FYI.

This story is over 5 years old.

Stuff

Ireland Must Act to Combat Its Growing Heroin Problem

It's one of the heroin capitals of Europe – but the treatment options are awful.

Dublin (Photo by Paul Roban)

In the early 1980s, a man named Tony "King Scum" Felloni began importing large quantities of heroin into the Republic of Ireland. The drug quickly began to work its way into daily life in Dublin's working-class areas, and thanks to its relatively addictive nature it has remained wildly popular. Take a walk down certain streets in Dublin and you'll get a pretty good indicator of its prevalence in the capital.

Annons

Unfortunately, the government's plans for treating heroin addiction nowadays appear to be much the same as they were in the 80s: almost nonexistent. The government at the time paid very little attention to the problem, and – despite the implementation of new, progressive harm reduction laws in other European countries – Ireland's attitudes are still very much lingering in the decade of fax machines and Billy Idol.

According to the 2012 annual report by the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, Ireland has the highest number of heroin users – along with Latvia, Luxembourg and Malta – in Europe. They reckon seven people in every thousand are addicted to the drug, which translates to roughly 30,000 Irish citizens. Worryingly, Ireland also has the third highest death rate from drug use in Europe, behind only Norway and Estonia. The EU average is 21 deaths per million people; for Ireland, it's 68 per million.

But these stats don't tell the whole story. For years, heroin use in Ireland was confined to Dublin. This is no longer the case; usage of the drug has spread throughout the country and is now having an impact in many smaller towns and cities. Unfortunately, while addiction is now much further-reaching, treatment has predominantly stayed within the confines of the capital.

I spoke to Dr Cathal Ó Súilliobháin, an addiction specialist with the Health Service Executive (HSE), Ireland's NHS, about the problem. He told me that, in some parts of the country, there is absolutely no treatment whatsoever: "In the midlands, there are very limited clinic places and no doctors in general practice able to initiate treatment," he said. "West of the River Shannon, there are none, and that includes Donegal county – not a single one."

Annons

(Photo via)

The lack of services to deal with the growing heroin problem outside Dublin needs to be addressed. No needle exchange clinics mean users are likely to end up sharing, and – unlike the government's attitude – HIV and hepatitis unfortunately didn't decide to hang back in the 80s. That could potentially have disastrous consequences on rural communities that have already been adversely affected by the emigration crisis; as Cathal told me, "We are sitting on a time bomb. I would be concerned that you could easily see something like a mini-HIV epidemic starting in one of these areas."

With little or no services in areas outside Dublin, you'd have thought that concentrating treatment in the capital would leave the city well-equipped to help its addicts. But, again, there doesn't seem to have been much progress made over the past few decades. There are roughly 9,200 Irish people on methadone treatment, most of them in Dublin, and that's the only care available. A number of other treatments – anti-opiate implants and buprenorphine, among them – are available in various other modern European states, so why hasn't Ireland adopted any of them?

Because, in Ireland, addiction isn't seen as it should be. Instead of treating it as a medical issue, addicts are seen by most as criminals who can't be trusted, let alone make decisions for themselves. The state knows best and the state knows you should be treated with methadone. If you don't trust the state's judgement, then you can fuck off out the door and find your own treatment – i.e. score, shoot up and end up back where you started.

Annons

Dr Garrett McGovern

I spoke to Dr Garrett McGovern, a GP who also specialises in addiction and spoke in favour of the recent Irish cannabis decriminalisation bill, which, predictably, was voted down by the government earlier this month.

Garrett explained his opinion of the situation clearly: "We really haven’t got a handle on who's using methadone," he said. "The figures tend to be crunched a little bit, and it all comes from people in treatment. But not everybody who has an opiate habit should be or wants to be on methadone and all it entails, and we forget about them. We don’t provide any services for them. You come up for treatment and we give you methadone. You might not want methadone, and you’re told that we can’t do anything for you."

I also spoke to current heroin user "Zoe", who's been on the drug – together with her boyfriend – for the past ten years. She's been taking methadone in tandem with that for the past seven years and told me of her experiences with the treatment services on offer. "We go to see our doctor once every two weeks," she explained. "We do a urine test and we get handed our methadone script. We haven't been offered any other help."

Many heroin users supplement methadone with heroin, which – of course – means they fail the urine tests they're required to pass in order to get a weekly prescription. If they fail, they have to go to the chemist every day to take their dose under supervision. The problem with this is that not everyone has schedules that permit daily chemist visits. "If a heroin addict misses their methadone dose they go into panic mode," Zoe said. "The choice you're left with is to either go through a night of withdrawals, or else score heroin. In this situation, we'd always score."

Annons

She continued: "I explained this to my doctor and he said that, if I couldn't make it to the chemist on time, I should work less hours. I told him that my boss couldn't give me that option, so my doctor suggested that I leave my job. My job was the only thing keeping me on the straight and narrow, yet my doctor suggested that I leave a good job and sign on the dole so I could get to the chemist on time each day. That seemed like a really bad idea, so thankfully I didn't take my doctor's advice."

Typical paraphernalia available at a needle exchange (Photo via

To think that a medical practitioner would encourage someone to leave their job so they can pick up their methadone each day beggars belief. Clearly, not every medical practitioner in Ireland would offer such awful advice – but it does indicate that there's a systematic problem with the provision of harm reduction treatment in the country. If, of course, you can even access it at all. And just to add a little more despair to an already dire situation, budgets for services to treat people with opiate problems are being slashed.

So what can be done? There is no way that Ireland will contemplate decriminalisation any time soon.

As Dr McGovern told me: "Let me be very clear about legalising drugs: legalising cannabis should be a no-brainer. In terms of heroin, people must be asleep in this country. They don't realise that, in Switzerland, there are 23 [specialist] clinics. In England, they have trialled heroin prescriptions. Holland and Australia – these countries are already [prescribing heroin] to give safe drugs to heroin users who don’t settle on conventional methods, and it has shown to be very effective."

Annons

The recent cannabis decriminalisation bill could have acted as an important stepping stone towards rethinking Ireland's drug policy, but it was laughed out of Irish parliament and the proponents of the bill were labelled nutcases by the government. That attitude also trickles down to a number of Irish media outlets, with some adopting the overly simplistic rationale that everyone with a drug problem is a criminal, rather than a person with dependency issues who may have turned to crime to support their habit.

The solution to what they perceive as danger seems so glaringly obvious: treat the addiction, cut down on crime. Unfortunately, they choose to keep their blinkers on – until the Irish government begins to legislate in a constructive way, Ireland is destined to keep topping European drug surveys.

Enjoy reading about drugs? Try these:

Drugs and Sadness in Glasgow's High-Rise Ghettos

Mexico's Drug Cartels Love Social Media

WATCH – The Real Walter White