On this page you can find relevant researchs on drug-related health topics, including HIV, hepatitis C, drug and overdose prevention, harm reduction and drug treatment. You can also find our Clinical Guidelines.

EMCDDA guidelines for reporting data on people entering drug treatment in European countries
The EMCDDA guidelines have been revised to better reflect the realities of today’s drug situation and changes in treatment services and data monitoring systems. They follow a three-year revision process involving experts from the EU Member States, Croatia, Turkey, Norway and Switzerland.
Supply,demand and harm reduction strategies in Australian prisons an update
"This report provides an update of the 2004 study of supply, demand and harm reduction strategies in Australian prisons (Black, Dolan and Wodak, 2004). Since the 2004 report, the Ministerial Council on Drug Strategy (MCDS) launched the first National Corrections Drug Strategy in 2008, designed to guide the provision of supply, demand and harm reduction strategies in prisons throughout Australia (Ministerial Council on Drug Strategy, 2008)."
Assessment of Medication Assisted Therapy Program in Kazakhstan
The purpose of this assessment was to collect information on the scale and quality of the existing MAT services for people who inject drugs (PWID) in Kazakhstan, and to identify any gaps in such services.
Scholarships for 2013 Dutch Summer Institute on Alcohol, Drugs and Addiction
Students from 62 low- and middle-income countries may apply for full scholarships (including living expenses) to the Dutch Summer Institute on Alcohol, Drugs and Addiction. The Summer Institute is a 2-week, intensive multidisciplinary program that offers graduate-level and continuing professional development training in addiction, while also promoting opportunities for international networking. Application deadline 1 October 2012.
Methadone replacement therapy: tried, tested, effective?
Two Scottish doctors debate, the efficacy of methadone maintenance (under attack in the Scottish media). IDHDP member, Dr Roy Robertson, makes the case that methadone has been well tested, is cheap and acceptable to the patient and results in visible improvement. Dr Daniels argues that methadone treatment is philosophically ill-conceived, ethically dubious, and costly. He also highlights evidence that the treatment is potentially harmful to both patients and those in contact with them.
PEPFAR’s Evolving HIV Prevention Approaches for Key Populations—People Who Inject Drugs, Men Who Have Sex With Men, and Sex Workers: Progress, Challenges, and Opportunities
"To expand country planning of programs to further reduce HIV burden and increase coverage among key populations (KPs), PEPFAR has developed a strategy consisting of technical documents on the prevention of HIV among people who inject drugs (July 2010) and prevention of HIV among men who have sex with men (May 2011), linked with regional meetings and assistance visits to guide the adoption and scale-up of comprehensive packages of evidence-based prevention services for KPs."
West Africa 21012 ATS Situation Report
A report on the growing evidence that West Africa is a manufacturing hub for amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS) and trafficking of drugs.
Retrospective accounts of injection initiation in intimate partnerships
Narrative data collected from semi-structured ethnographic interviews with 25 relatively stable drug-using couples from two New York City areas. The analyses, concentrates on the retrospective accounts of the initiation to injection in current or former intimate partnerships.
Frontline Challenge (DDN Magazine)
An opinion piece by Chris Ford stressing the need for much greater attention to drug-related HIV issues and to reach the goal of an AIDS-free generation. Emphasizing that the AIDS strategies must include people who use drugs, and most importantly, decision makers and the rest of the field need to address this group of people with respect, and we should all fight against their discrimination and criminalisation. (page 16 and 17)
HIV prevention, treatment and care in prisons and other closed settings: a comprehensive package of interventions
UNODC’s new policy brief highlights two guiding principles, namely that "prison health is good public health" and that a human rights-based approach and the principle of equivalence of health in prisons are key. The report proposes a comprehensive package of 15 interventions to address HIV in prisons settings.
Share this on: