Pubdate: Mon, 13 Mar 2006 Source: Australian, The (Australia) Copyright: 2006sThe Australian Contact: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/files/aus_letters.htm Website: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/35 Author: Ross Fitzgerald UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF ALCOHOL IN 1977, Liberal Party senator Peter Baume chaired a crucial Senate report on Drug Problems in Australia. Subtitled An Intoxicated Society?, this report perceptively argued that, if drug problems were to be tackled effectively, all drugs, including tobacco and alcohol, would have to be dealt with. But little was done until the declaration of Australia's modern "war on drugs" in 1985. After that year's drug summit, prime minister Bob Hawke and NSW premier Neville Wran gave doorstop interviews where they promised "wire taps", "border interdiction", more police: a clampdown on heroin. Unsurprisingly, they did not win the day. Victorian premier Jeff Kennett sensibly refused to sign up to a national campaign unless all drugs were included and only if prevention and treatment were given equal weight to law enforcement. The other states agreed. Thus was born the comprehensive and multilayered Australian approach to drugs. A decade later, another prime minister added a further layer. John Howard announced his Tough on Drugs campaign which stressed, and in my opinion unduly emphasised, law enforcement. On the ground, however, better sense prevailed. This involved finding what worked in treatment and prevention, and testing this against the evidence; that is to say, learning from experience and critical reflection. Up to now, Australia has done quite well reducing heroin deaths, keeping HIV/AIDS at a low rate, and now even cannabis use is declining. Indeed in these areas we are doing better than most countries. Plus tobacco use in Australia is now at its lowest level. But there is an important piece missing. And it is the biggest piece in the jigsaw: namely alcohol with its massive social, medical and economic impact. The effects of alcohol misuse overwhelm the stretched emergency departments in every hospital, it burdens GPs, mental health units, social welfare organisations and justice systems. In NSW last year alcohol fuelled the Cronulla riots and the upheavals in Macquarie Fields. Alcohol fuels myriad outbreaks of violence in our cities and suburbs and makes us all unsafe. It is easy to blame others -- the "riffraff", "rednecks", "ethnics", Aboriginal people and "today's youth" -- but alcohol itself escapes blame. In Australia, as in Britain, politicians argue that mental health is the nation's most pressing health problem. Thus at the Council of Australian Governments, Howard and all the premiers have guaranteed they will deal with mental health by preparing a comprehensive plan to tackle mental health issues when next they meet. But the PM and premiers Steve Bracks and Morris Iemma have potentially diverted attention from alcohol by highlighting cannabis as the big problem instead of realising that society's biggest problem is booze. In Australia, teenagers, especially girls, are increasingly bingeing on alcohol. Alcohol is directly linked to the main health problems in young people: depression, suicide, road and personal injuries, sexual assaults and other mental disorders. Adding to these immediate deleterious consequences are the long-term adverse effects on education, skill development and employment. Those who suffer a continuing mental illness have lives shortened on average by as much as 20 years; 23 per cent of this is due to alcohol. Being dependent on alcohol at least doubles and perhaps even triples the risk of depression and other substance abuse; it also increases vulnerability to other mental disorders and physical disease. Up to 23 per cent of suicides in Australia are caused by alcohol and between 30 and 50 per cent of people who commit suicide have had a previous history of alcohol use disorder. Suicide is the commonest cause of death in alcohol-dependent people. Alcohol misuse penetrates family life, the workplace and the community at large. Sadly, in relation to alcohol misuse, federal and state governments are pathetically unresponsive. We see an occasional summit here and an occasional plan there, but with insufficient or sometimes no funds allocated for effective implementation. In the past eight years, the combined governments in Australia have invested about $2.2 billion in programs specifically aimed at illicit drugs. However, over the same period the same governments have allocated only about $50 million to deal with problems caused by alcohol. What really takes the cake is that while teenage drinking is targeted in media campaigns, the federal Government picks up $200 million from underage drinkers through alcohol excise. Where is the public interest in that? Who's pulling the strings? It's reasonable to suggest that the liquor industry and its lobbyists exercise undue influence on the federal and state governments, who should recognise alcohol as the nation's main drug of harm. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom