- Author
- Freya Vander Laenen (UGent) , Pablo Nicaise, Tom Decorte (UGent) , Jessica De Maeyer, Brice De Ruyver (UGent) , Pierre Smith, Laurens van Puyenbroeck (UGent) and Louis Favril (UGent)
- Organization
- Abstract
- People who use illicit drugs (PWUD) experience a wide range of drug-related harms. The goal of harm reduction is to reduce these adverse effects of drug use, without necessarily reducing drug use itself. By providing a safe and hygienic environment to consume pre-obtained drugs under the supervision of trained staff, drug consumption rooms (DCRs) aim to reduce both individual-level and public-level harms associated with illicit drug use. A substantial body of evidence has accumulated over the past three decades to support the effectiveness of DCRs in achieving their primary health and public order objectives, and therefore supports their role within a continuum of services for PWUD. Despite the abundance of scientific evidence supporting DCRs, there continues to be social and structural barriers to the implementation of this public health intervention in communities across the globe. Yet, the debate about implementing new DCRs remains high on the political agenda in a number of countries worldwide. To date, Belgium does not offer a DCR to its drug using population. Against this background, the Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO) commissioned a first-ever study to assess the feasibility of DCRs in Belgium. The objective of the current feasibility study was to identify (legal) preconditions, design and operational considerations that would allow a DCR to be added within a continuum of policy initiatives for PWUD in five Belgian cities: Ghent, Antwerp, Brussels, Charleroi and Liège. The aims were threefold: (1) provide an up-to-date overview of the effectiveness, models, and barriers of DCRs worldwide, with particular attention to DCRs in Belgium’s four neighbouring countries; (2) conduct an in-depth analysis of the legal framework within a DCR could operate in Belgium; and (3) conduct a feasibility study with local stakeholders and PWUD from each of the five cities. Based on our findings, we formulate 18 recommendations specifically tailored to the Belgian context: essential preconditions (including legal options); main considerations when implementing a DCR; the implementation process; and monitoring and evaluation.
- Keywords
- Drug consumption room, feasibility, Belgium
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8546539
- MLA
- Vander Laenen, Freya, et al. Feasibility Study on Drug Consumption Rooms in Belgium. Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO), 2018.
- APA
- Vander Laenen, F., Nicaise, P., Decorte, T., De Maeyer, J., De Ruyver, B., Smith, P., … Favril, L. (2018). Feasibility study on drug consumption rooms in Belgium. Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO).
- Chicago author-date
- Vander Laenen, Freya, Pablo Nicaise, Tom Decorte, Jessica De Maeyer, Brice De Ruyver, Pierre Smith, Laurens van Puyenbroeck, and Louis Favril. 2018. “Feasibility Study on Drug Consumption Rooms in Belgium.” Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO).
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Vander Laenen, Freya, Pablo Nicaise, Tom Decorte, Jessica De Maeyer, Brice De Ruyver, Pierre Smith, Laurens van Puyenbroeck, and Louis Favril. 2018. “Feasibility Study on Drug Consumption Rooms in Belgium.” Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO).
- Vancouver
- 1.Vander Laenen F, Nicaise P, Decorte T, De Maeyer J, De Ruyver B, Smith P, et al. Feasibility study on drug consumption rooms in Belgium. Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO); 2018.
- IEEE
- [1]F. Vander Laenen et al., “Feasibility study on drug consumption rooms in Belgium.” Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO), 2018.
@misc{8546539, abstract = {{People who use illicit drugs (PWUD) experience a wide range of drug-related harms. The goal of harm reduction is to reduce these adverse effects of drug use, without necessarily reducing drug use itself. By providing a safe and hygienic environment to consume pre-obtained drugs under the supervision of trained staff, drug consumption rooms (DCRs) aim to reduce both individual-level and public-level harms associated with illicit drug use. A substantial body of evidence has accumulated over the past three decades to support the effectiveness of DCRs in achieving their primary health and public order objectives, and therefore supports their role within a continuum of services for PWUD. Despite the abundance of scientific evidence supporting DCRs, there continues to be social and structural barriers to the implementation of this public health intervention in communities across the globe. Yet, the debate about implementing new DCRs remains high on the political agenda in a number of countries worldwide. To date, Belgium does not offer a DCR to its drug using population. Against this background, the Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO) commissioned a first-ever study to assess the feasibility of DCRs in Belgium. The objective of the current feasibility study was to identify (legal) preconditions, design and operational considerations that would allow a DCR to be added within a continuum of policy initiatives for PWUD in five Belgian cities: Ghent, Antwerp, Brussels, Charleroi and Liège. The aims were threefold: (1) provide an up-to-date overview of the effectiveness, models, and barriers of DCRs worldwide, with particular attention to DCRs in Belgium’s four neighbouring countries; (2) conduct an in-depth analysis of the legal framework within a DCR could operate in Belgium; and (3) conduct a feasibility study with local stakeholders and PWUD from each of the five cities. Based on our findings, we formulate 18 recommendations specifically tailored to the Belgian context: essential preconditions (including legal options); main considerations when implementing a DCR; the implementation process; and monitoring and evaluation.}}, author = {{Vander Laenen, Freya and Nicaise, Pablo and Decorte, Tom and De Maeyer, Jessica and De Ruyver, Brice and Smith, Pierre and van Puyenbroeck, Laurens and Favril, Louis}}, keywords = {{Drug consumption room,feasibility,Belgium}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Belgian Science Policy Office (BELSPO)}}, title = {{Feasibility study on drug consumption rooms in Belgium}}, year = {{2018}}, }