Pubdate: Mon, 06 Mar 2000 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2000 The Sydney Morning Herald Contact: GPO Box 3771, Sydney NSW 2001 Fax: +61-(0)2-9282 3492 Website: http://www.smh.com.au/ Forum: http://forums.fairfax.com.au/ Author: Ernest Drucker Note: Dr Ernest Drucker is Professor of Epidemiology and Social Medicine at New York's Montefiore Medical Centre/Albert Einstein College of Medicine. JUST SAY NO TO AMERICA Australia Is Taking The Correct Approach To Tackling The Drug Problem, Writes Ernest Drucker. AS AN an American public health professional who has worked for more than 30 years in the treatment of drug addiction and, more recently, in research on AIDS prevention (these days on sabbatical leave here in Australia), I have followed the twists and turns of your national debate on the establishment of safe injecting rooms and heroin trials with more than casual interest. In my own country, command centre of the global "war on drugs", even such a debate would be impossible and the actual implementation of such programs still unthinkable. The US Government effectively dominates local and State drug policies and has banned Federal funding for all harm minimisation activities as "sending the wrong message", claiming they are thin covers for "drug legalisation". This, even as 10,000-15,000 Americans die from drug overdoses each year and more than 20,000 new HIV infections occur among the nation's one million to two million drug injectors (about 200,000 of whom already carry the AIDS virus). Some localities continue to prosecute their own citizen activists who (defying the laws) continue to distribute clean injecting equipment, and 11 States still ban methadone treatment altogether - despite the fact that research has clearly demonstrated that both approaches slow the spread of AIDS. What we do instead, and with a vengeance (literally), is incarcerate drug users. And we do so at a fearsome rate - having last week placed the two millionth American behind bars, an American who most probably is a drug user. Today, the US imprisonment rate is about four times that of Australia and has increased 100 per cent in the past decade alone. Most of this increase is associated with harsh mandatory sentences for drug use. But the US is not content to impose this insanely self-destructive approach upon its own citizens alone. We insist that other nations do likewise and toe the line of "zero tolerance". The US has done everything in its power to influence the Commonwealth to desist from the very innovations that have already saved so many Australian lives (such as needle exchange and the involvement of drug users' organisations) and objects strenuously to others that can save more lives if implemented - ie, the heroin trial, and most recently, the safe injecting rooms. But great powers like the US have other ways to make their feelings known. Last week, the United Nations International Narcotics Control Board (or INCB), which the US also dominates (even though it continues to be delinquent in its UN dues), issued a press release in which it accused Australia of violating international narcotic treaties if it went ahead with plans for safe injecting rooms. The INCB claimed that such programs are "not in line with international conventions" and that the "explicit or tacit approval of so-called drug injection rooms - or 'shooting galleries'- are seen as a step in the direction of drug legalisation". Sound familiar? Most experts on international law, who understand the actual power and mandate of the INCB, dismissed its assertions as a hollow threat. But the INCB will visit Australia in April - just as the first injecting rooms are getting set to open in Sydney. No doubt it will repeat its view that these facilities not only promote "tolerance towards illegal drug use and trafficking but also [run] counter to the provisions of the international drug control treaties", asserting that "any national, State or local authority that permits the establishment and operation of such drug injection rooms also facilitates illicit drug trafficking". This refrain echoes similar statements made a few years ago about the meticulously planned heroin trial that was then set to begin in the ACT. In that case a series of calls and visits from Washington and Vienna (home of the INCB) and open threats against your Tasmanian opium industry carried the day and the heroin trial was stopped by the Federal Government - despite its prior approval by your State health ministers. Such heroin programs have since been successfully implemented in Switzerland (with more than 1,000 patients) and the Netherlands, will soon begin in Germany and are planned for Spain and Italy. And, of course, this approach echoes US policy at its most retrograde, characterising even sound scientific trials of new approaches and other public health measures of proven effectiveness as devious routes towards drug legalisation. Why would a country, normally so generous of spirit and so famously open to innovation, adopt a posture so lethal to its own citizens? And more to the point here in Australia today, why would the US complain so bitterly about another distant country's choice of a more pragmatic and humane path? Why would we attempt to impose our own clearly failed approach on others? A partial answer can be drawn from the work of the Australian critic Robert Hughes, who has lived in America for more than 20 years. Hughes likes America. He readily speaks of his "visceral attachment" to it ("next to Australia, America is a place I know and love best") and has become unusually perceptive about its people and culture. In a series of lectures given at the New York Public Library in 1992, Hughes spoke of the "fraying of America" by the success of "populist demagoguery", and "a distrust of formal politics; sceptical of authority and prey to superstition; its language corroded by fake pity and euphemism". How else can we comprehend sentencing tens of thousands to long prison sentence because they have a problem with drugs? He speaks of a "culture of complaint" that is overtaking American thought and threatens to "unravel that sense of collectivity and mutual respect [and] has broken the traditional American genius for consensus, for getting along by making up practical compromise to meet real social needs". Thus, while many American politicians tell us in private that the war on drugs is a fiasco, there is no public debate about any of it in any actual political forum - the sceptics silenced by well-grounded fears of political retribution, fears of being called "soft on drugs" by demagogic opponents. The appalling casualty rate our citizens continue to pay for this mishandling of our own huge drug problem is the price we pay for this hypocritical lapse in moral judgment. The stunning success of your approach to AIDS (Australia having averted an epidemic among its drug users) is one of the things that has drawn me back here - to learn from your fine public health professionals and emulate their programs wherever possible in the US. And while hepatitis and overdose remain massive problems here - as everywhere else in a world awash in illicit drugs - you have the foundations of intent and a willingness to examine outcomes that are the prerequisite to effective policies. So now that the nation's first injecting room is soon to open in Kings Cross (with others to follow in Victoria and elsewhere), I am once again filled with admiration for Australia's compassionate pragmatism in drug matters. And its courage to do the right thing - even in the face of strong outside pressures to abstain from the sort of harm-minimisation strategies that have already saved thousands of Australians lives. Good on you! - --- MAP posted-by: Greg