Swiss back heroin prescription for addicts

By Katie Reid

ZURICH (Reuters) - Swiss voters on Sunday backed a scheme allowing heroin addicts to obtain the drug under prescription, angering conservatives who believe crime will rise as result.

Some 68 percent voted in favor of the prescription program that was already approved by parliament, making permanent an experiment that has been in place since 1994.

The referendum was instigated by the right-wing Swiss People’s Party (SVP), which wanted to overturn parliament’s decision.

Advocates of the program say that allowing addicts to be prescribed heroin makes them less likely to turn to crime to pay for their habit and that the treatment can lower mortality rates.

Opponents of the scheme say it has done little to encourage users to give up heroin.

Switzerland’s cities were plagued with drug problems in the 1990s, but drug-related crime has declined and addicts’ health has improved due to government health plans.

“The people have confirmed that the conditions of the 90s, with open drug scenes in all towns, must belong to the past,” the Social Democrats said in a statement.

The Green party also welcomed the result.

But the SVP said it was disappointed with the outcome, saying that the law failed to make abstinence its goal.

“The new legal framework will favor the drug mafia and will lead to new, open drug scenes and make the jobs of the police and justice departments even more difficult,” the party said in a statement.

“Several thousand drug addicts are not capable of working anymore and live off social help and disability insurance.”

Addicts have to fulfill strict criteria before being allowed to take part in the program, the Swiss Federal Council said in a document published before the referendum.

At the beginning of 2008, nearly 1,300 addicts were being prescribed heroin out of 26,000 undergoing treatment, many of whom were receiving the synthetic substitute methadone.

“Heroin-assisted treatment (HAT) is designed to help severely dependent heroin users who have fallen through the net provided by other treatment options,” the Federal Department of Home Affairs said on its website.

In another referendum on Sunday, the Swiss rejected the decriminalization of cannabis, with 63 percent voting against an initiative that was supported by the Social Democrats and the Green party.

(Editing by Mark Trevelyan and Angus MacSwan,)

Source

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Related Posts:


By Lucy Hornby BEIJING (Reuters) - China’s efforts to combat the spread of AIDS among drug users is being undermined by its harsh treatment of drug addicts, Human Rights Watch warned in a report Tuesday. Injecting drugs is one of the main causes of new HIV infections in China, which has helped drive more funding and attention

Full Post: Crackdown on drugs hurts China AIDS fight: report
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Mica Rosenberg MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Drug violence, including decapitations and grenade attacks, has killed some 4,500 people in Mexico this year but thousands of others are falling victim to a quieter crisis: addiction to methamphetamine. Mexico is now the largest producer of methamphetamine for the U.S. market and traffickers have recently found a growing number

Full Post: Mexicans catch meth habit in shadow of drugs war
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ZURICH (Reuters) - Novartis AG will license a program of vaccines from U.S. group AlphaVax against cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections, which can cause disability in newborn babies, the Swiss drugmaker said on Monday. The deal includes vaccines to prevent Helicobacter pylori infections, a major cause of gastritis that can lead to gastric cancer, and another potential immunization

Full Post: Novartis licenses vaccine candidates from U.S. group
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

By Bappa Majumdar NEW DELHI (Reuters) - HIV/AIDS infections will spread like “bushfire” in parts of India if the country fails to check a spike in the number of intravenous drug users, the United Nations AIDS agency said Thursday. India has the world’s third highest caseload with 2.5 million infections. It has an estimated 200,000 intravenous drug

Full Post: Injecting drugs threaten India’s AIDS fight : U.N.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The odds are high that a woman who is prescribed an “anticholinergic” drug to relieve urinary incontinence or other lower urinary tract symptom will discontinue the medication not long after starting it, a study suggests. This is true regardless of the class of medication used. Two examples of anticholinergic drugs that

Full Post: Drug adherence poor in women with urinary trouble

Site Navigation

Most Read

Search

Contact

  • kinwrite.com@gmail.com