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- Title
Coolmine Therapeutic Community, Dublin: a 40-year history of Ireland's first voluntary drug treatment service.
- Authors
Butler, Shane
- Abstract
Aim To document the evolution over 40 years (from 1973 to 2013) of Coolmine Therapeutic Community (Ireland's first voluntary drug treatment service) against a background of broader drug policy developments in the Republic of Ireland and elsewhere during this period. Methods Data were gathered by means of archival research within Coolmine, complemented by semi-structured interviews with former clients, current and former Coolmine management and staff, and representatives of outsider stakeholder interests. Results Coolmines's history has three phases: (1) an early and uncontentious phase, in which external authorities provided financial support for Coolmine without questioning its work practices or outcomes; (2) a middle, controversial phase, in which Coolmine struggled for survival in an external policy environment now dominated by harm reduction strategies; and (3) a final phase in which, through the use of conventional corporate governance, Coolmine management sought to repair its damaged reputation by introducing evidence-based clinical practices. Conclusions Coolmine Therapeutic Community was established when drug treatment services in Ireland were in their infancy, and its changing fortunes over subsequent decades reflected changing perceptions of what constitutes appropriate addiction treatment-and in particular the role to be played by former addicts within addiction treatment systems-as well as changing perceptions of funding relationships between statutory authorities and voluntary providers of health and social services.
- Subjects
DUBLIN (Ireland); IRELAND; SUBSTANCE abuse treatment facilities; MEDICAL care; TREATMENT of drug addiction; HEALTH services administration; DRUG control; HISTORY; HUMAN services; HIV prevention; HIV infection risk factors; SUBSTANCE abuse treatment; DOCUMENTATION; ENDOWMENTS; HEROIN; INTERVIEWING; RESEARCH methodology; MEDICAL personnel; HEALTH policy; NARCOTICS; PATIENTS; EVIDENCE-based medicine; HARM reduction; TREATMENT programs
- Publication
Addiction, 2016, Vol 111, Issue 2, p197
- ISSN
0965-2140
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/add.13157