Pubdate: Wed, 12 Sep 2001 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2001 Guardian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: Alan Travis RISING DRUG USE PROMPTS CALL FOR POLICY CHANGES The children of the 1990s are not growing out of teenage habits of taking drugs, including heroin and cocaine, until their late 20s, Britain's drugs squad officers will be told today. Such rising drug use among "twentysomethings" puts a large question mark against the government's targets and their concentration on reducing drug misuse among under-25s, according to the drugs criminologist, Howard Parker of Manchester University. Professor Parker will tell the Association of Chief Police Officers' annual drugs conference that what is needed is a programme to minimise the harm to these "recreational drug users", and to the wider community, from drug driving, accidents, public order offences, poor performance at work, and minor mental health problems. Prof Parker, a Home Office researcher on drugs, says it is time to abandon as unrealistic the four-year-old target of reducing drug misuse among the under-25s. "Whilst adolescent drug use is stable, it is not falling; the age of first use continues to fall. Heroin use is up, especially in Scotland and the English regions. Cocaine use is rising rapidly, and will continue to do so for a couple more years." With drug use rising among "twentysomethings", he said, it was time to drop the targeting of under-25s and realise that official action such as drugs education was having little impact. At best all that could be done was to "manage" drug abuse in Britain. In this situation there was a case for making attempts to minimise harm to drug users and the wider community the priority for official policy. It was time to face the fact that more than 95% of drug users in England were not "problem drug users" dealt with by the criminal justice system - but rather were fairly law abiding and conventional. They were recreational users who were in college, school or work during the week and "got off their faces" at the weekend. The more worrying aspect of the new drugs scene was that, as Prof Parker's recent study of night clubbers and long term studies of young people and drugs revealed, people who started abusing drink, drugs and smoking on a regular basis at 15 now maintained their "intoxicated" weekend habits well into adulthood with long term implications for their health. A significant minority of this "going out" group mixed their substances, and faced problems such as accidents, public order offences, poor performance at work, drug driving, and a tendency to minor mental health problems. A public health harm reduction strategy was needed to help these recreational drug users cope with these problems. Prof Parker will also tell the Acpo conference that since most of these recreational users bought their drugs not from professional dealers but from their friends, he backed the recommendations of the Police Foundation on drugs law reform that such not-for-profit "social supply", including for some class A drugs, be treated less punitively than dealing. Prof Parker will tell officers that there is now little prospect of meeting the government's official target of stifling drug supply in the United Kingdom. It is believed that the authorities are having so little success - even in preventing import of 10% of the annual inflow of an estimated 300m ecstasy tablets and 40 tonnes of cocaine - that the home secretary, David Blunkett, is to downgrade the official target to "disrupting supply by drug traffickers". - --- MAP posted-by: Rebel