Pubdate: Tue, 06 Jun 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: R. G. Arnold REMOVE ADDICTS FROM SOCIETY As there is no consensus in the community in favor of supervised injecting rooms, it is time to consider alternatives. Many people believe that more should be done to provide treatment for addiction, and others that addiction should be treated as crime. A wide range of attitudes to heroin addiction can be reconciled by accepting that heroin addicts should be removed from the community, for their own good as well as that of the community. If a person brought before a magistrate were found to be a heroin user, that person should be placed in detention in an institution operated in accordance with a medical model. A detained person could prove non-addiction through absence of withdrawal symptoms after a prescribed period, and be released. An addicted person might volunteer to enter a detoxification program and/or begin a methadone program and, when stable, be released into the community. Detected relapse would result in return to detention. Detained persons who elected not to enter a treatment program would be provided with sufficient narcotic administered under medical supervision to prevent withdrawal. That is, addicted persons may choose to retain their heroin-using lifestyle but forfeit their freedom in doing so. Many lives would be saved, the nuisance aspect of drug addiction in the community would be minimised and the community would, I believe, understand the ethical and humanitarian nature of the proposal. The only issue of substance is the libertarian one. We already have the concept of the involuntary patient in a psychiatric hospital who is detained for his or her own benefit, or the community's benefit, until safe to be released. R. G. ARNOLD, Burwood - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson