TY - JOUR
T1 - Facilitating a transition from compulsory detention of people who use drugs towards voluntary community-based drug dependence treatment and support services in Asia
AU - Tanguay, Pascal
AU - Kamarulzaman, Adeeba
AU - Aramrattana, Apinun
AU - Wodak, Alex
AU - Thomson, Nicholas
AU - Ali, Robert
AU - Vumbaca, Gino
AU - Lai, Gloria
AU - Chabungbam, Anand
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Ms. Vladanka Andreeva, Ms. Brianna Harrison, and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) as well as Mr. Olivier Lermet and Ms. Karen Peters and United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), who provided logistical and financial support for data collection and development of the manuscript. The article processing charges for this article were funded by the Joint United Nations Programme on AIDS (UNAIDS) and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). The article has undergone the journal’s full standard peer review process. The article was developed based on the current draft of the expert discussion paper referenced in the text. The discussion paper was conceived in September 2014 and was developed under a similar process with more contact between the members of the working group and PT, both through email and skype as well as, where possible, face to face meetings.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Tanguay et al.
PY - 2015/10/16
Y1 - 2015/10/16
N2 - Evidence indicates that detention of people who use drugs in compulsory centers in the name of treatment is common in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. The expansion of such practices has been costly, has not generated positive health outcomes, and has not reduced supply or demand for illicit drugs. United Nations agencies have convened several consultations with government and civil society stakeholders in order to facilitate a transition to voluntary evidence- and community-based drug dependence treatment and support services. In an effort to support such efforts, an informal group of experts proposes a three-step process to initiate and accelerate national-level transitions. Specifically, the working group recommends the establishment of a national multisectoral decision-making committee to oversee the development of national transition plans, drug policy reform to eliminate barriers to community-based drug dependence treatment and support services, and the integration of community-based drug dependence treatment in existing national health and social service systems. In parallel, the working group recommends that national-level transitions should be guided by overarching principles, including ethics, human rights, meaningful involvement of affected communities, and client safety, as well as good governance, transparency, and accountability. The transition also represents an opportunity to review the roles and responsibilities of various agencies across the public health and public security sectors in order to balance the workload and ensure positive results. The need to accelerate national-level transitions to voluntary community-based drug dependence treatment and support services is compelling-on economic, medical, sustainable community development, and ethical grounds-as extensively documented in the literature. In this context, the expert working group fully endorses initiation of a transition towards voluntary evidence- and community-based drug dependence treatment and support services across the region, as well as the steady scale-down of compulsory centers for drug users. Components of voluntary community-based drug dependence treatment and support services are being implemented in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. However, significant technical and financial support will be required to be allocated from national budgets and by international development agencies in order to complete the transition and reduce the reliance on detention of people who use drugs in Asia.
AB - Evidence indicates that detention of people who use drugs in compulsory centers in the name of treatment is common in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. The expansion of such practices has been costly, has not generated positive health outcomes, and has not reduced supply or demand for illicit drugs. United Nations agencies have convened several consultations with government and civil society stakeholders in order to facilitate a transition to voluntary evidence- and community-based drug dependence treatment and support services. In an effort to support such efforts, an informal group of experts proposes a three-step process to initiate and accelerate national-level transitions. Specifically, the working group recommends the establishment of a national multisectoral decision-making committee to oversee the development of national transition plans, drug policy reform to eliminate barriers to community-based drug dependence treatment and support services, and the integration of community-based drug dependence treatment in existing national health and social service systems. In parallel, the working group recommends that national-level transitions should be guided by overarching principles, including ethics, human rights, meaningful involvement of affected communities, and client safety, as well as good governance, transparency, and accountability. The transition also represents an opportunity to review the roles and responsibilities of various agencies across the public health and public security sectors in order to balance the workload and ensure positive results. The need to accelerate national-level transitions to voluntary community-based drug dependence treatment and support services is compelling-on economic, medical, sustainable community development, and ethical grounds-as extensively documented in the literature. In this context, the expert working group fully endorses initiation of a transition towards voluntary evidence- and community-based drug dependence treatment and support services across the region, as well as the steady scale-down of compulsory centers for drug users. Components of voluntary community-based drug dependence treatment and support services are being implemented in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand. However, significant technical and financial support will be required to be allocated from national budgets and by international development agencies in order to complete the transition and reduce the reliance on detention of people who use drugs in Asia.
KW - Community-based treatment
KW - Compulsory treatment
KW - Drug dependence
KW - Drug policy reform
KW - Health systems
KW - People who use drugs
KW - Planning
KW - Principles
KW - Resource mobilization
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84944879106
U2 - 10.1186/s12954-015-0071-0
DO - 10.1186/s12954-015-0071-0
M3 - Comment / Debate
C2 - 26470779
AN - SCOPUS:84944879106
SN - 1477-7517
VL - 12
JO - Harm Reduction Journal
JF - Harm Reduction Journal
IS - 1
M1 - 31
ER -