Pubdate: Tue, 11 Jul 2000 Source: Valley View (Australia) Contact: +61 2 6293 2183 Author: Paul Osborne LET'S FACE IT - HARM MINIMISATION SIMPLY ISN'T WORKING EDITOR: I would appreciate the opportunity to respond to claims by Brian McConnell, President of Families and Friends for Drug Law Reform in the ACT (Letters 4/7), that my article pointing out some of the more obvious shortcomings of needle exchange programs was somehow "dishonest", "scare-mongering" and inaccurate. I was careful to use only verifiable facts in the article, rather than my opinions. Mr McConnell and his supporters may not choose to believe them, but their truth remains the same. Even the champion of their cause, Health Minister Michael Moore, agrees that at least one third of the 600,000 syringes handed out each year in Canberra are not exchanged. I disagree with Mr McConnell that the answer to discarded syringes is a heroin shooting gallery. This latest 'weapon' in the harm minimisation arsenal is designed to keep people chained to the misery of their addiction. We have had harm minimisation in Canberra for over a decade now. It does not work. We would do well to learn the lessons of a country like Sweden that, over the course of a decade, went from having the worst drug problem in Europe to being the envy of the western world. Presently, around 52 per cent of Australians will use illicit drugs at least once in their lifetime compared with just nine per cent in Sweden. More astonishingly, Canberra alone has more heroin addicts than the whole of the Swedish nation. Comparatively, drug-related deaths are twice as high in Australia than Sweden, the cumulative rate of HIV infection is more than twice as high and only 1.2 per cent of Swedish young people (aged under 20) are drug dependent compared with 8.2 per cent of Australians in the same age group. How has Sweden achieved this without the 'enlightened' approach of free needle distribution and a heroin shooting gallery? Through a drug policy based on harm prevention. Harm prevention has three interlinking points of attack in education, treatment and law enforcement. Sweden does not send its convicted drug addicts to prison, rather it commits them to detox and rehabilitation centres. Schools are the hub for prevention with education programs endorsing the principle of people being drug free and staying that way. As a city, we should seriously consider doing the same. We've been doing things Michael Moore's way since 1989 and our drug problems have only gotten worse. It's time to admit that harm minimisation just doesn't work and instead try a genuine and proven solution. Paul Osborne MLA Independent for Brindabella - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens