Pubdate: Fri, 22 Oct 2004 Source: Cape Argus (South Africa) Copyright: 2004 Cape Argus. Contact: http://capeargus.co.za/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2939 Author: Di Caelers JUNKIE TOWN, AS HEROIN DIGS IN Cape Town is home to an estimated 15 000 heroin users - who blow hundreds of millions of rands each year on their highly dangerous habit. From Durbanville to Fish Hoek, Claremont to Mitchell's Plain, thousands of addicts are paying more than R2 000 a month each, including the cost of their other habits, like cigarettes and alcohol. This emerged yesterday at the latest Cape Town report-back of the South African Community Epidemiology Network on Drug Use, where one researcher said heroin here had "really settled in". And research conducted just months ago on 250 local heroin users found that at least a quarter were injecting the drug - the majority of them having shared a needle at least once. Most used heroin daily, a third had experienced an overdose at least once, and almost half knew of someone who had died as a result of a heroin overdose. That was the shocking picture painted by Andreas Pluddemann of the Medical Research Council's Alcohol and Drug Abuse Research Group, who spent six weeks in July and August studying addicts from across the city, including Claremont, Durbanville, Fish Hoek, Mitchell's Plain, Observatory, Somerset West, Woodstock and Wynberg. Perhaps worse was his finding that heroin users used a wide range of other drugs too; three-quarters reported using methamphetamine, commonly known as "tik" in the three days prior to their interviews, and a third had used dagga in the same period. Almost all (98%) smoked cigarettes, and 60% drank alcohol. Pluddemann said that although many of the people involved in the study wouldn't answer questions related to HIV/Aids, the threat was obvious in the fact that 80% of heroin injectors had shared a needle at least once. Eight participants reported they were HIV-positive. Close friends and regular sex partners were the chosen people with whom to share needles. And the financial cost was of equal concern. Pluddemann said the participants had spent an average R342 on heroin in the seven days prior to their interviews. Overall, they spent an average R548 on drugs in the same period, translating for the total 250 to almost R135 000 spent on drugs in just seven days. "This would translate to more than R7 million in one year for these drugs alone," he said. But Pluddemann pointed out that the heroin problem was far more widespread; researchers estimated the adult heroin-using population in Cape Town to be about 15 000. There may also be at least a further 1 000 teenage heroin users, aged between 12 and 17. The total amount local users were likely to spend on drugs could be in the region of R450m a year. "That indicates the muscle behind the market and what we're up against," he said. It was clear that heroin use had become a major concern in the city, and may be increasing. "The drug is being used in many suburbs of the city, and is no longer confined to white youth, but is increasingly used by coloured people and, although less commonly, by blacks," he said. Among some of the solutions mooted by Pluddemann to address concerns were: The need for a needle-exchange programme. The possibility of unrestricted access to needles. The desperate need for state-funded rehabilitation services. Post-treatment support networks and follow up systems needed to be encouraged and supported. "The estimates suggest that our capacity for treating heroin addiction in this city is completely inadequate, and that's not helped by the lack of state-funded rehabilitation services," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh