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Switzerland's Liberal Drug Policy Seems To Work, Study Says
Medical News Today ^ | 02 Jun 2006 | Joe Santangelo

Posted on 06/03/2006 12:37:09 PM PDT by Know your rights

Switzerland's policy of offering heroin addicts substitution treatment with methadone or buprenorphine has led to a decline in the number of new heroin users in Zurich, according to a paper published in this week's issue of The Lancet.

Switzerland has implemented various policies to try and reduce harm to dependent heroin users, including needle-exchange services, low-threshold methadone programmes, and heroin-assisted treatments. However, critics say that these policies may lead to a growing number of new drug users and lengthen the period of heroin addiction.

To investigate, Carlos Nordt and Rudolf Stohler from the Psychiatric University Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland analysed data from over 7250 patients in Zurich who presented for substitution treatments with methadone or buprenorphine over 13 years from 1991. From this data they estimated trends in the number of new heroin users. They found that the incidence of heroin use dropped from 850 new users in 1990 to 150 in 2002. The authors contrast the situation with heroin use in the UK, Italy, and Australia, which has continued to rise. They also found a low cessation (quit) rate and therefore, the overall number of heroin dependents, whether in treatment or not, only declined by 4% per year.

Dr Nordt states: "As the Swiss population supported this drug policy, this medicalisation of opiate dependence changed the image of heroin use as a rebellious act to an illness that needs therapy. Finally, heroin seems to have become a 'loser drug', with its attractiveness fading for young people. Nevertheless, whether drug policy had a positive effect on the number of new heroin users or not, our data could not confirm an increase of heroin incidence as expected by the critics of the liberal Swiss drug policy."


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: addiction; bongbrigade; drugs; drugskilledbelushi; heroin; knowyourleroy; leroyknowshisrights; losertarians; mrleroy; switzerland; warondrugs; wod; wodlist
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To: Vigilanteman

You don't actually have statistics to back up your claim, do you? I'm assuming you don't simply because Singapore's number of heroin addicts has been rising since the mid 80s.


21 posted on 06/03/2006 1:25:39 PM PDT by AntiGuv ("..I do things for political expediency.." - Sen. John McCain on FOX News)
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To: mugs99
Very few addicts require methadone to quit. Thousands of American servicemen became addicted to heroin in Viet Nam. Almost all quit with no problem when they returned home. Methadone is to a heroin addict what a nicotine patch is to a tobacco addict.

Dependance is distinct from addiction. Addiction includes a seeking behavior and other cultural associations. Soldiers dependant on opiates are much more easily detoxed because they no longer have a need for the drug. Once back at home the stresses that were an incentive to smoke opium are all but gone and recidivism is very low.

22 posted on 06/03/2006 1:29:53 PM PDT by corkoman
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To: andrew2527

Actually, the study was originally published in The Lancet. Which is the definitive source for the hard left on Iraqi civilian casualties.

Just because a media outlet calls itself a "medical journal" doesn't means it's above reproach. More often, it just means they'd like you to think they are.


23 posted on 06/03/2006 1:30:30 PM PDT by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
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To: mugs99
Methadone is to a heroin addict what a nicotine patch is to a tobacco addict.

That's a good analogy.

24 posted on 06/03/2006 1:30:59 PM PDT by corkoman
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To: corkoman
The WOD has unintended consequences.

Every war ever fought in the history of mankind has had unintended consequences.

25 posted on 06/03/2006 1:31:47 PM PDT by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
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To: corkoman
That's a good analogy.

Came to that conclusion after seeing my neighbor wearing his nicotine patch for three years.
.
26 posted on 06/03/2006 1:34:40 PM PDT by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: AntiGuv
You don't actually have statistics to back up your claim, do you? I'm assuming you don't simply because Singapore's number of heroin addicts has been rising since the mid 80s.

As far as I'm concerned, Singapore's "solution" could be 100% efficacious and I'd still find it counter to the principles of individual liberty. Furthermore, anyone who would back such a penalty for drug use, and I know that you don't, is a numbskull.

27 posted on 06/03/2006 1:34:46 PM PDT by Live and let live conservative (Capitalism: It works, give it a try America.)
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To: Know your rights
Switzerland has implemented various policies to try and reduce harm to dependent heroin users, including needle-exchange services, low-threshold methadone programmes, and heroin-assisted treatments.

A junkie-friendly nanny-state. How libertarian.

28 posted on 06/03/2006 1:35:03 PM PDT by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
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To: Know your rights
You certainly got that one right.

Add in the costs of burglaries [to get money to buy high priced drugs]; the criminal culture of gangs that are enabled by the high price of drugs; the likelihood that many of you reading this post would have a criminal record if you had been caught smoking dope or whatever; the load the war on drugs has placed on the judicial system and the jails .., and the fact that the war on drugs will only be won when there is no cash and all of us citizens have our very own RFID embedded in our bodies.

The Harrison Act was unconstitutional and all the Federal laws and regulations since then have only made matters worse.

29 posted on 06/03/2006 1:35:19 PM PDT by R W Reactionairy ("Everyone is entitled to their own opinion ... but not to their own facts" Daniel Patrick Moynihan)
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To: martin_fierro

Why do you claim that Somalia is a libertarian paradise? Libertarian don't claim Somalia.

Libertarians generally look to the most free countries in the world, such as the U.S., Chile, Switzerland, Singapore and New Zealand, and then identify where these countries are inconsistent with their commitment to freedom.

BTW According to Freedom House, Somalia is one of the most unfree countries in the world, just this side of Cuba.

And, on the issue of drugs, are you saying that Somalia has a liberatarian approach to drugs? I thought repressive Muslim countries have the kind of drug policy that conservatives advocate, but what do I know?


30 posted on 06/03/2006 1:35:57 PM PDT by Redmen4ever
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To: WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
Just because a media outlet calls itself a "medical journal" doesn't means it's above reproach. More often, it just means they'd like you to think they are.

So, where is your above reproach data that contradicts theirs?
.
31 posted on 06/03/2006 1:38:07 PM PDT by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: Gay State Conservative
Wait until the Swiss get a closeup look at meth.Their "progressive" attitude toward drugs might backfire....badly...with meth.

Switzerland has the highest percentage Muslim population in Europe. Their progressive policies don't have much longer to live anyway.

32 posted on 06/03/2006 1:39:20 PM PDT by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: WhistlingPastTheGraveyard

Genuine thanks for the clarification. I had no idea.


33 posted on 06/03/2006 1:39:39 PM PDT by andrew2527
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To: WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
A junkie-friendly nanny-state. How libertarian.

I agree with you - that is a good thing. Unless you prefer the totalitarian mess that the WOD has brought us. Or do you prefer that noose thing for people who use naughty vegetables?

34 posted on 06/03/2006 1:40:40 PM PDT by corkoman
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To: WhistlingPastTheGraveyard

Switzerland is not a junkie-nannie state. Because drug-addicts do not rapidly succumb to illness (leading to death), they are not involved in pushing drugs onto junior high school children, street prostitution, violent crime and the like, but can hold down steady jobs. These addicts generally pay for their own jobs and do not receive welfare. Hopefully, they will end their abuse of drugs, just as we all hope that those use abuse alcohol and tobacco in this country, but the social problems we all face because of legal drugs are not comparable to those who face from illegal drugs. It is in our country that drug-addicts are a major burden on the taxpayer, not even counting the cost of police and incarceration, but only counting the cost of taxpayer-funded drug maintenance programs, welfare, food stamps, etc., to drug addicts.


35 posted on 06/03/2006 1:41:52 PM PDT by Redmen4ever
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To: mugs99

I need hard data to back up skepticism, huh?

Interesting.


36 posted on 06/03/2006 1:42:56 PM PDT by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
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To: WhistlingPastTheGraveyard

LOL!
In other words, all you have to offer is hot air.
.


37 posted on 06/03/2006 1:51:33 PM PDT by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: corkoman
Or do you prefer that noose thing for people who use naughty vegetables?

Instead of projecting radical beliefs on everyone who says something you don't like, maybe you should stick with what was said. Singapore ain't my argument. Don't lump me in with those who have made it theirs.

And I stand by my statement. Switzerland practices junkie-welfare. If it were doing this with anything other than drugs, libertarians would condemn it... if they even cared enough to discuss it (and since it wouldn't involve narcotics, chances are, they wouldn't).

Which is my ultimate point. Libertarians have devolved from an anti-government party to a pro-drug movement.

38 posted on 06/03/2006 1:52:41 PM PDT by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
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To: Know your rights
according to the criminals it enriches and the LEOs and bureacrats it employs.

"Almost all of the major police corruption scandals of the last several decades have had their roots in drug enforcement. We’ve seen robbery, extortion, drug dealing, drug stealing, drug use, false arrests, perjury, throw-down guns, and murder. And these are the good guys?"...Norm Stamper, 28-year police veteran of the San Diego police department and former Seattle police chief.
.
39 posted on 06/03/2006 1:54:57 PM PDT by mugs99 (Don't take life too seriously, you won't get out alive.)
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To: mugs99
Actually, in addition to the hot air, I also have a passing familiarity with The Lancet.

As I said above, their October 2004 survey was the definitive source for the left on Iraqi civilian war casualties. They were also shown to have inflated those statistics by including every civilian death in the country into their casualty figures, regardless of the cause.

The Lancet is also a go-to source for Planned Parenthood and NARAL, mainly in the area of Emgency Contraceptives. The Lancet even went so far as to use its pages to suggest that Andrew von Eschenbach was an unfit FDA director because he was too beholden to Bush and his anti-abortion right-wing base (just the kind of findings you'd expect from a prestigious medical journal).

The Lancet also once announced a "near-unanimous scientific consensus that rising levels of greenhouse gases would cause global warming and other climate changes." Then they wrote a series of articles detailing how global-warming was creating a new generation of disease that would effectively obliterate humanity, thus affirming its existence (thus pinning it on greenhouse gases/mankind). These above-reproach findings were recently optioned by Al Gore, and are now playing at a multiplex near you.

My skepticism of The Lancet and its agenda is very well-founded.

40 posted on 06/03/2006 2:38:07 PM PDT by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
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