Illicit heroin is a dangerous street drug because its dose and purity are
unknown and users face the risk of overdose and death. Because the drug is
illegal, many users engage in unsafe practices, for example, using contaminated
syringes that increase the risk of life threatening infections such as HIV and
hepatitis, and its use often leads to crime and sex work.
Many users are often in and out of hospitals and prisons for these
reasons, he explains, adding that they can be “deeply affected by the illness
of the addiction and its consequences.” But heroin assisted treatments should
be offered to this vulnerable group of patients, he argues, because they have
been shown to improve outcomes, reduce harm, lower societal cost and make
savings for the healthcare system. Currently, this type of treatment is not
offered following regulations put in place by the Canadian government in 2014
although a small group of participants are being given the drug after
benefiting from it in a successful clinical trial. Schechter notes six
randomised controlled trials that found heroin assisted treatment to be more
effective than standard treatments for such patients, and the recent Cochrane
Collaboration review that concluded that it can help to decrease illicit
substance use, criminal activity, incarceration and possibly reduce mortality
and increase compliance with treatment. In addition, he explains that while the
direct cost of heroin assisted treatment is four times that of traditional
treatments, it still works out to be cheaper when accounting for all associated
costs when compared to other interventions. For example, a trial in the Netherlands
showed that heroin assisted therapy made overall savings of around € 13,000
(£9530; $14,100) per patient per year when compared to methadone, even when
taking into account the direct cost of treatment. Other research carried out by
Schechter demonstrated better outcomes at a lower societal cost compared to
methadone maintenance while British researchers found that heroin assisted
therapy was more cost effective than oral methadone.
“Treatments like this represent the holy grail of medical research
seeking to support a sustainable health system: they achieve better outcomes at
lower overall cost,” he argues. And such savings could be used in addiction
prevention programmes and other important priorities, he notes, adding that
“the key question is not whether we can afford this new treatment, but whether
we can afford the status quo.” Conventional treatments should remain the first
preference for patients with heroin addiction, but if these do not work,
diamorphine should be prescribed to patients by doctors at specialized clinics
to ensure safety, he concludes.