Pubdate: Tue, 01 Feb 2000 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: Telegraph Group Limited 2000 Contact: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Celia Hall, Medical Editor ADDICTS STEALING POUNDS 11,000 A YEAR DRUG addicts steal property or carry out frauds to the sum of pounds 11,000 a year each in order to feed their habit, say researchers. Those who inject drugs, primarily heroin, need pounds 324 a week to buy their supplies and resort to a range of crimes including shoplifting, car theft, housebreaking, mugging and fraud. Researchers at the NHS Scottish Centre for Infection and Environmental Health based their calculations on interviews with nearly 1,000 injecting drug abusers contacted in the community, through treatment centres and needle exchange schemes. In Glasgow, where the study was carried out, they estimate that goods to the value of pounds 194 million a year must be acquired illegally every year in the city by the drug users, most of whom are on low incomes. This sum does not include earnings made from prostitution or from drug dealing. "This sample is as representative as you can get," Sharon Hutchinson, statistician on the project, said yesterday. "Four out of five in our sample said they had committed crimes in the previous six months. Of these 69 per cent said the crimes were theft. In all 87 per cent of them said they had been imprisoned since they started to inject, 16 per cent of them more than 30 times." The on-going research, reported in the British Journal of Psychiatry was initially involved with injecting drug abuse and HIV infection and extended to include questions on crime. Half of the addicts said that 93 per cent of their drug spending money was illegally obtained. For the whole sample the average figure was 71 per cent. The most frequently used drug was heroin, with 90 per cent of the respondents saying they had used it in the previous six months, 97 per cent used more than one drug. Miss Hutchinson said that where abusers had been treated with methadone in the previous two months, there was likely to be a 20 per cent reduction in the amount spent on drugs. - --- MAP posted-by: Greg