The government is preparing to trial a medically-assisted treatment programme to help heroin users who want to quit the drug. This is after long resisting this approach in favour of drug-free rehab programmes that have had low success rates.
In July the national health department requested bids to run a pilot programme to provide opioid agonist therapy (OAT) to heroin users.
OAT is a form of treatment in which people quitting heroin (or reducing their intake) are provided with medicines, called opioid agonists.
These drugs block the painful withdrawal symptoms that occur after a person quits heroin.
The health department has until February 2025 to appoint a service provider to run the pilot, which will run for 20 months.
It's supposed to operate at two primary healthcare facilities – one in Emalahleni in Mpumalanga and another in Madibeng in the North West. These locations were chosen as they reportedly include a "high number of people" who use heroin.
The opioid agonist drug to be used in the pilot scheme is methadone, a syrup that is taken once a day. OAT programmes usually offer it alongside other forms of assistance, such as counselling or therapy. The medicine is typically administered for a minimum of six months.
Clinical trials show that heroin users are more successful at kicking the habit when they're provided with methadone than when they're sent to drug-free rehabs.
For the treatment to work, however, people need to take it for several months or even years.
This story is from the November 22, 2024 edition of The Citizen.
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This story is from the November 22, 2024 edition of The Citizen.
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