Pubdate: Tue, 13 Jun 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: Linda Doherty A 'SILVER BULLET' AIMED AT SCHOOLS The State Government is searching for a "silver bullet" for the next stage of its drug reform platform that will focus on prevention in schools and early intervention programs for families. The Special Minister of State, Mr Della Bosca, said the challenge for the Government after last year's Drug Summit was to find the policies which minimised the number of people using drugs and to find ways to stop experimental users becoming addicts. "I think the silver bullet in this debate, the policy mix we're still looking for, the issue we're going to work hard over the next few years, is to find a way in which we can put in place a full preventative strategy," Mr Della Bosca told the ALP's State conference yesterday. He later told the Herald that the Minister for Education, Mr Aquilina, was reviewing school drug education policies and looking at new programs for primary school students. "The big campaign is first of all getting all the treatment right, dealing with addicts, having a big program to get them off drugs and out of the criminal cycle," he said. "But the medium-to longer-term challenge is how do we get people to minimise the risk of individually making themselves drug addicts." Although the Government has separated the issues of legal and illegal drugs - because "we don't want to add any more drugs on to the acceptable list" - there was a deep suspicion that signs of alcohol abuse also influenced other behavioural problems, such as gambling. "It's all about societal issues, about how people react to problems they have," Mr Della Bosca said. "We need to look at how people are introduced to drugs in a cultural context." The emphasis on prevention follows the establishment of Government treatment, rehabilitation and court diversion programs after the Drug Summit and the opening later this year of Australia's first heroin injecting room. Mr Della Bosca said the International Narcotics Control Board had been impressed by early intervention programs for families established by the Minister for Community Services, Mrs Lo Po'. "They [the INCB] came out here, I think, with a half intention of developing a critique of us based on their concerns on the injecting room, but that became a marginal issue when they saw the work we were doing on law enforcement and prevention with families." * The Transport Workers Union will hold rolling stoppages throughout NSW on Thursday to highlight the dangers of needlestick injuries to union members collecting clinical waste from hospitals. A TWU delegate to the ALP conference said two workers had received needlestick injuries but there had been no response to requests to the Health Department to immunise employees against hepatitis strains. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck