Pubdate: Sat, 02 Dec 2006 Source: Herald, The (UK) Copyright: 2006 The Herald Contact: http://www.theherald.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/189 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v06/n1627/a02.html Author: Cameron Shepherd THE MIDDLE WAY TO TACKLE DRUG PROBLEM AT LAST a proposal that attempts seriously to tackle the drug problem (Q: How do we win the war on drugs? A: By making them legal -- November 29). Jack Cole will, of course, be roundly condemned for failing to address the addiction problem. His experience, however, and my own, coming from the child-care perspective, is that the collateral damage, the effect on families, society, the criminal justice system, the prison service, is a good deal worse than the isolated effect of the addiction. Addicts can function fairly well in society. It is the imperative to get money to feed the habit from criminal sources and the unreliability of these products that causes the life of the addict to be so chaotic. I would suggest there is a solution intermediate between criminalisation and Cole's proposal of legalisation. This is medicalisation. By medicalising the drug problem, society can get a handle on the situation. Registered addicts would be provided with the materials for their "treatment" in "shooting galleries" under medical and nursing supervision. They and their families, particularly the very vulnerable children, would be known to the workers and a degree of holistic care could be offered. Where possible, they could be pointed towards addiction treatment services, but this would not be the prime purpose of the exercise. Street drugs would remain illegal, but the market would disappear. For a time, dealers would try to capture a fresh clientele, but this would hopefully be insufficient to sustain the industry at its current level. This would not, of course be cheap, but would be considerably less costly, in both financial and human terms, than the current social and criminal costs. DR CAMERON SHEPHERD Bearsden - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath