Pubdate: Fri, 25 Aug 2000 Source: Irish Times, The (Ireland) Copyright: 2000 The Irish Times Contact: 11-15 D'Olier St, Dublin 2, Ireland Fax: + 353 1 671 9407 Website: http://www.ireland.com/ Author: Eithne Donnellan SPECIALIST DRUG TREATMENT DEMANDED The death of a 15-year-old girl from a suspected drugs overdose in Dublin has led to calls for the immediate setting up of specialist treatment services for young people who experiment with drugs. A source familiar with the dead girl's history expressed the view that she was not a drug addict. However, those working on drug projects in the city said young people experimenting with drugs were more likely to overdose because of their inexperience. Father Peter McVerry called last night for specialist treatment services for young people who use drugs and for changes in the law to facilitate the treatment of under-age persons without their parents' consent in certain circumstances. He said the law as it existed presented an obstacle to some very young drug-abusers receiving treatment. "Their parents are required to sign a consent form, but they might not be interested in doing so or the child might not want his or her parents to know about his or her problem," he said. He said responsible adults other than a child's parents should be allowed to sign consent forms in these situations. Mr Tony Geoghegan of the Merchants Quay Project, the largest voluntary drugs support project in Dublin, complained that most of the drug treatment services were geared to the needs of more established drug-users, rather than the very young who might be in the early stages of experimenting with drugs and therefore more vulnerable to overdosing. "There is a gap in services for that age group. We need earlier intervention programmes and more outreach services which engage young drug-users. We have had one or two pilot projects in this area, but in general there is a deficit in the services," he said. He described the death of the 15-year-old girl, who had been in the care of the South Western Area Health Board, as tragic. "A 15-year-old dying like that is dreadful, but I won't be surprised if it does turn out to be an overdose. Young people are the most vulnerable to overdose because they haven't got much experience of drugs," he said. The Merchants Quay Project dealt with more than 2,000 drug abusers last year, some as young as 15. They saw only the tip of the iceberg, Mr Geoghegan said. He said drug-related deaths were increasing every year in the State, even before contaminated heroin claimed 16 lives earlier this year. There were 86 drug related deaths last year and 72 the year before. Father McVerry said the problem of heroin abuse in particular was getting worse, and the age at which people were beginning to use the drug was getting lower. There were two deaths related to heroin overdoses every week in the Dublin area, but most went unreported and were "taken for granted". "What annoys me is there is a waiting time of three to four months to get on to methadone treatment programmes, and I don't see any urgency in the system in dealing with somebody who presents with a heroin problem," he said. A spokeswoman for the health boards in the eastern region formerly covered by the Eastern Health Board said over 1,000 new treatment places had been established this year for those who abused drugs. "We have a wide range of community-based drug education, prevention, outreach, treatment and rehabilitation services for young people," she said. "An independent evaluation of the drug treatment services in the east carried out by an international expert concluded that our drug treatment services had developed at a breathtaking rate and were among the most innovative in Europe," she added. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens