|
BEIJING, May 8 -- Brain surgery to cure drug
addiction is strictly controlled because its effectiveness and safety have not
been proved, a health official said yesterday.
 |
| A man walks in front of a light box with
Chinese writing that reads 'Severe Damage of Drug' at an anti-drugs
exhibition in Shanghai in 2003. [AFP] | Qi
Guoming, chief of the Science and Education Department under the Health
Ministry, said in Beijing that side effects of the surgery are still unclear.
He said the surgery is still under clinical study but
is not for clinical use.
"It is irresponsible and immoral to conduct the
operation before an experimental conclusion is reached," Qi said. "Therefore, we
are not resuming it."
Qi said the brain surgery is a key research field and
the ministry is thinking about applying for national funds for scientific
studies given by the Ministry of Science and Technology.
Health Ministry spokesman Mao Qun said last month
that brain surgery to curb drug cravings is a special medical practice.
Hospitals and doctors who perform the operation, as
well as the equipment, environment and post-surgery observation, must be
qualified and standardized.
The ministry suspended brain surgery for drug
addiction on November 2 last year because of disputes among medical experts over
its side effects.
In March, the ministry held a special meeting in
Shaanxi Province, at which experts and officials agreed the brain surgery is
still in the study phase and cannot be used in clinical service.
The current materials show the short-term effects of
the brain surgery are comparatively good, but long-term effects are still
unclear and need further study, they said.
Meanwhile, the studies must be done in hospitals that
have relatively good capability and the ministry will set up a team to verify
materials and set standards.
The meeting also agreed to work out regulations and
clarify ethical principles.
Stricter criteria for selecting patients and
observing side effects were also urged.
Brain surgery to cure drug addiction was banned in
Russia in 2002 after a patient claimed he suffered headaches as a result of the
operation, which also failed to cure his addiction, according to Agence France
Press.
By November 2 when the operation was suspended in
China, about 500 patients had received the surgery.
Most reported positive results, but some appeared to
have abnormal symptoms, like loss of sex drive.
(Source: Shanghai Daily) |