Pubdate: Sun, 10 Jul 2005
Source: Independent on Sunday (UK)
Copyright: Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/208
Author: Sophie Goodchild, Home Affairs Correspondent

BRAIN REPROGRAMMING TO 'CURE' ADDICTS

A Childhood Vaccine Against Addiction And Drug-Impregnated Clothing 
Are Part Of Scientists' Visions Of The Future

The brains of drug users and alcoholics should be "reprogrammed" to 
cure them of their addictions, according to leading scientists.

This is among the controversial proposals to be put before ministers 
by experts commissioned to investigate how scientific breakthroughs 
will affect society in the future.

They predict that doctors will be able to help men and women hooked 
on drugs to unlearn their life-threatening habits by altering the 
human body's neuro-transmitters, which carry messages around the brain.

Other radical ideas to be put forward this week include clinicians 
being able to use anti-addiction vaccines to inject children who are 
at risk of becoming smokers or drug users. Childhood immunisation 
would provide adults with protection from the euphoria that is 
experienced by users, making drugs such as heroin and cocaine 
pointless to take.

Such vaccinations are already being developed by pharmaceutical 
companies and are expected to become commercially available within a 
matter of years. The British biotechnology firm Xenova, for example, 
has carried out trials on an anti-cocaine virus that have produced 
encouraging results.

Drug addiction costs the country UKP12bn a year, according to 
official figures, and the Government is eager to find new ways of 
halting this spiralling problem. Cigarette smoking and alcohol misuse 
are huge causes of premature death.

A national immunisation programme to curb drug addiction is one of 
the proposals to have emerged from the Foresight programme, which was 
set up by the Department of Trade and Industry and is led by science 
minister Lord Sainsbury. The aim of the programme, which includes the 
Brain Science, Addiction and Drugs project, is to predict how new 
technologies and discoveries might affect society in 20 years' time.

Mood-enhancing prescription drugs will be in the future be available 
"off-label", that is, without clinical need, according to other 
research. The country's leading brain experts conclude that drugs 
that can improve intelligence and memory will become increasingly 
available for people who do not have a medical problem but who want 
to be more effective at work and in their daily lives.

These drugs include Modafinil, which is prescribed for narcolepsy - a 
medical disorder where people fall asleep without warning - but has 
also been used by defence agencies to help troops stay awake during 
long missions.

Another is Ritalin, which is currently prescribed by doctors to 
children and adults who have disorders that make them disruptive and 
hyperactive but is already being used illicitly by students before 
exams to help them concentrate.

Another prediction from the Foresight programme is that 
pharmaceutical companies may develop new ways of delivering medicinal 
drugs and legalised pleasure-enhancing drugs directly into the 
system, through impregnated clothing.

The Department of Health stressed that the findings would not be 
adopted necessarily as government policy but would form a valuable 
document that ministers could refer to when planning new strategies.

A spokeswoman said: "We hope that these findings will give us 
guidance about what could possibly happen in the future and give us 
some guidelines about how we can respond to certain issues like addiction."

The brains of drug users and alcoholics should be "reprogrammed" to 
cure them of their addictions, according to leading scientists.

This is among the controversial proposals to be put before ministers 
by experts commissioned to investigate how scientific breakthroughs 
will affect society in the future.

They predict that doctors will be able to help men and women hooked 
on drugs to unlearn their life-threatening habits by altering the 
human body's neuro-transmitters, which carry messages around the brain.

Other radical ideas to be put forward this week include clinicians 
being able to use anti-addiction vaccines to inject children who are 
at risk of becoming smokers or drug users. Childhood immunisation 
would provide adults with protection from the euphoria that is 
experienced by users, making drugs such as heroin and cocaine 
pointless to take.

Such vaccinations are already being developed by pharmaceutical 
companies and are expected to become commercially available within a 
matter of years. The British biotechnology firm Xenova, for example, 
has carried out trials on an anti-cocaine virus that have produced 
encouraging results.

Drug addiction costs the country UKP12bn a year, according to 
official figures, and the Government is eager to find new ways of 
halting this spiralling problem. Cigarette smoking and alcohol misuse 
are huge causes of premature death.

A national immunisation programme to curb drug addiction is one of 
the proposals to have emerged from the Foresight programme, which was 
set up by the Department of Trade and Industry and is led by science 
minister Lord Sainsbury. The aim of the programme, which includes the 
Brain Science, Addiction and Drugs project, is to predict how new 
technologies and discoveries might affect society in 20 years' time.

Mood-enhancing prescription drugs will be in the future be available 
"off-label", that is, without clinical need, according to other 
research. The country's leading brain experts conclude that drugs 
that can improve intelligence and memory will become increasingly 
available for people who do not have a medical problem but who want 
to be more effective at work and in their daily lives.

These drugs include Modafinil, which is prescribed for narcolepsy - a 
medical disorder where people fall asleep without warning - but has 
also been used by defence agencies to help troops stay awake during 
long missions.

Another is Ritalin, which is currently prescribed by doctors to 
children and adults who have disorders that make them disruptive and 
hyperactive but is already being used illicitly by students before 
exams to help them concentrate.

Another prediction from the Foresight programme is that 
pharmaceutical companies may develop new ways of delivering medicinal 
drugs and legalised pleasure-enhancing drugs directly into the 
system, through impregnated clothing.

The Department of Health stressed that the findings would not be 
adopted necessarily as government policy but would form a valuable 
document that ministers could refer to when planning new strategies.

A spokeswoman said: "We hope that these findings will give us 
guidance about what could possibly happen in the future and give us 
some guidelines about how we can respond to certain issues like addiction."
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