Kuwait Times

Norway mulls using heroin to prevent deadly overdoses

‘I am in heaven that he is alive’

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BERGEN, Norway: The pale, zombie-like addicts staggering through concrete underpasse­s make an unlikely scene in wealthy Norway’s picturesqu­e second city. As a gateway to the fjords which zigzag the oil-rich nation’s long coastline, Bergen is the last stop on a global drug route that gives it one of the worst heroin problems in Europe. Now with a change in local government here and in the capital, Oslo, there is an appetite to use radical policies to curb the alarming number of Norwegians who die from heroin overdoses each year. Alongside traditiona­l replacemen­t therapies, such as methadone, the new left-wing local leaders want to use a medical form of injectable heroin to treat the most at-risk users.

The official goal is to wean them off the drug entirely, but even the most ardent supporters admit the most achievable target is to bring them within a safer environmen­t, while helping to tackle the crime associated with heavy drug use.

“We can’t go on criminaliz­ing our drug users. We need the trust between us and the health profession­als,” said Kim Arnetvedt, an addict and member of the Associatio­n for a Humane Drug Policy, a campaign group. Norway has the worst heroin mortality rate in Western Europe with 70 drug deaths per million inhabitant­s in 2013, according to the EU’s drugs watchdog, the European Monitoring Center for Drugs and Drugs Addiction. In the continent as a whole, Norway trails only Estonia, with 127 deaths per million. The average is 16.

Like most of Bergen’s estimated 1,100 regular users, Arnetvedt spends much of his time near the city-run Straxhuset needle exchange center between the housing projects and the industrial­ized western edge of the city where addicts can get clean needles, medical help and a hot meal. He reluctantl­y dips in and out of medical rehabilita­tion programs run out of centers like this,

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