Should heroin be prescribed to addicts?

Jan 11, 2008

In this week’s BMJ experts debate whether heroin should be prescribed to addicts who are difficult to treat.

Maintenance treatment with heroin is appropriate for heroin misusers under certain circumstances, argue Jürgen Rehm from the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto and Benedikt Fischer from the University of Victoria, British Columbia.

They point to trials in Switzerland, the Netherlands and Germany, which found heroin assisted maintenance treatment feasible and effective for those resistant to treatment. They also found it to be cost effective compared with methadone maintenance treatment.

In the UK, heroin has also been a treatment option for heroin misusers for several decades, but the practice remains controversial.

So, if maintenance treatment is generally justifiable, why should heroin not be used as one such pharmacological agent, they ask"

One reason that has been cited is safety, both for the patient and for the general public. Yet results from the Swiss studies show that mortality among patients in heroin assisted maintenance programmes is low, and lower than for patients in other maintenance programmes.

Overall, say the authors, we see no convincing reason why heroin assisted maintenance treatment should not be part of a comprehensive treatment system for opioid dependence.

But Neil McKeganey, Professor of Drug Misuse Research at the University of Glasgow argues that prescribing heroin to heroin addicts is treating the effects of misuse not the addiction.

The evidence in relation to heroin prescribing is far from conclusive, he says, while the cost of treating an addict with heroin is estimated to be three to four times that of treating an addict with methadone.

Prescribing heroin to heroin addicts is also a risky strategy, which could lead to massive pressure on doctors to prescribe increasing amounts of the drug.

Research has shown that with the right services in place it is possible to do more than simply stabilise addicts’ continued drug use through the prescribing route, writes McKeganey. For example, a Scottish study found 29.4% of addicts who received residential rehabilitation were abstinent for at least 90 days compared with only 3.4% receiving methadone maintenance.

Other research has found that most addicts want services to help them become drug free. Health services therefore need to ensure that they are supporting addicts’ attempts to become drug free, and they need to be extremely cautious about any extension of a policy that could be seen as a route to maintaining rather than reducing an individual’s drug dependency, he concludes.

Source: British Medical Journal

Explore further: Survey points out deficiencies in addictions training for medical residents

add to favorites email to friend print save as pdf

Related Stories

Addicts helped by implanted devices: study

Oct 12, 2010

Persons addicted to heroin or prescription pain killers can get help kicking their habit by using an implanted device under the skin that delivers small doses of medication, researchers reported Tuesday.

Cocaine and heroin harm placenta

Jun 11, 2009

Cocaine and heroin increase permeability of the placenta. Researchers writing in BioMed Central's open access journal Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology have shown that exposure to the drugs causes an increase in the ...

Recommended for you

People on higher incomes are happier with new knees

May 21, 2013

Knee replacement surgery is a very common procedure. However, it does not always resolve function or pain in all the recipients of new knees. A study by Robert Barrack, MD and his colleagues from the Washington University ...

New search engine finds rare diagnoses

May 21, 2013

Doctors are trained to think "common disease" when they meet patients in their practices, and as they rarely or never meet a rare disease, it often takes many years to reach the right diagnosis. A new search tool called FindZebra ...

User comments : 2

Adjust slider to filter visible comments by rank

Display comments: newest first

noman
3 / 5 (2) Jan 11, 2008
Giving heroin to anyone who is having trouble getting off of it is a tragic mistake. I have a relative who has been an addict for far too long, you have to keep someone away from something until they no longer need it. As for replacements for calming and relaxing the detox symptoms, give them a cup of tea and tell them to shut up and stop winging. Nevermind health issues from dependancy, there are suppressors out there such as SUGAR, TEA, A STRAIGHT STATE OF MIND... Any doctor can say that their patient needs treatment of a special kind, but how can you treat someone by giving them what they don't need?!!!! I AM APPAULED, its disgusting, who ever heard of treating an insomniac by giving them a catastrophic amount of caffeine?????? It is the same but on another level. Any of you out there who don't know anything about heroin and the people who use it should shut up and listen to me, they do not need it, they need help, love, patience and respect. Not to be weaned off the stuff like a lab rat. Methadone is just as bad, and so are all the other replacement sedatives that have made my relative much sicker. Anyone that thinks more heroin will help needs to see what the person looks like when they have taken it, then you might decide that giving them more is maybe not such a good idea. GROW UP DOCTORS NURSES AND REHABILITATION CENTRES
jburchel
2 / 5 (3) Jan 11, 2008
How stupid. Yeah, this works out very well, just look at utopias like Amsterdam and Vancouver, BC where it was formally or practically legalized and crime has gone through the roof, addicts come from near and far to enjoy the wonders of the welfare state and eliminate their waste in allyways...

More news stories

The secret lives, and deaths, of neurons

As the human body fine-tunes its neurological wiring, nerve cells often must fix a faulty connection by amputating an axon—the "business end" of the neuron that sends electrical impulses to tissues or other ...

Amazon expands Kindle tablet sale to 170 countries

Online retail titan Amazon announced Thursday it is expanding sales of its Kindle tablet computers to "over 170 countries and territories around the world," and its Appstore in nearly 200 countries.

Google to add Galapagos Islands to Street View

Few have explored the remote volcanic islands of the Galapagos archipelago, an otherworldly landscape inhabited by the world's largest tortoises and other fantastical creatures that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution.

A hidden population of exotic neutron stars

(Phys.org) —Magnetars – the dense remains of dead stars that erupt sporadically with bursts of high-energy radiation - are some of the most extreme objects known in the Universe. A major campaign using ...

White tiger mystery solved

White tigers today are only seen in zoos, but they belong in nature, say researchers reporting new evidence about what makes those tigers white. Their spectacular white coats are produced by a single change ...