such trials
but as Senay, Lewis and Millar (1996) report "thereafter the topic receded into obscurity" (p.192).
They also report that later research proposals died either because of scientific review, which
David Lewis (a participant in the original Vera proposal) thought was correct25 or, in one case,
because the NIDA National Council (intended to advise the institute on policy issues) overruled a
scientific panel.
In the United States political reaction to the recent Swiss trials was illustrated by hearings
held by a House subcommittee.26 The Subcommittee called as witnesses from Switzerland two
doctors with long records of hostility to both needle exchange and heroin maintenance. One
(Ernst Aeschbach) was on the board of the "Youth without drugs" group, the principal group
responsible for an initiative to end heroin prescribing (chapter 12). The other (Erne Mathias)
asserted that there was a conspiracy, initially supported by the East German or Soviet intelligence
agencies, to create narco states in Europe; Switzerland had been targeted when the Netherlands
acquired too controversial a reputation. Most members, both Democratic and Republican, were
delighted with the Swiss witnesses, who were supported by two hawkish US witnesses who also
condemned the trials. Sample comments included: “Giving away free needles or doctor-injected
heroin is simply, ….a fast track to moral corruption and the first step towards genuine
disintegration of public security.”27 No Swiss researcher or official associated with the trials was
given an opportunity to testify.
25 Charles O’Brien, a member of the review committee, confirms that the proposals failed on their
scientific merits.
26 The National Security, International Affairs and Criminal Justice Subcommittee of the House
Government Reform and Oversight Committee.
27 Congressman Hastert (R-Ill.), [elected Speaker in 1999] introducing the hearing. Readers
unused to reading Congressional statements should be warned that they are often inflammatory.
However, even by contemporary Congressional standards, these seem extreme.
17
Still the proposal recurs. David Vlahov, a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of
Public Health proposed once again in 1998 to undertake a trial.28 The usual chorus of
disapproval was instantaneous. Maryland's Democratic governor said: "It doesn't make any
sense. It sends totally the wrong signal." The Lieutenant Governor expanded on this slightly.
"It's much better to tell young people that heroin is bad. This undermines the whole effort." Even
Mayor Kurt Schmoke, a leader in liberal drug policy, distanced himself from the proposal and
censured his health commissioner for endorsing it. It was also reported that "many addiction
experts say funding for traditional drug treatment falls far short of the demand, and heroin
maintenance is a dubious distraction from proven remedies for drug abuse."29
Considerations for Deciding on a United States Trial
Perhaps the principal accomplishment of the Swiss trials was simply to show that heroin
maintenance is possible, a matter which previously had been in question. For example, Kaplan
(1983) doubted the feasibility of even an experiment in heroin maintenance, raising a host of
possible objections, from community rejection of sites at which addicts could be found nodding
off (p.175) to heroin diversion by employees. At least in the context of a wealthy, well-ordered
society, the Swiss have shown that it is possible to maintain large numbers of otherwise chaotic
addicts on this drug in a way that the community finds acceptable and without any dire
consequences to the health and safety of the community or participants. Indeed, the addicts'
ability to operate in society appears to have been enhanced.
Normative Issues
Feasibility is not desirability. Heroin maintenance has a contradiction at its heart. Having
chosen to prohibit the drug, society then makes an exception for those who cause sufficient
damage, to themselves and society, as a consequence of their violation of the prohibition.
28 "Test of heroin maintenance may be launched in Baltimore" Baltimore Sun 10 June 1998
29 All quotes from "Heroin maintenance quickly stirs outrage" Baltimore Sun 12 June 1998
18
Society's decision is only to set the damage level that entitles a user to access. It can require that
an addict cause a lot of damage in order to gain access; that is expensive (in terms of crime and
health risks) and inhumane. However if the barrier is set low, then access to heroin becomes too
easy and the basic prohibition may be substantially weakened.
Linked to that is a revulsion against the government itself providing the prohibited drug.
A purely private market would probably raise far fewer objections but is implausible. The
impoverished condition of so many American heroin addicts and society's desire to require that
the drug be provided in the context of other services aimed at helping them overcome problems
other than the addiction itself mean that the state will certainly have a central role in the funding
and regulation of heroin maintenance, if not in its provision. Thus the innovation is more
disturbing than merely removing a restriction on the right of private provision.
We present this as a normative argument distinct both from the political issue of whether
such a role can obtain popular support and the related argument that heroin maintenance would
reduce the effectiveness of the basic prohibition by "sending the wrong signal" (MacCoun, 199.
The state has moral as well as programmatic purposes; providing a prohibited substance that has
caused so much harm will appear to some as normatively inconsistent, no matter what benefits it
yields. Similar normative concerns are often voiced about the inconsistency of current policies
toward alcohol, tobacco and other drugs, though to little effect.
In highlighting this problem, we should also identify a potential misunderstanding. There
might be a concern that "normatively inconsistent" messages will lead to increased drug use and
drug-related harms; if so, it can be answered empirically, and the Swiss trials and possible U.S.
trials becomes relevant. On the other hand, the view that inconsistent government messages are
intrinsically undesirable (irrespective of their consequences) is a purely normative matter that no
empirical study can address.
Heroin maintenance presents other conceptual problems. Providing heroin in accord with
the desires of the patient may allow for the delivery of psycho-social services that do indeed assist
19
the addict in dealing with his or her problem. But a case can be made that heroin maintenance of
itself is social policy not medicine; indeed, the INCB's objections to authorizing the shipments of
opiates to Switzerland emphasized just that. Arguably, interventions that blur the boundaries
between social policy and therapeutic treatment exploit and perhaps weaken the bonds of
legitimacy and trust that underpin the medical relationship.
These are issues that can be addressed without an American field trial. For some decision
makers these are troubling considerations that might nonetheless be waived if it were shown that
the reductions in disease and crime were large enough. But other decision makers might feel that
there are no findings of efficacy that could surmount the obstacles presented by these moral
concerns—though it should be noted that similar objections against methadone largely gave way
in the face of overwhelming evidence of reduced criminality, morbidity, and mortality.
Political Considerations
Another class of concerns that vitiate the need for a trial is political. Methadone
advocates and researchers express a concern that heroin maintenance would undermine public
support for maintenance therapy more generally, in particular for methadone. New York Mayor
Giuliani’s August 1998 attack on methadone maintenance for its failure to move addicts to
abstinence30 is a reminder of how thin is the foundation of public understanding on which those
programs rest, notwithstanding that he backed away from this position six months later. After all
it was only ten years ago that the White House Conference on Drug Abuse (198 produced a
report which opposed methadone maintenance. A population which doubts the morality of
providing a relatively unattractive narcotic such as methadone is likely to be extremely skeptical
about providing the demonized heroin. If it were offered, then methadone maintenance might
come under renewed attack.
30 New York Times August 1998 Details
20
Wayne Hall (personal communication) argues that in Australia the controversy over a
small scale heroin maintenance trial in Canberra has given new ammunition to those who oppose
both methadone maintenance and needle exchange. It is easy to caricature the idea of heroin
maintenance and that caricature rubs off on programs that have similar goals, to reduce drug
related problems without simply persuading or forcing addicts to quit habit forming illegal drugs.
Moreover the claim of a heroin “crisis” that served as justification for taking a trial seriously may
have backfired by supporting calls for greater toughness in a country which sometimes waves the
banner of harm reduction over its drug policies.
A related political argument focuses on the allocation of research resources. The budget
for treatment innovations is limited; one can reasonably question whether, given the political
obstacles to heroin maintenance, the marginal dollar should go into trials of a program that is
unlikely to be implemented. This is certainly a conservative view of social innovation generally.
A research program on heroin maintenance is clearly a long-term effort. Predicting the political
climate for maintenance ten years from now is a very risky enterprise.
Moreover the Swiss experience demonstrates is that in a wealthy society which values
order and sobriety it is possible to build a base of popular support for heroin maintenance.
Switzerland is a somewhat paternalistic society and its citizens may be less troubled by some of
the normative issues discussed here, though there is little positive evidence to support that.
Sigelman (1986) describes a welfare system which is mixed in this respect. The United States is
at the opposite end of that particular spectrum, with its ideology of individualism and distaste for
state support generally. But this poses the political question in a more positive light; what one
can learn from Switzerland about how to build popular support for a heroin maintenance trial.
Programmatic Concerns
National stereotypes are an important consideration in the argument for a US trial.
Americans see Switzerland as a fairly homogenous and orderly society, where program operators
can be trusted and even heroin addicts are probably given to following rules. Though Swiss
21
addicts in fact have high rates of criminality, they are (like European addicts and criminals
generally) vastly less violent than their American counterparts. The kind of fraud that has
characterized the US methadone industry from time to time is at least not reported and not raised
as a serious problem even by methadone opponents. Thus the need for a demonstration to
determine whether inter alia American program operators could be monitored and coerced
effectively enough that diversion would be a minor problem and whether American addicts would
be capable of meeting the demands imposed by a three times a day clinic attendance.
Such a trial could also be structured to answer a charge of some critics that heroin
maintenance is simply not an important policy innovation because it will bring in few addicts not
currently in treatment (Farrell and Hall, 199. The initial Swiss recruitment difficulties suggest
that few addicts will enter heroin maintenance programs, no matter how attractive they sound in
theory. For example, the Geneva site found that only one member of the control group entered
the heroin program when access was provided. Conducting the trials in smaller cities, where they
could reach a significant proportion of the total heroin addict population, would permit
assessment of their attractiveness.
Ironically, evidence that puritan critics are incorrect in claiming that these programs
amount to providing chocolate to chocolaholics is that they are not attractive enough to the
intended clients to make much of a difference. The programs can be effective and immoral or
ineffective and moral. The maintenance regime, with its highly routinized provision of the
mythologized drug in a sterile environment, may fall betwixt and between for most heroin
addicts. It takes the glamour from the drug that has dominated their lives, without providing any
cure for their addiction. Some informal inquiries among Zurich addicts early in the trial elicited
the response that heroin maintenance was a program for “losers” (Hall, personal communication).
It may do little more than improve the performance of a small fraction of those who would
otherwise choose methadone but prove erratic participants in that modality. The second stage
expanded Swiss program will help answer that question.
22
Even if the evaluation results hold up on tighter inspection and heroin outperforms
methadone in terms of improving health and reducing crime among participants, some important
empirical questions about population effects may remain unanswered. The Swiss evaluation has
been patient focused. This elides one of the basic concerns of opponents, namely that broad
availability of heroin maintenance will increase the attractiveness of heroin use or even of drug
use more generally. Answering that question requires more than pilot programs, since it is
precisely a function of scale. Evaluations of small-scale pilot projects have inherent limits, a point
made by Vincent Dole (1972) in the context of the Vera initiative. Again, that argues for trials in
a smaller city where experimental programs might have observable population effects.
It is worth noting though that large-scale expansion of heroin maintenance, if it
substantially reduces addict involvement in heroin use and selling, may also have the benign
effect of making heroin less accessible to new users. Markets are now primarily supplied at the
retail level by long-term addicts; if these mostly withdraw, then non-addicted users, particularly
experimenters, may have difficulty finding a regular source with substantially shrunken street
markets.31
One can argue that the reduction in harmfulness might make heroin use more attractive
(see MacCoun, 199. In particular, someone who initiates with black market heroin when heroin
maintenance is available might reason that if she does become dependent, her habit will be
supported by doses of predictable purity and potency, at a modest price, from a reliable and safe
source. At the margin, this is possible, though it is hard to imagine someone with the
foresighteness to reason this way who would knowingly choose to become "enslaved" to a drug,
no matter the source. Moreover, such a person would have to knowingly accept the substantial
risks of using black market heroin for a period of years before becoming eligible for a
31 Treatment also has this effect, drawing from markets individuals who are both users and
sellers, thus simultaneously affecting demand and supply. For an analysis of this phenomenon
see Caulkins et al., 1996
23
maintenance program. One might also argue that heroin maintenance would reduce the
likelihood that an addict would become abstinent. We find this compelling in the abstract, but the
argument loses some of its force when one considers the remarkably long duration of heroin
"careers" in the current system (e.g., Hser, Anglin, & Powers, 1993). At any rate, such
prevalence-increasing effects might be counterbalanced by the substantial reduction in black
market access that would result when current addicts stop frequenting (and running) those
markets.

Conclusion
The harshness of reactions in the international community to the Swiss trials illustrates
the difficulty faced by nations interested in testing harm reduction innovations. Whereas Dutch
coffee shops, the other much disapproved of harm reduction innovation, could arguably be
viewed as undercutting the sovereignty of neighboring countries because of drug tourism, the
Swiss heroin maintenance programs were clearly restricted to that nation's own citizens. Rather
than enthusiasm about the promising findings of the trials, the undoubted weaknesses of the
evaluation were seized on for accusations of irresponsibility. There was no recognition that
current policies, in particular the tough enforcement of prohibitions, have a much thinner research
base supporting them. Aggressive crack-downs, even if they have no demonstrable benefits and
highly visible harms in terms of increased violence, get no such international condemnation.
What is so striking here is that all this hostility is engendered not by a policy idea but
simply by a proposal to conduct a demonstration or trial. Clearly there are serious ethical issues
to government provision of a prohibited drug. Though it is not precisely a slippery slope, heroin
maintenance goes further down a path started by methadone maintenance and needle exchange,
two programs we endorse heartily. We confess to some squeamishness about heroin
maintenance. It is easier to feel than to articulate the qualitative breakpoint between it and the
other two programs. Needle exchange and methadone maintenance each help the addict meet her
need in a safer way. Methadone maintenance does so in a way that is less pleasurable than heroin
24
but that is not true of needle exchange. But providing a full rather than an empty needle seems a
substantial step, perhaps because needles of themselves are so often seen as benign, the source of
cure rather than illness. One can object to facilitating pleasure on either consequentialist or
deontological grounds; we explore these matters in our forthcoming book.
Even some of the empirical objections cannot readily be answered through a small scale
trial in a very large city. But it is still difficult to account for the indignation and the willful
misrepresentation of foreign experiences (Britain in the 1970s; Switzerland in the 1990s). If a
substantial percentage of current heroin addicts were to participate, which is by no means certain,
heroin maintenance would result in large gains in health, social functioning and criminal justice
costs.
We return to our initial point. Society's tools for alleviating the problems of heroin
addiction are weak. Heroin maintenance offers some prospect of helping. It is worth serious
consideration, certainly more than the hasty dismissal that it routinely receives from so many
participants, researchers included.

http://www.publicpolicy.umd.edu/facu...aintenance.pdf
 
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JayridleyII, thanks about your experience with morphine maintenaince!, please share other strories of HR Euro style (or Canadian Insite for that matter). Anyway, love to hear the stories. The second to last post was long but full of info.
 
Alitlle from "Foreign Drug Scenes abut the history and evolotution of the Frankfurt scene:

Some info on the drug scene in Frankfurt.

The open drug scene has an interesting history there. The first open air scene was established at a park nick named "Haschweise" in the inner city belt of parks at which, as the name suggests, cannabis was the drug with highest availability. A hard drug scene evolved through the 70s centered on heroin. This scene was chased around the city during this period until it finally settled in the area in and around the main station in 1981. The drug scene became centered on a park in this area, where it was to remain through the 80s. The scene grew through assimilation of narco refugees fleeing repressive policies in other parts of Germany at the time. In 1990 the Frankfurt Resolution was formulated in Frankfurt which was a significant development in harm reduction in Europe- serious students of harm reduction have probably heard of this. It is around this time, i believe, that crack, long a peculiarity of the Frankfurt scene, first began to make an apperance. In 92' the open scene was again closed down by authorities and this time spread to and took root in various parts of the city and its suburbs simutaneously, akin to smacking a behive with a stick- oops. At this point harm reduction, as opposed to Gestapo style crackdowns, began to seem like a seriously good strategy to authorities.

Some background (for people with well managed ADD):

http://www.rusmiddeletaten.oslo.komm...uttrapport.doc

http://www.uni-frankfurt.de/fb/fb04/...oring_2005.pdf


Today- although I have not been there first hand lately and could not provide specific info of where to cop even if I knew (per BL rules and regulations) keep certain things in mind:

1.) The main station has a crack smoking room and safe injection room either in the station or nearby.

2.) Central stations are usually a good place to look in my experience (though have'nt been to Europe since 96').

3.) Red light districts are often though not always associated with drugs- sometimes area adjacent to district. Park outside Victoria red light district in Athens stands out in my mind.

4.) Street hookers are often a great resource in many countries!!!

5.) If you read the heorin helper article: news. The type of info that bluelight discourages- like where to go and cop drugs- media sources freely disclose, although by the time that info makes it to newspapers police crackdowns are probably imminent because the police are forced to respond by the good citizens of the area in question. Often, though, scenes reconstitute in days to weeks after the crack down in the same place or nearby.

6.) Avoid open scenes around election time. xth & mi--ion in San Francisco was historically a good example of election time crackdowns

From my perspective it is good to know right where to go in the interests of harm reduction first and for most. I consider lessening your chances of getting arrested, ripped off, or killed harm reduction.
 
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