Literature DB >> 24360401

Work and the journey to recovery: exploring the implications of welfare reform for methadone maintenance clients.

Mark Monaghan1, Emma Wincup2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: An emphasis on welfare reform has been a shared concern of recent UK governments, with the project of transforming the provision of welfare gathering pace over the past six years. Replicating active labour market policies pursued across the globe, successive governments have used welfare-to-work programmes as mechanisms to address worklessness. Since 2008, problem drug users (PDUs) have been added to a list of groups for whom intervention is deemed necessary to encourage, enable, and sometimes coerce them into paid employment. This approach is underpinned by three beliefs relating to paid work: it sustains recovery, has a transformative potential and should be the primary duty of the responsible citizen. Using policy developments in the UK as a case study, the article explores the implications for methadone maintenance clients of connecting drug policy (premised on the belief that work is central to recovery) with welfare policy (which at present is preoccupied with reducing worklessness).
METHODS: A critical analysis of policy documents, including drug strategies, Green and White papers and welfare reform legislation, alongside a review of relevant academic literature.
RESULTS: The 'work first' approach which underpins current labour market activation policies in the UK and elsewhere is insufficiently flexible to accommodate the diverse needs of PDUs in recovery, and is particularly particular problematic when combined with a 'social deficit' model which concentrates on individual rather than structural barriers to employability. The use of payment-by-results mechanisms to provide employment services, coupled with the use of sanctions for those who do not engage, is likely to be particularly problematic for methadone maintenance clients.
CONCLUSION: Welfare reform in the UK is likely to undermine the recovery of methadone maintenance clients. Further research is urgently needed to explore its impact on this sub-group of PDUs, alongside comparative studies to determine best practice in integrating drug and welfare policies.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24360401     DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2013.08.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Drug Policy        ISSN: 0955-3959


  2 in total

1.  Being at work improves stress, craving, and mood for people with opioid use disorder: Ecological momentary assessment during a randomized trial of experimental employment in a contingency-management-based therapeutic workplace.

Authors:  Jeremiah W Bertz; Leigh V Panlilio; Samuel W Stull; Kirsten E Smith; David Reamer; August F Holtyn; Forrest Toegel; William J Kowalczyk; Karran A Phillips; David H Epstein; Kenneth Silverman; Kenzie L Preston
Journal:  Behav Res Ther       Date:  2022-03-12

2.  Examining the relationship between ethnicity and the use of drug-related services: an ethnographic study of Nepali drug users in Hong Kong.

Authors:  Wai-Man Tang
Journal:  Subst Abuse Rehabil       Date:  2014-06-20
  2 in total

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