Compulsory treatment of drug users in Asia: designed to torture?
Abstract
Purpose
Injecting drug use is a global concern, with an estimated 16 million people who inject drugs (PWIDs) in over 148 countries. A number of Asian countries detain PWIDs for compulsory treatment. The paper aims to discuss this issue.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors reviewed the literature on compulsory drug treatment in seven Asian countries.
Findings
The authors identified 1,269 closed settings which held over 600,000 drug users in eight countries. The average detainee was aged from 20 to 30 years and was predominantly male. HIV risk behaviour continued in detention in some countries. In most countries treatment comprised physical labour, military drills. Methadone maintenance treatment and antiretroviral therapy were rarely available. No data were located to show detention in a closed setting treated drug dependency. Issues of concern were; no due legal process for the detention of drug users, lack of evidence-based drug treatment, lack of HIV prevention and treatment, abusive conditions, forced labour and exercise, arbitrary exit procedures and very high relapse rates.
Research limitations/implications
The review of compulsory treatment of drug users failed to find any evaluation of effective drug treatment for detainees. Instead serious breaches in human rights conditions were evident. Prominent international organisations have called for the compulsory treatment of drug users to cease.
Practical implications
Many countries are spending vast amounts of funding on ineffective treatments for drug users.
Social implications
Funding should be directed to community-based drug treatments that have been shown to work.
Originality/value
This is the largest review of compulsory treatment of drug users to date.
Keywords
Citation
Dolan, K., Worth, H. and Wilson, D. (2015), "Compulsory treatment of drug users in Asia: designed to torture?", International Journal of Prisoner Health, Vol. 11 No. 4, pp. 255-268. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPH-09-2014-0030
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited