Transcript Slide 1

Wrap-up presentation
What has the EMCDDA learned ?
Paul Griffiths and Roland Simon
Overview
• Taking forward the findings
• 3-year work programme
• Conference proceedings
• Identify concrete issues for EMCDDA’s future work
• Roland Simon: policies and practices
• Paul Griffiths: trends and horizons
• Michael Farrell: scientific challenges
Approach
• Identify transversal findings that have direct relevance
to our work
• Explore how we might take them forward and suggest
some concrete next steps
• Not a comprehensive review of all the presentations
made during the last three days
.. a personal impression
• Big variety of presenters and presentations
• Opportunity for networking
• Exchange between different groups working with the
EMCDDA
• Scientific staff appreciated the opportunity to listen,
learn, and discuss with you
Policy
• Strong commitment to evidence-driven policies
• Difficult to achieve
• Policy has shifting priorities
• Growing interest in evaluation of effectiveness
• Different perspectives at national, EU and UN level,
but also increasing commonalities and a wish to learn
from the experiences of others
• Policy makers call for
• Solution oriented information
• Methods which allow to better understand the impact of drug
policies
Policy: Implications for the EMCDDA
• Promote coordination between national, EU and
international reporting system
• Develop reporting practices to better inform policy
processes (timeliness, topics, format)
• EU action plan on drugs
• Evaluation of national drug strategies
• Moving from description to analysis
• Developing tools and methods for
• policy analysis and evaluation
• comparative analysis of drug policies and laws
• supply reduction issues
Practices
• In many areas a growing understanding of what works
• Commitment to evidence-based practice, challenged
by difficulties in transferring knowledge into actions
• Different approaches to define evidence
• Need to avoid duplication of efforts and make best
use of international and national investments
• Bring together different types of knowledge, be
sensitive to national contexts, and involve
stakeholders
Practices: Parallel sessions
• Prevention, treatment and harm reduction
• Sensitive to different needs
• Matching responses to the settings
• Develop novel approaches, including for non-opiate users
and poly-drug use
• Increased focus on outcome and recovery
• Interventions related to supply reduction and the
criminal justice system
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Data sources often poorly developed
Need to better know what works
Growing awareness of importance of the prison setting
Clear need for research
Practices: Implications for the EMCDDA
• Strengthen our role as platform for knowledge
exchange
• Making better use of expert networks
• Developing the best practice portal
• Support the development of EU guidelines based on national
and international experiences
• Identification, critical evaluation and reporting on
novel approaches
• Developing conceptual frameworks and tools for data
collection in the fields of supply reduction and criminal
justice
Summary: Policies and practices
• A unique position to inform policy making and
support the development of drug-related
interventions in Europe
• Further develop as a platform for knowledge
exchange
• Key challenges are to produce knowledge
tailored to the needs of our different
audiences and to cover those areas which
have received only limited attention until now
Trends & Horizons
• Covered a incredibly diverse and complex set
of themes
• Monitoring issues were often implicit rather
than explicit… but always there
• And… despite the diversity of topics covered
we kept coming back to some fundamental &
common issues
Trends
• Multi-methods approaches, sensitivity and timeliness
are common issues for drug monitoring systems
• Learn about the strengths and weaknesses of the EU system
by looking at the US and Australia
• Value in working together
• Process and sustainable structures are critically
important
• Combining different types of information (qualitative/
quantitative) and levels of analysis (local/national/Int.),
remains a key challenge
Trends: Parallel sessions
• Hitting a moving target
• New drugs, new suppliers
• Blurred lines between medicinal products, legitimate goods
and illicit substances
• Increasing potential exists to track changes over time
• Understanding problems and consequences
• Differentiation of patterns of use to better understand drug
problems
• New data sources and new analytical approaches
• The need for monitoring to be based on a better overall
understanding of drug-related mortality and morbidity and the
factors that influence them
Trends: Parallel sessions (2)
• Understanding drug production, trafficking, and
availability
• Europe as drug producer
• Holistic approach to a dynamic marketplace
• Old drugs may prove to be new threats
• Information in this area has considerable potential to
inform our understanding – but clearly requires
development
• Methods, comparability, availability, reliability… all
problematic
Trends: Implications for the EMCDDA
• Maximize the analytical value of the available
information
• New sources and approaches to improve sensitivity
• Develop capacity to respond more rapidly to critical
information needs
• Need to develop further our approach to monitoring &
analysis of patterns of use and consequences
(problems, dependence, mortality)
• Develop and strengthen drug market indicators
Horizons: Implications for the EMCDDA
• Need to keep track of technology developments
• Overviews
• Adjustment of monitoring tools to keep them on target
• Improving our interaction with the European research
community
• As data provider, user and disseminator
• Language issues
• Drug use in neighbouring countries
• Knowledge transfer and capacity building
• Putting Europe’s drug situation in context
Final thoughts
• Considerable information resources in the EU
• Ongoing endeavour… a glass half empty or half full
• Has to produce useful and relevant outputs
• Synergies between the conference debate and the
EU Drug Action Plan
• Sustaining the existing system during a time of
financial difficulties
• Improving sensitivity to change whilst remaining nonalarmist and reliable
• Probably should do this again before 2024
Thank you