Pubdate: Tue, 17 Jan 2006
Source: Iowa State Daily (IA Edu)
Copyright: 2006 Iowa State Daily
Contact:  http://www.iowastatedaily.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1227
Author: Jeremy Oehlert
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)

OEHLERT: WINNING THE DRUG PEACE

Harm-Reduction Strategies Could Cure Drug Dependency, Crime

Brent Shapiro, son of the powerful southern California attorney 
Robert Shapiro, was a college student. His life was tragically cut 
short, however, after ingesting a half tablet of the drug Ecstasy.

Shapiro's death sheds light on what is wrong with the drug war. The 
Ecstasy tablet that killed him was likely impure - and it's most 
likely the impurity is what killed him. It is hard to believe 
otherwise. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services 
Administration reports nearly 25 million Ecstasy tablets are consumed 
every year in the United States. In 2001 those 25 million tablets 
resulted in just 76 deaths, only nine of which involved Ecstasy only.

Nine deaths out of 25 million pills makes any death from pure, 
unadulterated Ecstasy highly suspect. To put this in perspective, 
alcohol kills 50 out of every 100,000 users. To reach that magnitude, 
Ecstasy would have to kill over 12,000 people every year - 1,250 
percent more than it does today.

This sobering fact begs the question, if most deaths from illicit 
drugs are due to adulterants that would not be in legal preparations, 
would it not be better to make drugs legal?

More often than not, the response to such a question is indignation. 
Drug warriors make many claims as to why illicit drugs should remain 
illegal, not the least of which conjure up images of a society mired 
in chaos and rampant addiction if drugs were made legal.

The latest, and perhaps most sophisticated, view on how society might 
best deal with the issue of drugs offers a refreshingly honest 
challenge to this type of thinking. It utilizes scientific knowledge 
of humans and society to develop a coherent strategy that maximizes 
individual liberty and at the same time ensures public security.

Harm reduction, as opposed to outright prohibition, is the concept 
fast becoming the world's answer to the problem of drugs. It 
acknowledges the fact that drugs have been used by all peoples, of 
every age, for a variety of purposes, both medicinal and recreational 
and that many drugs have a detrimental impact on the user.

The harm-reduction approach treats addiction as an illness rather 
than a crime and drugs in general as a public health issue, similar 
to the handling of alcohol and tobacco. Harm-reduction strategies 
break the back of the black market drug trade by offering drugs at 
lower prices than dealers can afford to stay in business. With 
pushers put out of business, addicts are forced to get their fix from 
medical professionals who are able to offer treatment options.

It is a win-win strategy in which gangs are denied a funding 
resource, addiction-generated prostitution and theft are eliminated 
and addicts are directed into a treatment environment.

In addition, it would allow our society to make peace with its 
inherent sense of civil liberty by allowing individuals who use 
substances, such as marijuana, in a responsible manner the legal 
right to do so.

Libertarian advocate Dr. Mary Ruwart, a former research 
pharmaceutical scientist, outlined many harm reduction strategies in 
her book, "Healing Our World: The Other Piece of the Puzzle," 
available for download at www.ruwart.com.

Dr. Ruwart explains how the drug war actually causes more deaths than 
would occur with drug legalization.

She states that, "80 percent of drug overdose deaths (5,600 of 7,000 
annually) are due to impurities and other factors that would not be 
present in legal preparations." She goes on to explain how 3,500 new 
HIV cases could be prevented every year if the U.S. government did 
not oppose clean needle programs.

Those in the harm-reduction movement do not want to live in a society 
of drug-crazed psychotics any more than the rest of us do. However, 
their novel approach to the drug war may be the answer we have been 
looking for regarding the issues of addiction and drug violence.

Drug prohibition has proven itself to be a failure. It did not work 
with alcohol during the 1920s and it does not work with other 
substances today. In a nation that has seen crime escalate, prisons 
swell to capacity and drug use remain largely unchanged since the 
inception of the drug war, it has become obvious that alternative 
measures must be taken to address the drug issue.

Instead of leading the drug war, our nation should be the first to 
declare the drug peace.

- - Jeremy Oehlert is a senior in psychology from Osceola.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman