Pubdate: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 Source: El Pais (Spain) Contact: (Spanish language LTEs only) Website: http://www.elpais.es Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/966 Author: Rafael Mendez and E. De Benito Translation by: Robert Sharpe Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n792/a02.html ANDALUCIA TO PROVIDE PRESCRIPTION HEROIN TO LONG TERM ADDICTS The Ministry Of Health Will Have To Authorize "Compassionate Use" Of The Drug On A Case By Case Basis Heroin as medicine. The Council of Andalucia is formally requesting permission from the Ministry of Health to administer the drug to a group of addicts in Granada as if it were an experimental medicine. The Council's decision is based on the clinical research with heroin it has undertaken, which shows that heroin maintenance improves health twofold over methadone in long term addicts who have not been able to give up the drug. The Health Ministry will have to authorize compassionate use of the drug on a case by case basis, but the formal request puts the Ministry in an awkward position. The department run by Elena Salgado has until now opted to turn a blind eye to heroin maintenance. The Andalucian Council's Director of Drug Addiction, Andres Estrada, explained to this newspaper yesterday: "We will request heroin distribution to persons who need it on a case by case basis. Medically supervised maintenance can be a way out for addicts." The government's Council of Equality and Social welfare does not intend to extend the clinical research the PP (Partido Popular) government approved in 2003 after delaying it for years. Instead, heroin will be considered "medicine in an experimental phase." "The results of the clinical research have been positive and we will ask the Ministry for compassionate use as we would with any medicine," Estrada added. The Andalucian Executive will make use of the 1993 royal clinical trial decree, which defines compassionate use of a medicine administered to "select patients, following clinical research, of products in the final phases of research." The Andalucian researchers have already finished their research and concluded that heroin maintenance improves physical health 2.5 times as much as methadone and have published the results in the Journal of Abuse Treatment. Additionally, patients treated with heroin break the law less and have improved social situations. They have gone down from injecting themselves in the streets from 25 times a month to eight. Crimes have gone from 11 a month to one. There have been similar studies in Holland, Switzerland and Germany, all with similar results. The objective is not to cure addiction in patients with poor health and years of use, but rather to improve their state, bring them into the health system, reduce delinquency, avoid infections and reduce the use of adulterated street drugs. It Starts in Granada The Council has developed a protocol which, beginning in February, will make it possible to group long term addicts who have tried getting off drugs with methadone and failed and have "infectious diseases (like AIDS or hepatitis) and psychiatric problems," according to Estrada. One by one, based on their clinical history and with medical authorization, the Council will request authorization from the Ministry of Health to use the drug as medicine. The Council will begin with addicts in Granada, where they have the infrastructure in place, and expect to enroll roughly 50 heroin addicts. "This is not for a lot of people because heroin in Andalucia is very restricted and in many cases this treatment comes too late for those who are already dead," according to Estrada. Two years ago the Council requested compassionate use for the 36 patients who participated in their clinical trials. The Spanish Agency for Medicine, which falls under the Health Ministry, gave the patients authorization to continue receiving the drug for life as the doctors considered that heroin maintenance had been good for them. In reality, any doctor in any part of Spain can request compassionate use of heroin for a patient, based on the Andalucian research, but until now none have requested it. The Council's decision will force the Health Ministry to take a public position on heroin maintenance. Since the pilot research was completed in 2004, the Ministry has limited itself to stating they are analyzing the research results and will evaluate them the first trimester of the coming year. "It has to be done with caution, because this is a very delicate subject," said the Ministry spokesperson. The extension of heroin maintenance treatment constitutes a rejection of Carmen Moya, the government director of the National Drug Plan. She has affirmed that, unless the research proves otherwise, current policies (needle exchange and methadone), are enough to help addicts get better. Estrada assures that he has already informally communicated to the Ministry of Health the intention of broadening the compassionate use of heroin: "They told us to send them the cases and they will study them." Health authorities will have trouble denying compassionate use requests if the cases involve addicts similar to those who participated in the clinical research. If they have already approved compassionate use, how can they deny it now? Thus heroin, discovered in 1883 and used widely since then, will be considered in Spain as an experimental medicine. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek