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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
Now we have a real-world experiment in how to attack drug addiction2. Many parts of the United States are fighting the spread of opioids or heroin3. Portugal fought its own drug problems differently. That country decriminalized drugs - even heroin - treating addiction as a health issue, not a crime. Our colleague Lauren Frayer reports from Lisbon.
LAUREN FRAYER, BYLINE4: Seventy-eight-year-old Gandelina Damiao is permanently5 hunched6 carrying her sorrow. She lost three children to heroin in the 1990s.
GANDELINA DAMIAO: (Speaking Portugese).
FRAYER: She points to framed photos of Paulo, Miguel and Liliana on the wall of her cottage in a cobblestoned Lisbon slum with views of the river.
DAMIAO: (Speaking Portugese).
FRAYER: "It was a huge blow," she says. "I was a good mother. I never gave them money for drugs but I couldn't save them."
Drugs flooded into Portugal after the end of authoritarian7 rule in 1974. By the 1990s, 1 percent of Portugal's population was hooked on heroin. Joao Goulao was a family physician at the time.
JOAO GOULAO: Every family had its own drug habit. So it was so, so present in everyday life that it turned public opinion. OK, we are dealing8 with a chronic9 relapsing disease. And this is a disease like the others. I do not put a diabetic in jail, for instance.
FRAYER: Goulao is now Portugal's drug czar. He wrote the 2001 law that decriminalized all drugs. Drug dealers10 go to jail but anyone caught with less than a 10-day supply of any drug, including heroin, gets mandatory11 medical treatment - no judge, no courtroom, no jail. Instead, they end up in a sparsely12 furnished discrete13 unmarked office in downtown Lisbon for counseling with sociologists like Nuno Cabaz.
NUNO CABAZ: It's cheaper to treat people than to incarcerate14 them. If I come across someone that wants my help, I'm in a much better position to provide it than the judge would ever be. Just as simple as that.
FRAYER: His team of 10 counselors15 handle all of Lisbon's roughly 2,500 drug cases a year. In case that sounds like a lot, it's a 75 percent drop in the capital since the 1990s. Field psychologists take me to meet some of Portugal's remaining users along a row of abandoned buildings littered with needles and bursting with wildflowers.
There's a philosophy book on the stoop next to a middle-aged16 man smoking crack cocaine17. He gives his name as Rui and says the stigma18 against addicts19 has eased since decriminalization.
RUI: Now, not so much because the methadone is coming. They see the drugs with another perspective.
FRAYER: Every day, a government van pulls up and gives him a dose of methadone, an opioid that helps wean people off heroin. It's a step toward harm reduction. He still does cocaine but he no longer shoots up. And drug-related HIV infections have dropped 95 percent. Drug workers hand out kits20 with clean needles and condoms. And listen to another addict1, Antonio, describing his anxiety.
ANTONIO: If the drugs hurts too much my body, I escape a little, and then I come back again. And I - it's a world I cannot escape. If I turn there, it's there. It's everywhere. I cannot escape.
FRAYER: For every person in Portugal who cannot escape addiction, there's daily methadone, counselling and free treatment. A generation ago, these addicts were put in jail. And now they're on the street. But polls show the Portuguese21, having lived through the ravages22 of a heroin epidemic23, overwhelmingly support this policy. For NPR News, I'm Lauren Frayer in Lisbon.
1 addict | |
v.使沉溺;使上瘾;n.沉溺于不良嗜好的人 | |
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2 addiction | |
n.上瘾入迷,嗜好 | |
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3 heroin | |
n.海洛因 | |
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4 byline | |
n.署名;v.署名 | |
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5 permanently | |
adv.永恒地,永久地,固定不变地 | |
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6 hunched | |
(常指因寒冷、生病或愁苦)耸肩弓身的,伏首前倾的 | |
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7 authoritarian | |
n./adj.专制(的),专制主义者,独裁主义者 | |
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8 dealing | |
n.经商方法,待人态度 | |
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9 chronic | |
adj.(疾病)长期未愈的,慢性的;极坏的 | |
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10 dealers | |
n.商人( dealer的名词复数 );贩毒者;毒品贩子;发牌者 | |
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11 mandatory | |
adj.命令的;强制的;义务的;n.受托者 | |
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12 sparsely | |
adv.稀疏地;稀少地;不足地;贫乏地 | |
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13 discrete | |
adj.个别的,分离的,不连续的 | |
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14 incarcerate | |
v.监禁,禁闭 | |
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15 counselors | |
n.顾问( counselor的名词复数 );律师;(使馆等的)参赞;(协助学生解决问题的)指导老师 | |
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16 middle-aged | |
adj.中年的 | |
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17 cocaine | |
n.可卡因,古柯碱(用作局部麻醉剂) | |
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18 stigma | |
n.耻辱,污名;(花的)柱头 | |
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19 addicts | |
有…瘾的人( addict的名词复数 ); 入迷的人 | |
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20 kits | |
衣物和装备( kit的名词复数 ); 成套用品; 配套元件 | |
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21 Portuguese | |
n.葡萄牙人;葡萄牙语 | |
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22 ravages | |
劫掠后的残迹,破坏的结果,毁坏后的残迹 | |
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23 epidemic | |
n.流行病;盛行;adj.流行性的,流传极广的 | |
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