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An alternative to the war on drugs in the British Medical Journal

Although this is by a major activist, Stephen Rolles of Transform, rather than an "unbiased" expert, the venue is a significant one, and the argument for regulation is now obviously a mature one. Here are five models for regulating drug activity from the article:

Medical prescription model or supervised venues -- For highest risk drugs (injected drugs including heroin and more potent stimulants such as methamphetamine) and problematic users

Specialist pharmacist retail model -- combined with named/licensed user access and rationing of volume of sales for moderate risk drugs such as amphetamine, powder cocaine, and methylenedioxymethamphetamine (ecstasy)

Licensed retailing -- including tiers of regulation appropriate to product risk and local needs. Used for lower risk drugs and preparations such as lower strength stimulant based drinks

Licensed premises for sale and consumption -- similar to licensed alcohol venues and Dutch cannabis "coffee shops," potentially also for smoking opium or poppy tea

Unlicensed sales -- minimal regulation for the least risky products, such as caffeine drinks and coca tea.

Posted By Psychotrophic at 2010-07-18 13:21:15 permalink | comments
Tags: bmj reform progress uk
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Paul. : 2010-07-19 06:15:38
Our masters in the Ruling class are not interested in hearing these ideas. The only way reasonable alternatives to the drug war will ever see the light of day is that we somehow get their boot off our collective necks.
Mike s.. : 2010-07-19 03:39:10
That will be the day that I die when this becomes reality... Just my luck.
Brandon : 2010-07-18 19:12:48
this seems like an important step, to have realistic models, possibilities, something concrete to show people
Mike. : 2010-07-18 16:29:23
There's another model discussed in Transform's report 'Blueprint for a Regulated Market', written by Steve Rolles and on which this BMJ article is based.

For psychedelics, Transform float the idea of a 'club' model, where (say) LSD, DMT or K are made available through registered user clubs. These clubs are licensed to supply to suitable consumers - they would also supply info and health advice, and may make conditions, e.g. people trying the drug for the first time require a straight 'sitter'. The bottom line is, the club is responsible for their members, so it's in their interest to ensure that their use is informed and safe.

The Blueprint report is available for download at www.tdpf.org.uk

The comments posted here do not reflect the views of the owners of this site.

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