I agree with you on that, but there is now a very large body of work telling us that there is a small percentage of high-risk individuals who do not respond to any of the current substitution programs such as methadone or suboxone. The question, then, is what about a program that works for them? If you believe, and you said earlier that you agree with evidence-based results.... If the evidence shows that some of this very tiny group of people needs to take the pharmaceutical drug diacetylmorphine, would you not consider that to be a substitution treatment for that tiny group of people?
On November 18th, 2013. See this statement in context.