Pubdate: Thu, 08 Feb 2007
Source: BBC News (UK Web)
Copyright: 2007 BBC
Website: http://news.bbc.co.uk/
Author: Simon Cox
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)

NHS HEROIN 'WILL PROTECT WOMEN'

Earlier this week the first funeral took place of one of the five 
young women killed in Ipswich while working as prostitutes.

The deaths of Ipswich prostitutes raised concerns over the link 
between sex workers and drugs

All had been supposedly working on the streets to help finance an 
addiction to heroin and crack cocaine.

Their deaths led to calls for heroin to be widely prescribed on the 
NHS as a way of stopping drug addicts becoming prostitutes.

On a cold night in Ipswich's red light district, Janine is working.

She is selling herself in order to buy drugs, specifically heroin and 
crack cocaine.

It's the same for all of the other prostitutes she knows. She says: 
"I can't name one girl who doesn't have a drug habit who works the streets."

Society will have to think about whether they want this treatment to 
be available and whether they are prepared to pay for it  Dr Emily 
Finch, Maudsley Hospital

Before the killings Janine was making almost UKP200 a night. All of 
it would be spent on drugs "apart from a phone credit and a packet of fags".

The heroin also helps her to do the work as, "it just numbs your emotions".

Her friend and fellow heroin user, Paula, the mother of a young baby, 
doesn't work as a prostitute but has watched many of her friends end 
up on the streets.

"I have seen girls do things for crack (cocaine) they would never 
dream of doing otherwise", she says.

'Daily dose'

Ten years ago Erin O'Mara, who lives in north west London, was in the 
same position as Janine.

To finance her habit she began working in the sex industry, initially 
as an escort. As her addiction developed she couldn't keep to any routine.

Many prostitutes work to get money to pay for drugs such as heroin

"When you have got a habit the drugs come first and if you don't have 
them by the time you start your shift you can't do it. That's why a 
lot of girls end up working on the street."

Erin no longer works as a prostitute but she does still take heroin. 
After 20 years on the drug she has tried every kind of treatment. Now 
she is part of a select group of drugs users who get their heroin on the NHS.

At a chemist near her flat there are several other addicts there 
collecting methadone prescriptions.

Methadone is synthetic heroin substitute and is the tried and trusted 
route for heroin addicts trying to kick the habit.

Erin is getting the real thing. The chemist is expecting her and 
hands over a bag containing her daily dose of pharmaceutical heroin. 
She has been doing this every few days, week in, week out, for the 
last four years.

She says: "You've got a measured dose, you know exactly how much 
you're taking and you can function perfectly well on it."

Her speech is a little slurred and she seems a little woozy but 
getting heroin on the NHS has given her stability - she now has a job 
and a flat.

"I felt like I was trapped on this treatment nightmare. Now that I 
get my heroin prescribed, all that anxiety has gone."

Control

Erin is a special case. She is HIV positive and has had Hepatitis C 
so it's vital she doesn't share needles.

Currently just over 1% of heroin users in the UK, around 400 people, 
get their heroin in this way.

Each one costs the taxpayer around UKP10,000 a year.

In spite of this, some policy makers and police would like to see a 
lot more people being prescribed heroin.

Tom Lloyd, the recently retired Chief Constable of Cambridgeshire 
says heroin on the NHS could dramatically cut the cost of drug relate 
crime and improve the lives of heroin users.

"If they were allowed to have heroin under controlled circumstances 
then that chaos would be taken out of their lives, they could get 
their lives sorted out."

'Huge improvements'

This is exactly what's currently happening in three areas in Britain 
where trials are being conducted into prescribing heroin on the NHS.

Users don't get it at their local chemist like Erin, but have to go 
to a centre to take the drug under strict supervision.

The trials have only been running for a year but Professor John 
Strang, director of the National Addiction Centre, says the early 
results are promising.

"Our strong clinical impression is we are seeing huge improvements 
which we would not ordinarily have seen."

The stiffest opposition to wide scale heroin prescribing comes from 
Professor Strang's own colleagues within the medical establishment.

Will suit 'a minority'

At his private GP practice in Felixstowe in Suffolk, Dr John McMurray 
has been dispensing methadone to heroin users for many years.

He says giving heroin to patients, even heavily addicted users like 
Erin O'Mara, could end up killing them.

"What you needed to feel perfectly OK yesterday if you use today 
could be sufficient to kill you".

Even those campaigning for heroin on the NHS say it will only be 
suitable for a minority of heroin users.

That could still mean up to 25,000 addicts being given free heroin. 
The bill for the NHS would be around UKP375m.

Dr Emily Finch is a consultant psychiatrist in addiction at the 
Maudsley Hospital, one of the sites conducting trials into heroin prescribing.

She says it won't be up to doctors to decide whether the scheme 
should be rolled out: "Society will have to think about whether they 
want this treatment to be available and whether they are prepared to 
pay for it."

The Investigation: Heroin On The NHS will be broadcast on Radio 4 at 
2000 GMT on Thursday 8 February.

You can also listen online for 7 days after that at Radio 4's Listen again page.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman