Pubdate: Mon, 30 Oct 2006 Source: Daily Telegraph (Australia) Copyright: 2006 News Limited Contact: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/113 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) DRUG-ADDICTED WOMEN 'DIE AT ALARMING RATE' Women addicted to hard drugs die at 20 times the rate of other women, according to Australia's first comprehensive review of the illicit drug death toll. The National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre study, released today, paints an alarming picture of death rates among Australians hooked on heroin, cocaine, methamphetamines, party drugs and cannabis. Among the general public, men die more often than women, but the latest analysis shows drug addiction "evens out" the figures. Male abusers die at ten times the rate of their clean peers, but for women the rate is doubled. "The impact on women's mortality is just far, far more dramatic," said University of NSW academic Professor Shane Darke, author of the 200-page national review. "They're dragged up from a position of relative safety to the incredibly high risk rate compared to their sisters." Heroin and methamphetamine have a far greater impact on women and girls, the review found. The book, Mortality Amongst Illicit Drug Users: Epidemiology, Causes And Intervention, is the first to analyse the rates and causes of drug deaths. Heroin kills more than 350 Australians each year, with cocaine and methamphetamines responsible for a further 100 deaths. Prof Darke has found that dependent users of these hard drugs die at 15 times the rate of the general population - with half dead by the age of 50. Half of all premature deaths are caused by overdose, with another 30 per cent caused by disease associated with the addiction. Ten per cent commit suicide but Prof Darke said a more surprising finding is that 10 per cent die of trauma. "That's people who are either murdered or have drug-induced accidents. That's a phenomenally high rate," he said. "It proves just how dangerous and risky these habits are." Despite international increases in methamphetamine use, heroin remained by far the most dangerous and deadly of the illicit drugs, Prof Darke said. "Heroin overdose death rates are now about the same level as they were in the early 1990s, when it was rightly regarded as a national tragedy," he said. "Now methamphetamine is the hot topic and heroin is considered a problem solved, but that's clearly very wrong." The review showed drug treatment dramatically reduced the risk of death, but Prof Darke said addicts must access long term programs rather than a short detox courses to break the habit. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek