Pubdate: Sun, 08 Feb 2009
Source: Baltimore Sun (MD)
Copyright: 2009 The Baltimore Sun Company
Contact:  http://www.baltimoresun.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/37
Author: Kelly Brewington
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?131 (Heroin Maintenance)

FOUNDATION FINDS SUPPORT FOR CLINICAL HEROIN PROGRAMS

Giving Drug To Addicts Could Reduce Crime, Some Say, But Critics Call 
Method Costly, Dangerous

A new study done for Baltimore's Abell Foundation concludes that 
programs that give heroin to hard-core addicts can reduce crime and 
improve public health - findings some hope will spur renewed debate 
about whether such an effort could help combat the city's unrelenting 
drug problem.

Peter Reuter, a drug policy expert at the University of Maryland, 
College Park, analyzed heroin maintenance programs in Switzerland, 
the Netherlands, Germany and Vancouver, Canada. He found some 
positive results. In Germany, for instance, participants were less 
likely to commit crimes, and in Switzerland, many addicts moved from 
the heroin distribution program to drug treatment aimed at helping 
them kick their habit.

While Reuter notes there are drawbacks as well - including high costs 
and low rates of participation - he says public health officials and 
city leaders should at least discuss the concept.

"It is a sensible innovation to consider," he said. "I am not a 
passionate advocate for it, but I do think someone should try it in 
the U.S. It has enough plausibility that it's worth trying."

But the issue raises thorny moral and legal questions and is 
politically contentious. Baltimore officials call the report 
unconvincing and say they would not consider the option, especially 
when proven treatments go underfunded.

"I think it would be a mistake to pursue an expensive and unproven 
idea when we need more resources for effective drug treatment," said 
Dr. Joshua M. Sharfstein, the city health commissioner. "There's 
nothing that persuades me to invest in something that is so expensive 
and without evidence."

Heroin maintenance programs seek to lure addicts into treatment, not 
act as a replacement for it, Reuter said. Some researchers believe 
that once addicts are removed from the drug lifestyle, they can 
realize the need for help.

Medical professionals treat addicts like patients, distributing doses 
of heroin in a sterile, clinical setting. In the Netherlands, where 
the drug is largely smoked, heroin is distributed in small groups. 
Users remain at the centers while intoxicated but must leave once 
they have recovered from their dose. In Switzerland, drug users must 
have failed several treatment options to be accepted into a heroin 
maintenance program. They also receive weekly counseling sessions and 
help finding jobs and housing.

Reuter found that the programs helped lead to a modest decrease in 
crime and spurred some addicts to seek treatment. In Germany, trials 
done from 2002-2006 measured the average number of days a participant 
was involved in crime at the start and end of the 12 month program. 
The average dropped from 15.6 days to 2.5.

In Switzerland, a 2001 study followed up with 2,000 addicts who had 
left a heroin maintenance program. It found that about 60 percent of 
them sought treatment. Of those, 60 percent went into a methadone 
program and 40 percent into an abstinence program.

Reuter says Baltimore's large number of aging addicts might be 
especially good candidates for heroin maintenance.

Among the programs' shortcomings, he said, is that they enroll a 
small number of addicts - in Switzerland, just 5 percent of the 
estimated total. Also, crime declines in the Netherlands were small, 
not any better than with a good methadone program. Heroin maintenance 
is expensive and tends to cost more than methadone treatment, Reuter 
said, though it might reduce health care and other costs in the long run.

Some addiction specialists think Baltimore should at least consider a 
clinical trial.

"Do I think it would be interesting? In a controlled clinical trial 
setting, yes," said Susan Sherman, an epidemiologist with the Johns 
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health "To me, it's also important 
to have a public dialogue, regardless of the outcome. It forces 
people to deal with really hard issues about drug use and drug users."

Other addiction specialists agreed that a trial is worthwhile but 
said adopting such a program might not be feasible.

"Most studies clearly show they help," said Dr. Christopher Welsh, 
assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Maryland 
medical school. "But using public funds to fund something like this 
would be a whole other level of politics, especially in this economy."

Still, Welsh said heroin maintenance could benefit society in the 
long run by helping stave off overdoses, HIV/AIDS, hepatitis and 
serious heart valve infections that come from needle usages. "That 
can require six to eight weeks in the hospital with antibiotics," he 
said. "We are paying for that."

But Dr. Peter Beilenson, a former Baltimore health commissioner, said 
he worries a discussion would sideline practical attempts at reform.

"It's not like everything has been tried and everything has failed 
and you just throw up your hands," said Beilenson, who is now Howard 
County's top health official. "The problem is if you are going to do 
any reasonable drug policy reform, this heroin thing is such a red 
flag that it takes all the attention away. It makes it look like 
anyone who is interested in drug policy reform is crazy."

He should know. Eleven years ago, he was blasted for his tacit 
support for a heroin maintenance research study being considered at 
Johns Hopkins. He nearly lost his job. The clinical trial never 
happened. Even his boss, then-Mayor Kurt L. Schmoke, opposed heroin 
maintenance. A decade earlier, Schmoke had prompted criticism for 
suggesting that drugs are a public health problem, not a matter of 
criminal justice.

Looking back, Schmoke said heroin maintenancewas worthy of a trial, 
but he feared it would result in political failure. "Without the kind 
of discussion that the Abell Foundation is trying to encourage, it 
would simply be too shocking to the public to get approved."

Beilenson says the issue is still too politically sensitive. "Anyone 
who even talked about it would be vilified," he said.

Politics isn't the only stumbling block. Legally, the federal 
government would have to allow heroin to be imported to the U.S. 
Others believe giving addicts illegal drugs is morally wrong and only 
serves to further their addiction.

Sharfstein said the cost would not be worth any potential benefit. 
Rather, treating addicts with methadone and buprenorphine does work, 
he said. He also took issue with the study's characterization of the 
city's heroin problem. "We have seen a substantial decline in drug 
overdoses over the last decade, particularly for heroin; that was not 
mentioned," he said.

Robert C. Embry Jr., Abell Foundation president, said he isn't 
advocating for heroin maintenance but that hopes to inform the public 
on another approach to the heroin problem. "It's a very complicated 
and difficult question that should be continually discussed and 
challenged," he said.
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