Pubdate: Fri, 6 Jun 2003 Source: Guardian, The (UK) Copyright: 2003 Guardian Newspapers Limited Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175 Author: James Meikle GRIM PLIGHT OF DRUG USERS' CHILDREN Up to 350,000 children in Britain have at least one parent who is a problem drug user, government advisers said yesterday. Many are suffering "hidden harm" from poverty, abuse, poor health and disrupted education. The children often fend for themselves and look after their parents and siblings. The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD), conducted this first official attempt to quantify the offspring of addicts. It hopes the results, which paint a "depressing but not unexpected" picture, will jolt mainstream health, social, education and child protection services, as well as specialist drug services. The inquiry suggested that its estimate of 2%-3% of all children under 16 being affected in England and Wales was "conservative". Better methods of collating evidence in Scotland, where a slightly higher number of children were born to drug users, accounted for a 4%-6% estimate there. Laurence Gruer, who chaired the working group responsible for the inquiry report, said: "Babies can be harmed during pregnancy by the drugs used by their mothers. From birth onwards their parents' drug problems can endanger their health in many ways and cause a great deal of emotional and psychological damage that often goes unnoticed. "Out of shame or fear, or simply because they are too young, such children are rarely able to speak to anyone about their experiences and can become isolated and excluded from society. "Reducing the harm to these children should be a main aim of government drug policy, and services such as child protection agencies, GPs and education bodies need to work in a joined up way so signs are not overlooked and these children's voices are heard." Dr Gruer, a consultant in public health medicine based in Glasgow, said: "The possibility that a child will stumble down the same path as his or her parents is very real. We found more than a third of mothers, two-thirds of fathers, were not living with their child and the more severe the drug problem the less likely it was for children to be living with parents." Of those who were not, only about 5% were in care, the rest living with relatives such as grandparents or aunts. More research was needed in this area. The council made 48 recommendations to government, public and voluntary services. The Home Office minister Bob Ainsworth said the government was investing record amounts on its drug strategy, UKP 1.2bn this year, but recognised that services needed to be expanded. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens