Time For A New Normal

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Time For A New Normal

26 June has been transformed from its origins as a day promoting the worst aspects of prohibition to a day celebrating the resistance to the War on Drugs. Support Don’t Punish triggers a wave of actions around the globe from football matches between drug users and the police, to marching bands, peer education sessions, and acts of memorial. EuroNPUD has embraced Support Don’t Punish with the support of our main donor the Robert Carr Fund. By distributing small grants of €450, EuroNPUD has been able to stimulate local actions delivered by country drug user groups. In 2019, we decided to focus our campaigning capacity on International Overdose Awareness Day on 31 August as part of our sustained advocacy to document and promote the effectiveness of peer-to-peer distribution of Naloxone / Find out more about our Naloxone campaign on..>> https://www.euronpud.net/naloxone

The campaign was co-branded with SDP as peer-led harm reduction is very much part of the specialist peer adaption of SDP, Self-Support Don’t Punish Us.

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 In 2020, EuroNPUD is becoming an ever more efficient campaigning vehicle. Building on our rapid, multi-lingual and successful partnership response to COVID-19, EuroNPUD is committed to delivering two further coordinated country campaigns in 2020. The first is our Time For A New Normal campaign for Support Don’t Punish Day, which picks up the many gains that have been secured for people who use drugs as a result of COVID-19. Long requested and evidence-based advocacy asks for quicker access to OST treatment, for supervised consumption to be a last resort and for dispensing to be flexible and trusting have finally been achieved. The response of people on OST to being provided with weekly plus take home doses has been overwhelming to manage their medication sensibly. The much-feared pattern of mass diversion just has not happened.

Overall, people dependent on opioids are asking for a more respectful and meaningful treatment partnership and a dialling down of the “methadone police” approach. It is time to stop the constant guilt tripping of people who, in line with the evidence, are choosing long-term and even lifelong OST maintenance. Virtually checking in with clients allows for a less intrusive model of key working which prioritises support over supervision. When sanctions are not threatened and more varied treatment outcomes are respected, people who use drugs will often share what is happening with their drugs. As long as this is set with a wider discussion about our wider life goals, health and wellbeing, respectful questions about our drug use will not be experienced as threatening. When professional inquiries about our drug use are founded on the offer of support rather than backed up with the threat of punishment then a useful dialogue may follow. When the practitioner is driven by a desire to uncover and expose, it is unsurprising that they will be met with resistance, defence and stories that comply with what we think you want us to be. 


Support Don’t Punish starts with the every day interactions between people who use drugs and harm reduction, drug treatment and wider healthcare professionals. Some years back, I saw a locum GP after I experienced a syndrome known to stimulant users as the “funky chicken”. This is spasms caused by an excess of adrenalin surging through the body like electric charges. It provided a perfect opportunity for my GP to enquire about my excessive pattern of freebase cocaine use that underpinned this physical reaction. Instead as soon as I acknowledged my use of drugs, her demeanour changed, she couldn’t sustain eye contact and I saw her write ADDICT in large letters across the top of my file!! It reaffirmed me in my general approach of managing my drug use as far away from the healthcare system as possible.

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COVID-19 has seen many people re-engage with OST treatment systems and many longstanding OST clients have access to a much more flexible model of treatment. However, many Governments have set these changes as temporary measures. It would be crazy to go back to the old, restrictive, punitive, high threshold past. Instead we should build on this transformation of services and instead invest the released capacity in reaching those people dependent on opioids who aren’t yet able to access OST.

 

This will require new treatment options. Heroin Assisted Treatment provides a way of engaging people not attracted by methadone or buprenorphine. It is time that professional partners get over their discomfort with an OST therapy providing us with a pleasurable flash experience. EuroNPUD are also watching with interest the development of depot buprenorphine, which gives people dependent on opioids a way of accessing buprenorphine without the need for daily dosing or dispensing. This freedom from the treatment system is a powerful incentive and EuroNPUD welcomes Camurus sensitive development of their product. Their willingness to engage with people who use drugs helps manage concerns around the potential misuse of their product by unethical doctors or policy makers. We believe that engagement and dialogue is the best safeguard. We are very pleased to have signed a declaration with Camurus after a joint meeting organised by our Norwegian partners ProLAR and hosted by the Danish drug user groups, Brugerforeningen in Copenhagen in May 2019 about rights in OST treatment:

 

“People who are dependent on opioids have the right to the highest attainable standard of health. This includes access to and information about and the freedom to choose from available opioid dependence pharmacological treatments as well as psycho-social support.”

Follow the link to see the project page…>> https://www.euronpud.net/ost

At the same time, many drug user groups have stepped up during the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure access to naloxone through peer-to-peer distribution schemes and access to needles, syringes and injecting paraphernalia through secondary needle and syringe programmes. This shows that we are not just consumers of services but we also potential partners in scaling up and driving up the quality of harm reduction services.

EuroNPUD is proud once again to support our country groups to undertake actions on 26 June.  We call on providers, Governments and European institutions to work with drug user groups as is it clearly Time For A New Normal!

Follow the link to see the campaign page…>> https://www.euronpud.net/support-dont-punish-2020

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Narco Feminism  - a campaign for the feminist who uses drugs

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Narco Feminism - a campaign for the feminist who uses drugs

Judy Chang, Chief exec from INPUD writes about feminism and women who use drugs in this important piece, as Narcofeminism edges ever forward, making waves and treading new ground…“In a marketplace of experiences, the privileged inevitably have more platforms from which to narrate, and the marginalised are often spoken for within agendas which are not their own.”

Alison Phipps 2016, p. 5-6, Sussex University

I am a feminist. I am a woman who uses drugs. Up until recently, these identities have been mutually exclusive, having rarely been held together in the same conceptual space.

Only now are the links between drug policy, feminism and drug use beginning to be drawn. Feminism, I took to early on, as any woman who questioned dominant paradigms, interrogated inequities in political and social life and was sceptical of the ways gendered norms condition how we speak, act, behave and interact with one another.

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European Harm reduction Conference, Bucharest

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European Harm reduction Conference, Bucharest

EuroNPUD presents and attends at the European Harm Reduction Network’s Conference.

Recently, peers from all over europe descended on the European Harm Reduction Conference in Bucharest and gave a fabulous, captivating and informed response to where we are today in Europe, what peers and peer groups are doing to bring about change to our inhumane system of prohibition. Many inspiring peers gave really terrific presentations, heading panels and discussions, educating and informing. It really was a great few days. Women who use drugs shone so brightly as they discussed their work and ideas, and a new term was coined by our amazing ENPUD colleague, Olga Belyaeva, ‘Narco Feminism’. What a great term to be used by women who wish to talk about the issues of women who use drugs, through a framework of prohibition and gender. Really good stuff! To keep things short, here is our welcome speech, spoken at the opening of the conference. Our Norwegian peer, Arild Knutson, gave a powerful and energized closing speech at the end of the event, which shone a big spotlight on just how far people who use drugs have come in the world of drug policy -how far they are bringing governments and policy makers, and how important their - our - contribution really is in today’s world of (slowly but surely) changing drug policies. And may it keep on changing in a more human direction!! Check out more, here///

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Community Involvement & Two Events on HCV

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Community Involvement & Two Events on HCV

EuroNPUD members attended 2 important hepatitis events held in Portugal in September this year. Taking HCV testing, treatment and follow up care -to the people, to the street, into our communities seemed to be the overarching theme, as HCV treatment is finally being dragged out of its silo and HCV positive people are demanding to be looked at as people, and not ‘livers on a plate’.

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CASO: Campaigning in Portugal

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CASO: Campaigning in Portugal

In Porto, in a social housing neighborhood, in an abandoned building that is occupied by around 12 people and it is a place used by many people just to go there and smoke or inject outside of normalizing looks…

Unfortunately the week before on the 14th a person died there, alone, surrounded by garbage, needle still in the arm…

As it is one of the places where we’ve been developing a project trying to have 2 Peers from CASO at least two days peer week, since the beginning of March, it seemed the adequate and right place and moment to develop this action.

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Looking Back Over A Campaigning Summer, 2018

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Looking Back Over A Campaigning Summer, 2018

Over Summer, 2018, there were 3 big campaigns for our community - in June there was Support. Don’t Punish, in July there was International Remembrance Day and in August there was International Overdose Awareness Day. Here is Janko Belins round up of what some of the EuroNPUD grant winners did for Support Dont Punish, this June.

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The UK's Naloxone and Advocacy Awareness Project

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The UK's Naloxone and Advocacy Awareness Project

EuroNPUD designs and delivers a project aimed at increasing the availability of Peer 2 Peer Naloxone in the UK. Working with peer partners in 3 areas of the UK with some of the highest overdose rates, our community dug down to find out where naloxone is being ditributed and where it isnt and what any barriers to access, mean for the opiate user on the street.

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International Remembrance Day, 21st July 2018

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International Remembrance Day, 21st July 2018

• Our communities demand an end to austerity, an end to the war on drugs and people who use drugs.
• We demand to be decriminalised.
• We demand for our drugs to be legalised so that we do not risk our health and lives every time we use drugs.
• We demand access to comprehensive harm reduction and means with which to test the contents of our drugs, as well as widespread access to life-saving overdose reversing naloxone.
• We demand an end to  social exclusion, and a recognition of our human rights. We do not forfeit our human rights because we use drugs.
• We are the people who use drugs, and we demand to be recognised.

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On Support. Don't Punish Day - Visit the Kazakhstan  Embassy!

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On Support. Don't Punish Day - Visit the Kazakhstan Embassy!

: on the 26th June, drug user groups along with other supporting organisations are encouraged to take a letter to your cities Kazakhstan embassy - and deliver it personally, taking pictures to send out across social media in protest. There are very real fears that if OST is lost in Kazakhstan, it will be lost in surrounding countries as well. Fight for our peers, fight for humane, evidence based drug policies and effective, life saving drug treatment. 

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