Eurasian Harm Reduction Network (EHRN), 11B Svitrigailos Street, Vilnius 03228, Lithuania.
Harm Reduct J. 2011 Dec 30;8:32. doi: 10.1186/1477-7517-8-32.
This paper reviews the development of early Soviet drug treatment approaches by focusing on the struggle for disciplinary power between leading social and mental hygienists and clinical psychiatrists as a defining moment for Soviet drug treatment speciality that became known as "narcology." From this vantage point, I engage in the examination of the rise and fall of various treatment methods and conceptualizations of addiction in Russian metropolitan centres and look at how they were imported (or not) to other Soviet republics. As clinical psychiatrists appeared as undisputed victors from the battle with social and mental hygienists, the entire narcological arsenal was subdued in order to serve the needs of mainstream psychiatry. However, what that 'mainstream' would be, was not entirely clear. When, in 1934, Aleksandr Rapoport insisted on the need for re-working narcological knowledge in line with the Marxist approach, he could only raise questions and recognise that there were almost no "dialectically illuminated scientific data" to address these questions. The maintenance treatment of opiate users, which emerged as the most effective one based on the results of a six-year study published in 1936, was definitely not attuned to the political and ideological environment of the late 1930s. Maintenance was rather considered as a temporary solution, in the absence of radical therapeutic measures to free Soviet society from "narkomania." As the Great Terror swept across the Soviet Union, Stalin's regime achieved its objective of eliminating drug addiction from the surface of public life by driving opiate users deep underground and incarcerating many of them in prisons and the Gulag camps. In the final section, I briefly discuss the changing perceptions of drug use during the World War II and outline subsequent transformations in Soviet responses to the post-war opiate addiction [Additional file 1].
本文通过关注主导社会和精神卫生学家与临床精神病学家之间争夺学科权力的斗争,回顾了早期苏联药物治疗方法的发展,这一斗争成为苏联药物治疗专业的决定性时刻,该专业后来被称为“麻醉学”。从这个角度出发,我考察了俄罗斯大都市中心各种治疗方法和成瘾概念的兴衰,并研究了它们如何被引入(或未被引入)到其他苏联共和国。随着临床精神病学家在与社会和精神卫生学家的战斗中似乎成为无可争议的胜利者,整个麻醉学武器库都被制服,以服务于主流精神病学的需求。然而,这种“主流”并不完全清楚。1934 年,亚历山大·拉波波特(Aleksandr Rapoport)坚持认为需要根据马克思主义方法重新处理麻醉学知识时,他只能提出问题,并认识到几乎没有“辩证照亮的科学数据”来解决这些问题。基于 1936 年发表的一项为期六年的研究结果,维持阿片类药物使用者的治疗被证明是最有效的方法,而这种方法肯定与 20 世纪 30 年代后期的政治和意识形态环境不符。维持治疗被认为是一种临时解决方案,因为缺乏从苏联社会中消除“成瘾”的激进治疗措施。随着大恐怖席卷苏联,斯大林政权通过将阿片类药物使用者推向地下并将其中许多人监禁在监狱和古拉格营地,实现了从公共生活表面消除毒瘾的目标。在最后一节中,我简要讨论了第二次世界大战期间对吸毒的看法的变化,并概述了苏联对战后阿片类药物成瘾的反应的后续转变[附加文件 1]。