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This is your gateway to numerous informative sites on the web - just click on the links to get you there, then click the "back" button on your browser to bring you back here. You can Search the Blogsite for articles from the past in the box at the top, or you can go to the bottom and click on "Older Posts", or bottom right under my picture for articles in previous months...... go on, you know you want to.....

Friday 29 February 2008

Personal News


Your scribe is about to undergo a seismic change in his work: I will continue as the RCGP Drug Training Lead in the South West, but have resigned from 30 years as a GP, 15 years in Clouds House and 5 years as Trust Specialist to the Wiltshire SDAS, to take up a new challenge in Somerset.


This means that Clouds House needs a new doctor - if any of you would be interested, please contact them kirby.gregory@actiononaddiction.org.uk - they are marvellous people to work for and the work is fascinating.

The New Drug Strategy


Well it is here - the "new thinking" from the DoH. The Daily Mail hacks have already subverted the key messages with cheery messages for their readers that promise to get the junkies off their backsides by removing their benefits if they "fail" their treatment.... oh dear.

Anyway, give it a read, you can be linked over to the documents by clicking here.

Friday 1 February 2008

Should Heroin Be Prescribed?


This debate is featured in the BMJ Jan 12 2008, you may like to give it a read. Notwithstanding the considerable cost, and the complexities of supervised injecting and diversion, the experience from studies in Switzerland and Holland have revealed a range of benefits to justify a limited place in our already limited range of treatment options.

Professor Neil McKeganey, never one to shirk controversy in the addiction treatment policy arena, gave his characteristically forthright view that we should not be contemplating this option: “If you can not stop addicts committing crimes to fund their drug habits, then, so the argument goes, the next best thing is to provide them with the drugs thatt are the reason they are committing crimes in the first place. The logic may seem faultless, but at the back of your mind is the nagging question – is this treatment, or is it social problem prescribing?”

My own view is that it is probably both, and in the spirit of harm reduction, I would defend a limited place for diamorphine prescribing, albeit not by me. But my “nagging doubt” is that this is a further step down the road of the medicalisation of drug dependency – a further tacit acquiescence to addiction being some sort of disease that actually reinforces the misguided belief that drugs are needed - rather than their use being a symptom of a more fundamental malaise.

But give it a read – it is thought provoking.