Fueled by the idealism of a Spanish doctor, Madrid Positivo provides
medical services, clean needles and methadone on a daily basis.
Using a van, they go to three sites a dayevery day of the
year. The program is devoid of the bureaucracy and rules that
bedevil programs in the United States. A doctor prescribes a daily
dose of methadone. Workers pour it into disposable cups and it
is consumed on the spot. The flexible rules make the methadone
program accessible to the homeless, the same group that is hardest
to reach in the United States.
Programs in the U.S. require urine tests to determine that the
patients are not using illegal drugs, and detailed regimens are
in place to prevent patients from selling the methadone. Often
the clients must keep appointments. Structured in this manner,
the American programs are limited to middle class, or at least
well-organized users, and inaccessible to the more defiant street
person.
It is hard to conceive that the idealistic staff in Madrid Positivo
would work in the security-conscious environment required by the
U.S. rules. This is at best unfortunate because the street populations
have dire needs. But American rules direct methadone to a different
population.
Madrid Positivo strikes even the Spanish as a liberal advocacy
venture. Spain has a punitive drug policy that levies strict jail
terms or fines on people who carry more than a small weight in
drugs. Between 1996 and 2004, the prison population rose from
44,312 to 58,456 with the largest number of arrests for cannabis-related
offenses. The dominant drug education program and drug rehab programs
are tied to the Roman Catholic Church and emphasize abstention.
Madrid Positivo is an island of harm reduction in a sea of prohibition.
But the program works, for the same reason good drug programs
work all over the world, because it provides medical services
in a friendly and caring environment. This humane approach is
crucial to a successful drug abuse reduction effort. Dr. Carlos
Alvarez Vera who authorized Madrid Positivo when he was in charge
of anti-drug programs for the Madrid region, sees non-governmental
organizations playing a crucial role in dealing with drug abuse.
According to him , these programs bring a motivation that can
never be duplicated by a corporate or government bureaucracy.
Madrid Positivo has medical doctors, trained social
workers and educators who work directly with the clients at the
roadside locations, building up long-term rapport and familiarity.
Some weekends, Dr. Jorge Gutierrez, the founder and driving force
of Madrid Positivo, organizes activities for clients, and provides
them with opportunities to relate with the staff outside of their
street environment. On one trip, when a client got lost, and others
searched for him in the dark, the homeless man took a simple practical
step. He found a hunters shack and prepared to pass the
nighthardly a new experience for him. He was touched when
he found that the others were worried enough to search for him.
This man and others leave the streets to enter transitional housing
provided by the program. One supposes that with more support the
number of people resuming a normal life would increase.