Pubdate: Wed, 18 Jun 2003 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2003 Guardian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: David Brindle TOUGH LINE ON DRUG INJECTION PRINCIPLES Tight restrictions have been set in the first official guidance on prescription of injectable heroin and methadone for hard-core drug users. The potentially controversial guidance was issued by the national treatment agency (NTA) last Friday, as the government reshuffle dominated news agendas. But the guidelines - for specialist doctors - are worded with painstaking care and stress repeatedly the limited nature of their application. "The message for specialist clinicians is that, yes, injectable heroin and injectable methadone have a role to play in the treatment of drug misuse - but it's a limited role and one that needs to be developed very carefully," says John Strang, chair of the NTA's heroin expert group and head of the National Addiction Centre. The guidance was foreshadowed last month by David Blunkett, home secretary, who accepted that "radical thinking" was needed to engage hardened drug takers. But he said he expected no dramatic increase in the number of patients prescribed heroin - currently just 440. Although heroin prescription for oral use "is and will remain" the most clinically appropriate form, the NTA asserts, injectable medication "may be appropriate for a minority who fail to benefit from oral maintenance programmes". Injectable medication is "potentially more risky both for the patient and the public and should only be considered by a specialist and if there are adequate services in place, including supervised consumption of medication until the patient has stabilised", the NTA says. The guidance lays down eight principles to be observed in connection with any prescription of injectable heroin or methadone. These include provision of an integrated care package for patients, so that injection is not sanctioned in isolation, and that other options are explored fully. Priority should be given to improving the effectiveness of prescription for oral use, the guidelines say. On monitoring of injection, the guidance states: "Injectable drugs may present more risk of overdose than oral preparations, and have a greater street value on illicit markets, and hence may require greater levels of supervision." Paul Hayes, NTA chief executive, says the guidance represents only part of an overall strategy to improve treatment for drug users. "Treatment is not just about prescribing a substitute drug. It's about the full range of services - including counselling, in-patient care, prescribing and aftercare." Roger Howard, chief executive of charity Drugscope, says: "We welcome the NTA guidelines on heroin prescription and hope that they will lead to the situation found in other countries where, when other treatments have failed, there is an increase in users potentially being prescribed heroin." The guidance is at: www.nta.nhs.uk - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart