Pubdate: Tue, 18 Jul 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: Adrian Rollins, Chloe Saltau And Meaghan Shaw STATE NOT SET UP FOR HEROIN ROOMS: LIB Victoria does not have the integration of health and community services necessary to ensure supervised injecting facilities are a success, according to state Liberal health spokesman Robert Doyle. Speaking on his return from a tour of drug facilities in Europe, Mr Doyle acknowledged injecting rooms had worked overseas but said it was apparent well integrated services were essential for them to succeed. "People who do it (injecting rooms) ... integrate their services very well," Mr Doyle said. He said in Melbourne the necessary close cooperation between services had not been achieved, and for a city with one of the worst drug problems in the world, it was embarrassing that drug users could face lengthy delays for detoxification and rehabilitation. But he insisted he had an open mind to the government's proposed trial, due to be debated in the next session of parliament. "There is still a bipartisan approach to drugs," he said. "I went away with an open mind (and) I want to talk with my colleagues, particularly about this idea of integrating services and what part that might play." One of the government's key drug adviser's, VicHealth chief executive Rob Moodie, said the Victorian Government should push ahead with the plans to tackle heroin use regardless of whether the legislation was defeated. Dr Moodie, a member of the Penington committee who led the delegation from both sides of politics on the mission to inspect drug facilities in the United States, Germany, Switzerland and Sweden, also said injecting rooms should incorporate accommodation, food, clothes, counselling and medical care for users. Hanover Welfare Services has already indicated it is prepared to run an injecting facility out of its crisis accommodation centre at Southbank as part of a full approach to tackling heroin addiction among the homeless. However, Dr Moodie said the highly successful Swiss approach to reducing the death toll and public nuisance associated with the open drug scene consisted of an integrated four-pillar strategy: prevention, treatment, harm reduction (including supervised injecting) and improved law enforcement. Dr Moodie said it was important that police had a strong presence, but "policing the closing down of the open drug scene didn't work until they started offering services for the users to use". - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D