Pubdate: Wed, 29 Mar 2000 Source: Daily Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2000 Telegraph Group Limited Contact: (Sunday Telegraph: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/ Author: Celia Hall, medical editor DOCTORS WANT MORE DRUG EDUCATION CASH DOCTORS' leaders have called on the Government to change its policies for tackling the country's growing drugs problem and provide more money for effective education, prevention and treatment. A report from the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the Royal College of Physicians says that too much of the UKP1.4 billion anti-drug expenditure goes on enforcement with little evidence that the money is well spent. The book, Drugs, Dilemmas and Choices says that there is little evidence that the Government drugs strategies will work. It comes two days after an independent inquiry recommended abolishing jail terms for possessing ecstasy, cannabis and LSD which was rejected by the Government yesterday. The new study says that Government targets to reduce young people's heroin and cocaine abuse by 25 per cent in five years and 50 per cent in eight were "very ambitious". It adds: "But the modest initiatives outlined in the plan are unlikely to work on their own to reverse the steadily rising consumption of the last three decades." The doctors' study which has taken two years to produce says that no drug, including cannabis, is harmless but suggests that imprisonment of convicted users is not the best solution. It wants to see the availability of treatment increased by 50 per cent, provision of adolescent addicts, more research and more consultants and general practitioners trained in treating addiction. The doctors say that methadone substitute programmes are effective in treating heroin addiction and that another 25,000 places for addicts are needed. At present an addict can wait three to nine months for a National Health Service place on a programme. Drugs, Dilemmas and Choices is published by the Royal College of Psychiatrists, UKP9. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst