Pubdate: Sat, 24 Mar 2001 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Copyright: 2001 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: Paola Totaro PM'S DRUGS APPEAL TO 6 MILLION HOMES A $24 million anti-drugs campaign - including graphic television commercials and a mail-out to more than 6million households - will be launched by the Prime Minister tomorrow. It includes an unprecedented offer of group sessions run by Relationships Australia, which will teach parents how to talk to their children about illicit drugs. The theme of the campaign is "Families - our strongest defence against the drug problem". It is understood it will begin with a series of confronting commercials, including a teenage girl who appears to have just had sex, a girl fighting and shouting with her mother, a young man breaking into a property, and a corpse being zipped into a body bag. This series will be followed by a second wave of advertisements known as the "Lost Dreaming", in which a young child's voice is heard talking over the scenes in the original ads, outlining hopes for the future, including: "When I grow up, I want to play footy for Australia." A third and fourth wave of ads will follow and will feature immigrant, indigenous and other families watching the original ads and discussing their content. Further TV and newspaper ads will provide more straightforward information on the mailout of the parental information booklet. This pamphlet offers counselling, education and 10 tips on communicating with children. Mr Howard told Melbourne radio yesterday that the advertisements would be "quite confronting" and that parents should talk to their children and "understand it can happen to you". The campaign was originally scheduled for launch in July last year but caused a national controversy when it was suddenly withdrawn after Mr Howard's office criticised the content of the parents' booklet, stating it was not tough enough. A personal staffer rewrote key sections, sparking grave anxieties among health officials and senior members of the Australian National Council on Drugs reference committee, which was established specifically to oversee development of the strategy. Originally, Mr Howard's rewritten theme was "Our strongest weapon against drugs ... families". The booklet contained statistics and information which health sources described as unscientific, including: "Studies overseas reveal that young people from families who eat together at least five times a week are less likely to be involved in drugs." However, after much debate and amendment, the campaign in its final form has been welcomed with enthusiasm, with drug and alcohol workers and law reform advocates happy with the focus and content. The founder of Family Drug Support and former member of the Council on Drugs, Mr Tony Trimingham, said: "The emphasis on communication is excellent, particularly listening as well as talking. Parents need to remember what it was like when they were teenagers and not be hypocritical about their own drinking or smoking. "The comprehensive nature of this campaign will be very effective. The only criticism I would have is that tobacco and alcohol are clearly problems, and although there is reference to mixing illicit drugs with alcohol, I believe there should have been material on the legal drugs included with the illicit." Mr Howard was under fire this week for changing the membership of the drugs council. An independent panel of doctors called on the Government to increase spending on drug prevention, treatment and education. The Victorian Parliament also held a historic joint session to debate drugs, in a similar vein to the successful NSW Drug Summit. - --- MAP posted-by: Andrew