Human rights in patient care: drug treatment and punishment in Russia

Abstract An inherent feature of drug control in many countries has been an excessive emphasis on punitive measures at the expense of public health. At its most extreme, this approach has reduced health services for people who use drugs to an extension of the drug control system. In these environment...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mikhail Golichenko, Sandra Ka Hon Chu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-06-01
Series:Public Health Reviews
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40985-018-0088-5
id doaj-1b55281e3ea24378839eb2cbc3839625
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1b55281e3ea24378839eb2cbc38396252021-04-02T10:27:00ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Public Health Reviews2107-69522018-06-0139111210.1186/s40985-018-0088-5Human rights in patient care: drug treatment and punishment in RussiaMikhail Golichenko0Sandra Ka Hon Chu1Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal NetworkCanadian HIV/AIDS Legal NetworkAbstract An inherent feature of drug control in many countries has been an excessive emphasis on punitive measures at the expense of public health. At its most extreme, this approach has reduced health services for people who use drugs to an extension of the drug control system. In these environments, health services are punitive rather than supportive for people who use drugs, especially those who are drug dependent. In Russia, the government’s official policy towards drug use is one of “social intolerance,” which seeks to legitimize and encourage societal ill treatment of people who use drugs. In practice, this policy has materialized as widespread and systematic human rights violations of people who use drugs, including by subjecting them to unscientific and ideologically driven methods of drug prevention and treatment and denying them access to essential medicines and services. While such human rights violations are well-documented, there have been no attempts to date to consider the consequences of this approach through the lens of human rights in patient care. This concept brings together the rights of both patients and providers and interrogates the role of the state on the relationship between two core groups: drug-dependent people and drug treatment doctors or “narcologists” in Russia. In this article, we apply the concept of human rights in patient care to consider the narcologist’s role in punitive drug policy and human rights violations against people who use drugs and to analyze how punitive drug policy manifests as human rights violations against narcologists themselves, who lose their professional independence and their ability to work according to professional standards and ethical norms. We conclude that both people who use drugs and narcologists suffer from punitive drug policy and should unite their efforts to ensure drug policy does not undermine patients’ health and human rights.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40985-018-0088-5RussiaDrug treatmentHuman rights in patient care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mikhail Golichenko
Sandra Ka Hon Chu
spellingShingle Mikhail Golichenko
Sandra Ka Hon Chu
Human rights in patient care: drug treatment and punishment in Russia
Public Health Reviews
Russia
Drug treatment
Human rights in patient care
author_facet Mikhail Golichenko
Sandra Ka Hon Chu
author_sort Mikhail Golichenko
title Human rights in patient care: drug treatment and punishment in Russia
title_short Human rights in patient care: drug treatment and punishment in Russia
title_full Human rights in patient care: drug treatment and punishment in Russia
title_fullStr Human rights in patient care: drug treatment and punishment in Russia
title_full_unstemmed Human rights in patient care: drug treatment and punishment in Russia
title_sort human rights in patient care: drug treatment and punishment in russia
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Public Health Reviews
issn 2107-6952
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Abstract An inherent feature of drug control in many countries has been an excessive emphasis on punitive measures at the expense of public health. At its most extreme, this approach has reduced health services for people who use drugs to an extension of the drug control system. In these environments, health services are punitive rather than supportive for people who use drugs, especially those who are drug dependent. In Russia, the government’s official policy towards drug use is one of “social intolerance,” which seeks to legitimize and encourage societal ill treatment of people who use drugs. In practice, this policy has materialized as widespread and systematic human rights violations of people who use drugs, including by subjecting them to unscientific and ideologically driven methods of drug prevention and treatment and denying them access to essential medicines and services. While such human rights violations are well-documented, there have been no attempts to date to consider the consequences of this approach through the lens of human rights in patient care. This concept brings together the rights of both patients and providers and interrogates the role of the state on the relationship between two core groups: drug-dependent people and drug treatment doctors or “narcologists” in Russia. In this article, we apply the concept of human rights in patient care to consider the narcologist’s role in punitive drug policy and human rights violations against people who use drugs and to analyze how punitive drug policy manifests as human rights violations against narcologists themselves, who lose their professional independence and their ability to work according to professional standards and ethical norms. We conclude that both people who use drugs and narcologists suffer from punitive drug policy and should unite their efforts to ensure drug policy does not undermine patients’ health and human rights.
topic Russia
Drug treatment
Human rights in patient care
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40985-018-0088-5
work_keys_str_mv AT mikhailgolichenko humanrightsinpatientcaredrugtreatmentandpunishmentinrussia
AT sandrakahonchu humanrightsinpatientcaredrugtreatmentandpunishmentinrussia
_version_ 1724167333676580864