Pubdate: Wed, 01 Mar 2000 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 2000 Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ Author: Evelyn Ring DRUG CENTRES IMPROVE JOB PROSPECTS FOR ADDICTS THREE out of five people attending drug addiction treatment centres run by the Eastern Health Board are now in full employment. But the job success rate of those attending larger treatment centres run by the board in disadvantaged areas is lower because the problems associated with drug abuse are more complex. Heroin is the principal drug used by people over the age of 25 in Ireland and it is currently estimated that there are 13,000 heroin users in Dublin, Wicklow and Kildare alone. The EHB has opened 30 new drug treatment locations in the past two years and now has over 50 treatment locations. Gardai say the crime rate drops by as much as 25% in areas where the centres are located. Local communities have also adopted a more positive approach. Earlier this month, an independent external review of the EHB's drug treatment services found that they had developed at a breathtaking rate and were now among the most innovative in Europe. This year the EHB will spend almost pounds 25 million on prevention, treatment and rehabilitation for drug abusers. Eastern Health Board chairman, Ivor Callely, believes that the authority cannot afford to relax its fight against the abuse of drugs. ``We are talking about people who were ostracised and are now back in the community. What's more, the vast majority are holding down jobs,'' he said. Isabel Somerville is operations manager of drug addiction services on Dublin's northside. She said most of people they see are heroin addicts and the average age is 25. ``There are people as young as 16 misusing drugs, but they don't see themselves as having a problem and don't present themselves at an early stage,'' she said. She noted that an increasing number of people attending treatment centres were getting jobs once they became stabilised. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst