BMA proposes the medical use of Afghan heroin
Doctors propose using Afghan opium as NHS pain-killer
Wednesday, January 24, 2007
By Justin Huggler
Afghan heroin available on the NHS? It may sound far-fetched but that is
what two leading doctors from the British Medical Association have put
forward as a way of dealing with a shortage of the drug.
Heroin is used by doctors under its medical name diamorphine as a
pain-killer for the terminally ill and after serious operations. But there
is currently a severe shortage of legal diamorphine in the UK.
At the same time, British soldiers in Afghanistan are in the midst of
efforts to wipe out the cultivation of opium, from which heroin is refined.
Doctors have suggested a solution to both problems: use the opium to produce
heroin for medicinal use.
"If we were harvesting this drug from Afghanistan rather than destroying it,
we'd be benefiting the population of Afghanistan as well as helping
patients," Dr Vivienne Nathanson, the BMA's head of science and ethics, told
the BBC.
But the suggestion has been rejected by both the Department of Health in
Britain and the Afghan government. The idea of using Afghan opium for legal
medicines has been touted before by a French think-tank. But it is the first
time that the proposal has been given the weight of an internationally
respected medical association.
Britain is the leading Western donor to Afghanistan's efforts to wipe out
opium production, which accounts for 90 per cent of the world's illegal
opium. Kabul does not have a major domestic problem with opium abuse, with
most being exported to Europe.
To satisfy Western demands that this supply chain is broken, Afghan farmers
have had their entire crops destroyed. Other farmers who voluntarily gave up
growing poppies on the promise of financial help to grow other crops say the
help never materialised. Reports have emerged of farmers made destitute by
the West's anti-poppy campaign, who have resorted to selling their children
in order to stay financially afloat.
The targeting of the poppy fields is widely believed to be a major factor in
the popularity of the Taliban insurgency in the south and east. British
troops facing some of the most intense fighting are in Helmand, a major
centre of poppy cultivation.
"There must be ways of harvesting it and making sure that the harvest safely
reaches the drug industry which would then refine it into diamorphine," Dr
Nathanson said.
Her remarks were supported by Dr Jonathan Fielden, a consultant in
anaesthesia and intensive care. He said: "Over the past year the
availability of diamorphine has dramatically reduced. It has got to the
stage where it is almost impossible in some hospitals to get hold of this
drug for use outside very specific circumstances."
But the Department of Health said the shortage of diamorphine was due to
limited production capacity, not a shortage of raw opium. Western
anti-narcotics agencies have rejected the suggestion of cultivating Afghan
opium for medicinal use in the past, saying it is too difficult to put
safeguards in place and ensure the opium conforms to international standards.
Leading NGOs still contend the best solution is long-term investment in
alternative crops. The problem is little else will grow in many barren parts
of Afghanistan.