Pubdate: Mon, 28 Jan 2002 Source: Oldham Evening Chronicle (UK) Copyright: Oldham Evening Chronicle 2002 Contact: http://www.oldham-chronicle.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1151 Author: Alun Ireland PROSECUTION REPRIEVE FOR DRUG CASUALTIES POLICE will no longer automatically be called to incidents where drug users have overdosed. Greater Manchester Ambulance Service (GMAS) has changed its policy in a move designed to encourage drug users to ring 999 when someone is in trouble. Ambulance chiefs believe that many drug users and their friends are discouraged from calling for help because they fear penalties if the police become involved. It is a situation that may be costing lives. In the past, GMAS says many users have even been stripped of all identification and left alone before the ambulance arrives. Time is obviously being lost, as is helpful information. GMAS currently deals with more than 1,100 heroin and methadone overdoses a year, and in the vast majority of cases death is avoidable if paramedics can get there in time. From today, police will only be called to the scene of an overdose under exceptional circumstances, such as if a child is involved or if ambulance crews or paramedics have been assaulted at the caller address on a previous occasion. GMAS divisional manager Delwyn Wray said the move should help medics provide more prompt treatment and gain more information about what drugs have been taken. The policy is supported by the police and drugs charity Lifeline. GMAS is also set to launch an education programme in prisons to inform inmates about the new policy and teach them basic first aid techniques like the recovery position. GMAS chief executive John Burnside said: Both new policies are aiming to improve the confidence drug users have in the ambulance service. We now need to educate drug users to call for help and make them realize that the police will not automatically turn up. "The job of GMAS is to save lives, not to judge on the wrongs of drug taking." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek