The four-pillar policy
Swiss drug policy aims to reduce drug use and its negative consequences for users and society. It is based on the four pillars of prevention, therapy, harm reduction and repression.
The revision of the Narcotics Act (NarcA) in 2008 enshrined the four-pillar drug policy in law. This policy was developed against the background of the heroin epidemic of the 1990-ies.
Expanded definitions of the four-pillar policy
The Federal Commission on Narcotic Drugs expanded the concept of the four pillars to include the dimension of the three use-patterns: low-risk, problematic, and dependent use. In addition, it was also postulated that this model applies to all forms of addiction, not just to illegal drugs.
The National Strategy on Addiction 2017-2024 builds on this «cube model».
Further information
Further topics

Addiction & health
Addictions and dependencies pose a risk to individuals and society at large. For this reason we promote people’s health literacy and encourage them to take responsibility for themselves. Here you’ll find information about the various addictions and about addiction prevention, regulation, damage limitation, counselling and therapies.

National Strategy on Addiction
The National Strategy on Addiction aims to prevent the development of addiction, provide help to people with an addiction and reduce the negative impact on health and society.
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