Pubdate: Wed, 15 Apr 2015 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Helen Branswell Page: A8 PRESCRIBE HEROIN TO ADDICTS WHO CAN'T KICK HABIT: PROF An addictions expert at the University of B.C. is renewing the argument for prescribing heroin to addicts who have tried and failed to kick their habits. Dr. Martin Schechter says there is a small subset of heroin addicts who have tried to quit but cannot succeed using traditional methods such as detox programs or methadone treatment. Schechter says giving these people access to heroin in treatment, rather than leaving them to find it on the street, is better for them and for society. He says if they remain untreated they may end up contracting HIV or other diseases from sharing needles. They are often in and out of hospital emergency rooms and sometimes resort to sex work or crime to raise money for drugs. Schechter says six randomized controlled trials in Europe and Canada have shown that heroin-assisted treatment is more effective for this group of addicts than conventional therapies. But he says political opposition to the idea of giving addicts drugs prevents doctors from treating people in this manner. "The real problem is not that we don't know what to do, because the science is very clear about the benefits for this particular sub-population (of addicts). The problem is political," says Schechter, a professor in UBC's school of population and public health. Schechter's commentary is published in the medical journal BMJ, which asked him to write an article addressing the issue. Schechter was the principal investigator of a trial conducted in B.C., which randomly assigned persistent addicts to receive either prescribed heroin or standard treatment. That trial found those on prescribed heroin used fewer illicit drugs and were involved in less crime. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt