policy
THE DISCOVERY OF RECOVERY
Since 2008‘ recovery’ has been at the heart of British drug treatment policy. As Mike Ashton reports, it has been used as both an inspirational call to overcome addiction and a justification for limiting treatment
Though the term has a long history associated especially with 12-step-based approaches, the modern‘ recovery’ era in Britain can be dated to May 2008, when governments in Scotland and England presented it as a new dawn, which would reinvigorate treatment services stuck in the rut of preventing harm and crime rather than redeeming and regenerating lives.
In an‘ age of austerity’, commentators have noted that the ambitious rhetoric was not matched by the‘ intensive support over long periods of time needed to become drug free’. Though incorporated in genuine patient-centred advocacy, at a political level, in England‘ recovery’ helped legitimise not intensification, but withdrawal of support, as long-term treatment became stigmatised as impeding recovery. This article offers a reminder of that part of its origins which lay in the imperative to cut public spending and curtail addiction treatment – not to do more, but to spend less. Neglected in the dazzle of the recovery vision, these origins remain active in today’ s conceptualisations and uses of the term.
So dominant has recovery become, that it lies at the heart of the treatment themes in Britain’ s national drug policies. It features in the titles of both the English and the Scottish strategies, while the Welsh strategy committed the nation to‘ focus our efforts on helping substance misusers to improve their health and maintain their recovery’. What these strategies meant by‘ recovery’ was not spelt out, but the broad themes were clear: some of the most marginal, damaged and unconventional of people were to become variously abstinent from illegal drugs and / or free of dependence and( as Scotland’ s strategy put it)‘ active and contributing member [ s ] of society’. Scotland’ s ambition echoed those of the government in England dating back to the mid-2000s for more drug users to leave treatment, come off benefits, and get back to work – and become an economic asset rather than a drain.
At first, under Gordon Brown’ s Labour government this ambition verged on the brutal. In February 2008 Labour’ s UK drug strategy seemed to threaten drug users reliant on benefits with penury if they failed to‘ move successfully through treatment and into employment’. The backdrop was the credit-crunch crisis dating from August 2007, followed in April 2009 by a promise by Conservative Party leader David Cameron to usher in an‘ age of austerity’ to cut the budget deficit.
Though transition out of treatment and into employment was close to what later became‘ recovery’, of the six times that word was mentioned in the 2008 strategy, all but one referred to recovering financial assets from drug dealers, not recovery from addiction. South of the Scottish border,‘ recovery’ had yet to be discovered, but already preparations must have been underway to make it the dominant theme in the May 2008 Scottish strategy. That month too, in England the initial stress on reintegration through employment, enforced by withdrawal of benefits, had in senior government circles morphed into a more appealing label:‘ recovery’.
12 | drinkanddrugsnews | October 2016 www. drinkanddrugsnews. com