We are happy to announce the New Advisory Committee Members 2024!

Based on the results of the voting process, the following candidates have been elected: Magdalena Bartnik, Irena Molnar, Aura Roig and Marios Atzemis.

C-EHRN would like to take the opportunity to thank all the members who submitted an application. Also, to emphasize the high level of expertise and the excellence of applications received for this election.

In the coming days, the newly elected members will participate in their first Advisory Committee Meeting. In this event, they will have the opportunity to meet the current remaining members and to connect with those who leave their seats.

C-EHRN would like to invite you all to join us in congratulating the four new committee members. We are truly excited to start working with them!

City Report – Amsterdam. Shaping the future of drug regulation from the ‘bottom-up’

On January 26, 2024, the city of Amsterdam hosted a groundbreaking international conference on the legal regulation of drugs, spearheaded by Mayor Femke Halsema, a vocal advocate for drug policy reform. The event united policymakers, academics, and civil society representatives in acknowledging the failures and human rights violations caused by over fifty years of drug prohibition. Emphasising the importance of advancing effective and humane drug policies at the city level, the conference garnered support from several current and former mayors worldwide. While Amsterdam has long been at the forefront of decriminalisation and harm reduction efforts, discussions around legal regulation have been, until now, relatively limited. The conference underscored the importance of ensuring fair and socially just legal regulation, including reparations and affirmative action to those unfairly and disproportionately affected by the war on drugs, and the importance of guarding drug markets against excessive ‘corporate capture’. The event represents a turning point in drug policy reform, especially within policymaking circles, marking a significant stride towards drug policies grounded in health and human rights. At the city level, Amsterdam is taking the lead in proposing innovative approaches to drug regulation, moving the conversation beyond cannabis, and firmly placing the regulation of substances like cocaine and MDMA on the agenda.

 

Following a new format, Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network’s Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe 2023 Data Report is launched in 6 volumes: Hepatitis C CareEssential Harm Reduction ServicesNew Drug TrendsMental Health of Harm Reduction StaffTEDI Reports and City Reports (WarsawBălţiEsch-sur-AlzetteLondonAmsterdam). The Executive Summary can be accessed here.

C-EHRN Activity Report 2023 – Summary of Activities and Impact

C-EHRN is proud and grateful to present its 2023 Network Report, providing a summarised version of the activities undertaken last year. In this document, we are looking back at a year full of tasks, challenges and opportunities.

Join the side events at the 67th Session of the United Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs!

We would like to highlight 3 side events, one on drug consumption rooms, organised by De Regenboog Groep, with C-EHRN, the European Network of Drug Consumption Rooms and ICAD as co-sponsors, and the other 2, on civil society’s role in monitoring drug policy and on the incorporation of social justice into harm reduction, organised with the support and participation of our Network.

Empowering Voices: Civil Society’s Role in Monitoring and Evaluation of Drug Policy

19 March 2024, 14:10-15:00 [CET]
Room M0E07

Civil society organisations play an essential role in monitoring drug policy and drug-related services, providing ground-level insights that complement and expand the knowledge generated by the governments and international organisations. By being more connected with people who use drugs, and advocating for the rights of affected communities, they bridge the gap between policy and practice, contributing to the development of more effective, humane, and realistic drug policies.

This side event will highlight the crucial role of civil society in monitoring drug trends and drug-related services and the added value civil society brings to the policy-making process through its monitoring activities. This event also aims to underscore the effectiveness of networking among civil society organisations, highlighting their capacity to systematically monitor essential, field-derived data.

Speakers:
Dr Mireia Ventura, Drug checking services coordinator, Trans European Drug Information network [TEDI] – NEW Net; Acción, Bienestar y Desarrollo [ABD] – Energy Control
Dr Iga Jeziorska, Senior Researcher, Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network [C-EHRN]
Susanna Ronconi, Researcher, Forum Droghe
Danilo Ballotta, Principal Policy Analyst, European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction [EMCDDA]

Chair & Moderator: Stéphane Leclercq, Director, Fédération bruxelloise des institutions pour toxicomanes [FEDA BXL]

Drug Consumption Rooms in Europe – Between Health & Safety

21st of March, 09:10h [CET]
Hybrid Location: Room M0E100 & Online
You can join the event via this Zoom link.

For more than 30 years, Drug Consumption Rooms (DCRs) have been implemented in Western countries, generating a substantial body of practical experience and research that evidences their effectiveness in achieving public health and safety goals and contributing to the well-being of people who use drugs. However, the scale and breadth of their global implementation still vary significantly. This side event aims to contribute to an informed discussion about DCRs by presenting the available evidence, reviewing the various models being adopted and their characteristics, as well as (legal) preconditions and considerations that would allow this public health service to be integrated in a balanced continuum of drug policy initiatives.

Speakers:
Dr. João Castel-Branco Goulão, Director General of the Portuguese Institute on Addictive Behaviours and Dependencies [ICAD]
Dr. Blanca Iciar Indave Ruiz, Scientific Agent of the Support to Practice Sector at the Public Health Unit of the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction [EMCDDA]
Mx. Roberto Perez Gayo, Head of Policy at Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network [C-EHRN] and Coordinator of the European Network of Drug Consumption Rooms [ENDCR]
Mr. Hugo Faria, Team Manager at Associação Ares do Pinhal

Chair & Moderator: Ms. Katrin Shiffer, Director of Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network [C-EHRN] and Head of the International Department of Stichting De Regenboog Groep.

 

The Incorporation of Social Justice Into Harm Reduction, an Essential Step

22 March, 13:00 [CET]
Room M0E100
Organized by the ABD Associació Benestar I Desenvolupament

Harm reduction is consolidated worldwide as an effective public health strategy in substance use.

Through the example of Spain with experience of more than 40 years, the main of this Side is to make visible the importance of (re)incorporating the perspective of social justice to strengthen health and social protection systems, while integrating and stimulating the participation, learning and leadership of the communities themselves.

Ester Aranda Rodríguez, Director of Harm Reduction in ABD and researcher in UNAD.
Juan Fernández Ochoa, Campaigns and Communications Officer at IDPC. Global coordinator of the Support Don’t Punish campaign.
Roberto Pérez Gayo, Head of Policy at Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network [C-EHRN] and Coordinator of the European Network of Drug Consumption Rooms [ENDCR]
Aura Roig Fortaleza, Founder Director of Metzineres and international advisor on drug policy, harm reduction, human rights and gender

Chair & Moderator:
Constanza Sánchez Avilés, Law, Policy and Human Rights Director at ICEERS

Download the flyer

Recording – Roundup Webinar | Civil Society Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe

 

The video is the recording of the webinar organised to celebrate the core publications for the C-EHRN Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe that took place on the 7th of March.

The event brought together four volumes of the 2023 Data Report:


Moderator:
 Rafaela Rigoni (C-EHRN)

Speakers:
Iga Jeziorska (C-EHRN) – Essential Harm Reduction Services
Tuukka Tammi (THL) – Eliminating Hepatitis C in Europe
Daan van der Gouwe (Trimbos) – New Drug Trends
Guy Jones (TEDI) – Drug Checking Observations and European Drug Checking Trends via TEDI

 
Following a new format, Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network’s Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe 2023 Data Report is launched in 6 volumes: Hepatitis C CareEssential Harm Reduction ServicesNew Drug TrendsMental Health of Harm Reduction StaffTEDI Reports and City Reports (WarsawBălţiEsch-sur-AlzetteLondonAmsterdam). The Executive Summary can be accessed here.

Essential Harm Reduction Services: Report on policy implementation for people who use drugs

In 2023, C-EHRN and its members assessed the state of essential harm reduction services in European cities for the fourth time as part of the Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction In Europe, with 35 cities responding to our survey in 30 countries. You can now download the resulting publication, Essential Harm Reduction Services: Report on Policy Implementation for People Who Use Drugs, and read the interview with Iga Jeziorska, C-EHRN’s Senior Research Officer and the primary author below.

Which type of harm reduction services are most lacking in the cities that contributed to the report?

The ones that are not that well established are those not related to the prevention of infectious diseases as closely as needle and syringe programmes and are not aiming to minimise injecting use like opioid substitution treatment does. Namely, drug consumption rooms and drug checking are lacking in Europe overall the most. This underdevelopment of DRCs and drug checking may become a serious problem, especially in the context of the opioid crisis that we might be facing very soon.

Another problematic issue is harm reduction services in prison. Except for opioid agonist treatment (OAT), this is also an area where there are very big gaps in the service provision in terms of harm reduction. OAT is officially available in prison in most cities, but that doesn’t mean that it is easily accessible everywhere. We know that in Budapest, Hungary, for example, it is theoretically available, but there are no records of people using the service, and definitely not because there are no people who use opioids in prisons.

What would you highlight regarding the barriers in the outreach of harm reduction services based on the findings?

Funding, lack of political will and lack of or insufficient involvement of people who use drugs in services were reported as the main barriers to reaching out to specific subgroups of people who use drugs. Of course, all of these aspects are related to one another. Funding is an evergreen topic which is always there, and the lack of or insufficient funding is a direct consequence of the lack of political will. If there was political support for harm reduction, there would have been funding as well.

 

Are there any main differences in the availability, accessibility and quality of the services between the cities of the focal points?

On the one hand, we have opioid agonist treatment, needle distribution programs and all of the infectious diseases-related services, such as testing and treatment. These are well-developed in general in terms of availability, accessibility and quality.

On the other hand, there are some more innovative services that maybe, as I said before, are not that much connected, at least in the minds of the general public and the policymakers, with direct prevention of infectious diseases. These services that go beyond the ‘traditional’ harm reduction and focus primarily (but not exclusively) on overdose prevention are the drug consumption rooms (DCRs) and drug checking. These are in general more available in Western European countries. Snorting kits, kits for smoking, and fentanyl strips are also less available and accessible.

There are no DCRs in Central-Eastern Europe and Western Balkans. They are quite well developed as a network in Germany, Switzerland, Spain and maybe two other countries. In some countries, such as Greece or Portugal, there are one or two services. Drug checking is similar. There is a clear division between Central-Eastern Europe and Western Balkans on the one hand and Western Europe on the other,  in terms of service scope, service accessibility, low versus high threshold of various services, and the very service existence in the first place.

Harm reduction is chronically underfunded everywhere, but that means something different in the West and in Eastern-Central Europe and Western Balkans. In the East and Southeast, underfunded means that an insufficient number of services are operating or – in extreme cases – they are not funded for several months in a year because there are gaps between grants. Underfunded in the West seems to mean mostly that services don’t have enough funds to develop the offer, scale up activities and broaden their scope. We can also see that in the West, in general, services are more integrated into the health and social care systems, and in the East, they are more standing alone. One of the worrying phenomena that we observed this year, however, is the extremely low availability and accessibility of social integration services, such as housing, income generation and employment, and legal support. Furthermore, for the two latter types of services, we’ve observed significant deterioration in availability over the last couple of years.

We also know from the previous Monitoring edition that there are divisions between the urban and rural areas. Services are focused and concentrated in big cities, and they are lacking in the countryside. The question is also to what extent they are needed in the rural areas, as we also know that the concentration of people who use drugs is also in bigger cities. Some level of services is necessary in rural areas, but what level of availability and accessibility is necessary is something that would require additional assessment.

 

How do you think that harm reduction organizations can use the report? 

We are trying to follow the requests of the Focal Points in terms of the focus and to make our assessments address the topics that are important to people at any given moment.

When it comes to using the report in advocacy efforts, harm reduction organisations can use it to highlight cities and countries that can serve as good practice examples, like Bern or Amsterdam, with holistic, integrated services. The report is a general overview of the situation in Europe, and it can serve as a starting point in orienting oneself in what’s happening in different cities.

In the context of talking to policymakers, the report – in conjunction, for example, with the European Drug Strategy, which calls for scaling up harm reduction services – can help to showcase the gaps in harm reduction services at the city level compared to what is declared by a country or a city in official policy documents. This can potentially be quite a powerful tool in helping organisations in their advocacy efforts.

 

What do you think is the added value of civil society-led monitoring in comparison with other types of monitoring done by major agencies?

One of the added values is trust and the hands-on experience of our Focal Points, and the related kind and detail of the information collected. Civil society organisations are close to people who use drugs, and people who use drugs trust them enough to share honest information. For example, from the point of view of drug checking, this means that we can have very detailed information on how people use drugs, what drugs they use, in what contexts, etc. This is in sharp contrast, for example, to wastewater analysis that can tell us how much cocaine is in the wastewater but cannot provide information about the people who used it and the circumstances, if they used it at all.

For our monitoring, we collect data in a way that is contextualised. This is quite different from data collected, for example, by the national Reitox focal points that focus on the existence of services and perhaps the number of services.

On the other hand, when we ask to what extent particular types of services are available to specific communities and to what extent they are accessible, we implicitly include the element of the needs. That is this contextualisation of data that I mentioned, which includes additional information. For example, seven services existing in one city can mean something completely different than the same number of services in another city because the needs are different, and this is what we address with our monitoring. This is one of the main values of C-EHRN monitoring compared to other data.

Another point is focus on the city level. Most data is collected by European agencies and country governments is collected at the national level. Our data is collected at the city level, which is important primarily because the implementation of drug policies is done mostly at the local level in European countries.

We are also quite timely with our data. We are now at the beginning of 2024, and we are reporting on the data between 2022 and June 2023, a bit over one year of delay in reporting. This is also something that makes us different, less bureaucracy and resulting quicker data processing give us the possibility of being quicker with our reporting.

 

Would you pick one graph that you find significant and explain why it is relevant?

All of them are significant in their own way. What I would suggest is Figure 9 on service delivery for ageing people who use drugs, a category that we introduced last year.  Ageing people who use drugs are becoming a more and more significant group among the clients of harm reduction services all over Europe. The people for whom the first harm reduction services were established in the 1980s are ageing, and there is an increasingly recognised need for developing and adjusting services to their needs, which significantly differ from those of the other subgroups, and there hasn’t been sufficient focus on them so far.

Another question that we asked last year for the first time is the extent of involvement of people who use drugs in service governance, service implementation and evaluation. There are very few cities where people with living and lived experience are involved in the governance of services. They are involved in implementation and, to some lesser extent, in evaluation but not really in the governance of organisations and services. This is something that we need to keep monitoring. The debate about community involvement, community empowerment and community-led services is very lively across the continent, but we are still not there yet in terms of practice of harm reduction services functioning. We should keep a close eye on this and possibly combine the monitoring with capacity-building efforts to improve the involvement of people with lived and living experiences in services.

 

Following a new format, Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network’s Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe 2023 Data Report is launched in 6 volumes: Hepatitis C CareEssential Harm Reduction ServicesNew Drug TrendsMental Health of Harm Reduction StaffTEDI Reports and City Reports (WarsawBălţiEsch-sur-AlzetteLondonAmsterdam). The Executive Summary can be accessed here.

Drug Checking Observations and European Drug Checking Trends via TEDI

To monitor new drug trends in Europe and complement the information gained through focus group discussions, C-EHRN’s 2023 Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe includes two reports via the Trans European Drug Information Network (TEDI), drawing from data collected from drug checking services.

The snapshot report contains information from the first two quarters of 2023 for each drug where significant drug checking data exists in Europe. These are amphetamine, cocaine, ketamine, MDMA, methamphetamine, heroin, and general pages for benzodiazepine sedatives, novel stimulants and novel opioids. The multi-year report contains data since 2018 and aims to show the changes in drug markets over time.

Download the snapshot report and the multi-year report and read the interview with Guy Jones, TEDI’s data manager and the primary author below!

How do you see the role of drug-checking services?

Drug checking services are an invaluable tool that are able to both monitor trends while also responding in real-time to mitigate the health impacts that emerging trends may have. They have unique insight into new trends as they can talk directly to service users to understand the real drivers of new consumption patterns and understand whether people are deliberately seeking out a new drug or if it is simply being added by manufacturers.

 

What are the main adulterants and risk trends in the European drug market based on the data you 

analysed from 2023?

2023 has seen the market recover to pre-COVID trends of increasing strength of some drugs, presenting a significant risk that service users regularly underestimate.

Alongside this, there is major concern about the potential for changes in the heroin supply from Afghanistan and whether this could lead to a move to synthetic opioids as was seen in North America over the last decade.

 

Would you highlight any differences in drug preferences in the past year between European countries based on the findings?

Not really. Europe has a fairly consistent supply throughout the continent, however, there are consumption patterns that exist more in certain countries, such as a slightly higher prevalence of amphetamine in Eastern Europe.

 

Based on the data you analysed, what are the most significant changes in the drug markets over time?

When I first started working in the field, I never expected that we would find ourselves in a position where the major threat in the cocaine supply was because it was so strong and unadulterated.

 

How do you think harm reduction organisations can use the reports?

The reports are often extremely interesting to service users and they can serve as an invaluable starting point for discussions about risk from adulteration but also about the role that tolerance plays in a service user’s experience of a drug.

 

How do you think data from drug-checking services can be combined with other kinds of research, such as the data from insights from focus group discussions conducted as part of C-EHRN’s 2023 Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe?

Data is extremely useful for “calibrating” qualitative observations to help us understand whether they are accurate reflections of reality and tuning how we collect qualitative data to get more accurate information, faster.

 

Would you pick a graph that you find significant and explain why you find it relevant?

Not a chart, but a number from the snapshot report. The median heroin sample contains just 17% purity, with huge variation. This variation already creates a risk for people who use heroin but it also means that organised groups wouldn’t have much to do to create a product that is much stronger and substitutes heroin for synthetic opioids. Experience shows us that law enforcement won’t reduce the health risk from this.

 
 

Following a new format, Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network’s Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe 2023 Data Report is launched in 6 volumes: Hepatitis C CareEssential Harm Reduction ServicesNew Drug TrendsMental Health of Harm Reduction StaffTEDI Reports and City Reports (WarsawBălţiEsch-sur-AlzetteLondonAmsterdam). The Executive Summary can be accessed here.

Executive Summary | Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe 2023

Following a new format, Correlation – European Harm Reduction Network’s Civil Society-led Monitoring of Harm Reduction in Europe 2023 Data Report is launched in 6 volumes: Hepatitis C CareEssential Harm Reduction ServicesNew Drug TrendsMental Health of Harm Reduction StaffTEDI Reports and City Reports (WarsawBălţiEsch-sur-AlzetteLondonAmsterdam). 

Innovation, Mutual Learning & Empowerment

Implementing a Drug Consumption Room (DCR) reveals a nuanced landscape where practical considerations and negotiations often need more attention despite their equal complexity. These considerations involve, amongst others, the strategic designing of care support services, the development of supportive environments and day-to-day operations, encompassing the articulation and enhancement of procedural protocols to effectively respond to the unique context, needs, preferences and values of the served communities.

These challenges become particularly pronounced when establishing a DCR for the first time in regions with high drug-related fatalities or limited resources. Moreover, establishing and operating a DCR is ongoing, subject to periodic evaluations of efficacy and legitimacy, to ensure continued optional functionality and societal acceptance.

In 2023, to assist care professionals in Europe contemplating the establishment or improvement of DCRs – including community-based and community-led organisations, programme managers, policymakers, researchers, and other related stakeholders – C-EHRN and the European Network of DCRs (ENDCR) conceptualised and developed an on-site training programme. This programme was piloted in two locations, Ljubljana, in cooperation with the NGOs STIMGA and ŠENT, and Brno, in cooperation with PODANÉ RUCE.

The following report presents an overview of the methodology employed in developing the training programme and a summary of the background, context and outcomes of each pilot training.

Infographic. Location & Number of DCR throughout Europe

For more than 30 years, Drug Consumption Rooms (DCRs) have been implemented in Western countries. These services typically aim to reduce overdose-related morbidity and mortality, prevent the spread of infectious diseases and provide access to a broad range of medical and social support services. As frontline, low-threshold services, DCRs are also often among the first sites where insights into new drug use patterns can, and they, therefore, play an important role in the early identification of new and emerging drug trends. In addition, DCRs may also aim to reduce drug use in public and improve public amenities.

In some countries, DCRs are a well-established and integrated component in responses to drug-related problems. Additionally, a substantial body of practical experience and research evidence has accumulated to support its effectiveness in achieving public health and safety. Yet, the scale of DCR implementation still varies considerably worldwide as they remain contested measures, particularly at the level of political and public debates.

This map shows the current number and location of drug consumption facilities throughout Europe (as of March 2024), incorporating the latest data from the European Network of Drug Consumption Rooms [ENDCR] yearly update. The source data for this map may be found in the following document. The coordinates here are approximate and cannot be used to locate facilities.