Pubdate: Thu, 23 Aug 2007 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) THE A, B, CS OF DRUG ABUSE Health Minister Tony Clement's promise to educate young people about drugs, if done properly, might be very useful. The more information young people have, the better equipped they will be to make good decisions. Among the many reasons for the decline in youth smoking is, probably, the increase in public knowledge about the effects of the habit. Teenagers today have seen images of diseased lungs. If they take up smoking, it isn't out of ignorance of the consequences. It follows that 13-year-olds might be better able to navigate their teenage years if they understood the health consequences of ecstasy, crystal meth and crack cocaine -- and OxyContin, Percodan, and the other prescription drugs that are now also street drugs. To make young people understand the specific dangers of drugs, however, it is also necessary to explain how drugs work, and to be honest about the fact that not all drugs are the same. There are ill effects associated with marijuana use, but the degree of harm is relatively minor for moderate users, and it's a good bet that at least some teachers in Canadian high schools had more than an academic familiarity with the drug in their youth. It would be dishonest and hypocritical for those teachers to stand up in front of students and speak of marijuana and heroin as though they were the same thing, differently packaged. They're not. That seems to be the kind of education campaign Mr. Clement has in mind, though. "We will discourage young people from thinking there are safe amounts or that there are safe drugs," he said recently. He also hopes to dispel any notions teenagers might have that marijuana is legal in Canada. That would serve a useful function because, sadly, smoking pot is still against the law. But a blanket message -- "trust us, all drugs are bad, just don't do them" -- isn't likely to work on today's youth, any more than it worked on generations past. There may be no safe drugs, but some drugs, in some amounts, are safer than others. There is good reason to wonder if Mr. Clement is using this education proposal as a political substitute for harm reduction, in particular for the safe-injection site in Vancouver that could soon disappear unless the federal government allows it to continue. "Harm reduction, in a sense, takes many forms," the health minister mused. "To me, prevention is harm reduction. Treatment is harm reduction. Enforcement is harm reduction." Actually, harm reduction is a fourth, distinct technique for reducing the damage drugs do to users and society, as the health minister knows. It keeps existing addicts from spreading disease among themselves and to others, and, ideally, removes some of the crime and desperation associated with addiction. If Canada turns its back on harm reduction, it turns its back on the inveterate users, the ones who are unwilling or unable to turn their lives around using their own willpower. Those addicts will have fewer interactions with social services, and in the meantime, they'll contract and spread hepatitis and HIV. Any education campaign that begins with an insult to Canadians' intelligence isn't likely to be successful. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman