Managing Opioid Agonist Therapy in the Post-Soviet Limbo

IF 2.3 Q3 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
A. Dmitrieva, V. Stepanov, Alyona Mazhnaya
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

According to Dante, “Limbo” is the first circle of Hell located at its edge. Unlike other residents of Hell, the Limbo population suffers no torment other than their lack of hope. We argue that a lack of hope in post-Soviet Ukraine is expressed by a lack of conditions for a better future since the past is overrepresented in the present. Therefore, every movement transforms under the past’s pressure, changing its course in order to reproduce and perpetuate ghosts of what is long gone. We argue that the current state of Ukraine can be framed as “post-Soviet limbo.” If the great stability of the Soviet regime was a result of overregulation and extensive control, or of “uncertainty avoidance,” then a post-Soviet limbo is a result of “managing uncertainty” simultaneously influenced by Soviet legacies and neoliberal promises of growth, calculability, and deregulation on the part of the State. “Soviet legacies” are dominant and represent a mix of formal overregulation explicitly presented through laws and policies and informality which, according to some authors, became even more widespread in the post-Soviet period than it used to be under the Soviet rule. We do not aim to consider the past legacies as being opposite to neoliberal features and futures, but negotiate the way the two are interrelated and mutually reinforced in the present to produce the post-Soviet limbo. Ukraine’s performance of Opioid Agonist Therapy (OAT) coverage is consistently estimated as insufficient and needing further improvement. However, we argue that that there are two modes of OAT implementation in Ukraine: state-funded (formal) and privately-funded (informal). The latter’s size does not fall into official estimates since the national reports on OAT performance never include the numbers of patients involved in informal treatment. We suggest, that the informal mode of OAT implementation appeared as a result of contrasting efforts towards intensive regulation and extensive growth. To understand how these two modes are produced in the context of post-Soviet narcology, how they differ and where their paths cross, we analyze two types of texts: legal and policy documents regulating substance use disorder (SUD) treatment, mainly OAT; and qualitative data, including interviews with OAT patients and field notes reflecting the environment of OAT programs. Finally, the presented article seeks to answer how the state’s contrasting efforts to manage the uncertainty of SUD treatment through OAT regulation and implementation reproduce the post-Soviet limbo and, thus, people with SUD as “patients of the state” who are frozen in a hopeless wait for changes.
在后苏联时期管理阿片类兴奋剂治疗
根据但丁的说法,“林波”是地狱边缘的第一个圆圈。与地狱的其他居民不同,林波人除了缺乏希望之外,没有受到任何折磨。我们认为,后苏联时代的乌克兰缺乏希望,表现为缺乏更美好未来的条件,因为过去在现在的比例过高。因此,每一个运动都在过去的压力下发生变化,改变其进程,以重现和延续早已逝去的幽灵。我们认为,乌克兰目前的状态可以被定义为“后苏联的边缘状态”。如果苏联政权的巨大稳定是过度监管和广泛控制的结果,或者是“避免不确定性”的结果,那么后苏联的不确定性是“管理不确定性”同时受到苏联遗产和新自由主义对增长、可计算性、,以及国家放松管制。“苏联遗产”占主导地位,代表着通过法律和政策明确提出的正式过度监管和非正式的混合,根据一些作者的说法,这种非正式在后苏联时期变得比苏联统治下更加普遍。我们的目的不是将过去的遗产视为与新自由主义特征和未来相反,而是通过谈判,使两者在当前相互关联并相互加强,从而产生后苏联时代的边缘状态。乌克兰的阿片类兴奋剂治疗(OAT)覆盖率一直被认为不足,需要进一步改进。然而,我们认为,乌克兰有两种OAT实施模式:国家资助(正式)和私人资助(非正式)。后者的规模不属于官方估计,因为关于OAT表现的国家报告从未包括参与非正式治疗的患者人数。我们认为,OAT的非正式实施模式是密集监管和广泛增长的对比努力的结果。为了理解这两种模式是如何在后苏联毒物学背景下产生的,它们是如何不同的,以及它们的路径在哪里交叉,我们分析了两种类型的文本:规范物质使用障碍(SUD)治疗的法律和政策文件,主要是OAT;以及定性数据,包括对OAT患者的访谈和反映OAT项目环境的现场记录。最后,本文试图回答国家通过OAT监管和实施来管理SUD治疗的不确定性的对比努力是如何再现后苏联时期的困境的,因此,SUD患者是“国家的病人”,他们被冻结在绝望的等待中。
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来源期刊
Contemporary Drug Problems
Contemporary Drug Problems Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Contemporary Drug Problems is a scholarly journal that publishes peer-reviewed social science research on alcohol and other psychoactive drugs, licit and illicit. The journal’s orientation is multidisciplinary and international; it is open to any research paper that contributes to social, cultural, historical or epidemiological knowledge and theory concerning drug use and related problems. While Contemporary Drug Problems publishes all types of social science research on alcohol and other drugs, it recognizes that innovative or challenging research can sometimes struggle to find a suitable outlet. The journal therefore particularly welcomes original studies for which publication options are limited, including historical research, qualitative studies, and policy and legal analyses. In terms of readership, Contemporary Drug Problems serves a burgeoning constituency of social researchers as well as policy makers and practitioners working in health, welfare, social services, public policy, criminal justice and law enforcement.
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