Pubdate: Thu, 16 Mar 2000 Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Copyright: 2000 Canberra Times Contact: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Author: Catriona Jackson, health reporter FIRST-TIME HEROIN USERS UP 50PC IN 3 YEARS: REPORT First-time heroin use has jumped by 50 per cent over three years despite record seizures of the drug, according the Australian Illicit Drug Report issued yesterday. The Chief Commissioner of the Victorian Police, Neil Comrie, said that heroin remained the biggest problem drug, with a 38 per cent increase in the number of arrests for dealing or possession in the 1998-99 financial year, taking the total from 10,000 to almost 14,500. Victoria topped the list with an almost 50 per cent jump in numbers arrested, while the ACT experienced a very slight decline in the number of arrests, down from 86 to 83. Issued annually by the Australian Bureau of Criminal Intelligence, the information is collected from law-enforcement, community and government agencies. Availability of heroin had continued to grow last year, with Sydney the place where it was easiest to find, and cheapest. The cost of heroin varied substantially around the nation, but Sydney prices had halved since 1996, down from $400 a gram to between $240 and $200 last year. There were no specifics for ACT prices, but they are often closely related to Sydney's. Purity had increased slightly in the ACT, but the national average had jumped from 57 to 65 per cent pure in the last financial year. An increase in heroin use in Aboriginal communities in the Shoalhaven region was noted. There was a trend towards smoking, rather than injecting heroin among young Asian males, and middle- and upper-class professionals wanting to avoid needle marks. The most recent figures available for heroin overdose deaths were from 1997, when 636 users died. Most deaths occurred in the company of others, who were afraid to call for help, fearing police involvement. The most common reason for not getting help cited by witnesses who were not drug users, was that they did not want to become involved. And this was fatal, given research that said instant death after an overdose was very rare. In cases of overdosing, users generally died about three hours after injecting. Federal Justice Minister Amanda Vanstone said the year had seen had been ''extraordinary successes'' in intercepting heroin and other drug supplies before they reached the streets. In NSW, 390kg of heroin had been seized in one hit and large quantities of cocaine, including 225kg in 1998 and 500kg last month had been taken out of the system. She said these results proved that the drug problem was ''not intractable''. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst