Pubdate: Fri, 06 Oct 2006 Source: Moose Jaw Times-Herald (CN SN) Copyright: 2006 The Moose Jaw Times-Herald Group Inc. Contact: (306) 692-2101 Website: http://www.mjtimes.sk.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2154 Author: Ron Walter Note: No email LTEs accepted - use fax or mail REGION UNVEILS NEW PLAN OF ATTACK ON DRUG ABUSE Ambitious, Significant, Overdue. That's how Moose Jaw police Chief Terry Coleman described a regional drug strategy unveiled Thursday. The multi-agency strategy, developed over two years with consultation in an area from Craik south to the U.S. border, offers 21 recommendations to address specific issues in rural and urban communities. Agencies from health care, justice, education, corrections and other services came together "to assess what is in our region and what should be." Broad recommendations are designed to reduce substance abuse, improve community health, reduce supply and demand of illegal drugs, and ensure appropriate consequences for those who abuse, he said. "Enforcement and incarceration is only one tool in the array we should use to enhance the quality of life." With funding from all three levels of government expected, Coleman hopes to see action "sooner rather than later." Saskatchewan Health has allocated $425,000. The strategy study found a gap between real substance abuse and public perception. "The difference with Moose Jaw is we tend to think of Moose Jaw as a very quiet, family-oriented community, and often don't see what's going on around us," said Sharon Erickson, Five Hills Health Region alcohol and drug co-ordinator. "The most often used, the most often abused is alcohol and people don't always see the problem." A significant number of people use marijuana and cocaine. "We have an increase out in the community with cocaine. Almost every third referral we're getting in our office is directly related to cocaine." But Moose Jaw "isn't any worse" than other communities. Drug and alcohol abuse has wide and deep impact on the community, said Coleman. "Substance abuse and drug alcohol addiction is one of those social issues that is the root cause of much of what we as police experience." The impact surfaces in acquisitive (theft) crime, violent crime, gang violence and drug distribution by organized crime. "Other consequences of substance abuse are substantial pressures on the health care system, our corrections facilities, education, the families of those who abuse and the workplace." Knowing the exact extent of drug abuse is made difficult by the "twilight community" users live in, said medical health officer Dr. Mark Vooght. "It's quite a twilight population operating into the early hours of the morning and coming to us late in the afternoon when they need equipment to safely shoot up." The three-year-old needle exchange program at public health exchanges needles for about 50 addicts daily and thus prevents spread of Hepatitis C, HIV virus and sexually-transmitted diseases. "It is regrettable that injection drugs are used but we're gratified to see we're at least having some insight into that twilight community," said Vooght. Erickson said concerns about prescription drug abuse involve mostly over-prescribing certain sedatives and stimulants and seniors who don't empty medicine cabinets often enough. A provincewide program allows pharmacists to monitor for double-doctoring to obtain certain drugs for abuse. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine