| Literature DB >> 28278755 |
Dan Werb1,2, Steffanie A Strathdee1, Emilo Meza1, Maria Gudelia Rangel Gomez3, Lawrence Palinkas4, Maria Elena Medina-Mora5, Leo Beletsky1,6.
Abstract
Mexico has experienced disproportionate drug-related harms given its role as a production and transit zone for illegal drugs destined primarily for the USA. In response, in 2009, the Mexican federal government passed legislation mandating pre-arrest diversion of drug-dependent individuals towards addiction treatment. However, this federal law was not specific about how the scale-up of the addiction treatment sector was to be operationalised. We therefore conducted in-depth qualitative interviews with key 'interactors' in fields affected by the federal legislation, including participants from the law enforcement, public health, addiction treatment, and governmental administration sectors. Among 19 participants from the municipal, state and federal levels were interviewed and multiple barriers to policy reform were identified. First, there is a lack of institutional expertise to implement the reform. Second, the operationalisation of the reform was not accompanied by a coordinated action plan. Third, the law is an unfunded mandate. Institutional barriers are likely hampering the implementation of Mexico's policy reform. Addressing the concerns expressed by interactors through the scale-up of services, the provision of increased training and education programmes for stakeholders and a coordinated action plan to operationalise the policy reform are likely needed to improve the policy reform process.Entities:
Keywords: Mexico; Tijuana; addiction treatment; drug policy reform; institutional barriers
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 28278755 PMCID: PMC5612664 DOI: 10.1080/17441692.2015.1093524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Public Health ISSN: 1744-1692