This paper investigates some productive ambiguities around the medical administration of methadone in the Republic of Ireland. The tensions surrounding methadone maintenance therapy (MMT) are outlined, as well as the sociohistorical context in which a serious heroin addiction problem in Ireland developed. Irish psychiatry intervened in this situation, during a time of institutional change, debates concerning the nature of addiction, moral panics concerning heroin addiction in Irish society and the recent boom in the Irish economy, known popularly as the Celtic Tiger. A particular history of this sort illuminates how technologies like MMT become cosmopolitan, settling into, while changing, local contexts
BACKGROUND Opioid dependence, characterised by socio economic disadvantage and significant morbidit...
This paper charts the benefits of harm reduction measures for drug users and society in general in I...
This article aimed to fill a perceived gap in the analysis of Irish social policy, by reviewing soci...
This paper investigates some productive ambiguities around the medical administration of methadone ...
In this paper, I reflect on two of my intertwined research interests. The first is my professional e...
Treatment service provision for problem drug users in the Republic of Ireland until the mid-1980s wa...
The author discusses the use of methadone maintenance treatment as a method for treating opiate depe...
While policy makers in the Republic of Ireland had been concerned with illicit drug use since the la...
Professor Michael Farrell’s recent review of the methadone treatment protocol (The Introduction of t...
This study sets out to make a meaningful and useful contribution to the discussion surrounding the t...
This paper looked at the development of problematic illicit drug use and the responses of policy mak...
This paper will initially outline the prevalence of methadone maintenance treatment in the European ...
Over the past decade, Northern Ireland has witnessed the cessation of conflict and the emergence of ...
This paper overviews the drug problem in Dublin, highlighting the history of heroin use since the la...
In the first part of a major two-part investigation into Ireland’s opioid treatment services, Aoife ...
BACKGROUND Opioid dependence, characterised by socio economic disadvantage and significant morbidit...
This paper charts the benefits of harm reduction measures for drug users and society in general in I...
This article aimed to fill a perceived gap in the analysis of Irish social policy, by reviewing soci...
This paper investigates some productive ambiguities around the medical administration of methadone ...
In this paper, I reflect on two of my intertwined research interests. The first is my professional e...
Treatment service provision for problem drug users in the Republic of Ireland until the mid-1980s wa...
The author discusses the use of methadone maintenance treatment as a method for treating opiate depe...
While policy makers in the Republic of Ireland had been concerned with illicit drug use since the la...
Professor Michael Farrell’s recent review of the methadone treatment protocol (The Introduction of t...
This study sets out to make a meaningful and useful contribution to the discussion surrounding the t...
This paper looked at the development of problematic illicit drug use and the responses of policy mak...
This paper will initially outline the prevalence of methadone maintenance treatment in the European ...
Over the past decade, Northern Ireland has witnessed the cessation of conflict and the emergence of ...
This paper overviews the drug problem in Dublin, highlighting the history of heroin use since the la...
In the first part of a major two-part investigation into Ireland’s opioid treatment services, Aoife ...
BACKGROUND Opioid dependence, characterised by socio economic disadvantage and significant morbidit...
This paper charts the benefits of harm reduction measures for drug users and society in general in I...
This article aimed to fill a perceived gap in the analysis of Irish social policy, by reviewing soci...