Pubdate: Fri, 31 Aug 2007 Source: Herald, The (UK) Copyright: 2007 The Herald Contact: http://www.theherald.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/189 Author: David Leask VICTIMS GETTING OLDER AS DRUGS TAKE TOLL Heroin used to take young lives. Now it takes old ones too, as Scotland's annual toll of drug-related deaths revealed yesterday. There were 421, more than ever before, and all but 69 were over the age of 25 while 70 were over 45. The newspaper headlines 25 years ago, at the beginning of the heroin epidemic north of the Border, were about parents who had lost their children to the drug. Today, the story is about children losing their parents. advertisement "We have had a large-scale heroin problem since the early 1980s," said David Liddell of the Scottish Drugs Forum. "We have now got people in their 40s and even 50s who have been taking drugs ever since. "These are people who have damaged their health in various ways. People who, with that length of addiction, despair of ever escaping their addiction. They've reached the point when they almost don't care if they live or die." Yesterday's figures, for all drugs, were higher than ever before. Is this a symptom of the sheer longevity of Scotland's heroin addiction? Neil McKeganey thinks so, at least partly. A professor at Glasgow University, he has been studying the epidemic for years. He said: "Part of the difficulty is the fact so many of the drug users in Scotland are at the end of the road of their drug use (which in many cases started in the 1990s) and they are in a very poor state of health, with very low expectations of surviving. "This rather makes them somewhat immune to advice as to the risks they are running continuing to use the drugs they are injecting." Fully 280 died from drug abuse last year, matching the all-time record of 2002. The rest of the 421 were made up of a tragic catalogue of accidental, deliberate and undetermined poisonings. Academics in England are already questioning the definition of a drug death. Right now, it only includes those who died directly from narcotics, not any of the many of deaths from side effects or consequences of a drug-using lifestyle. One of those consequences is a remarkable reduction in life expectancy. Professor McKeganey last week highlighted the dangers of older drug addicts. Their children, he said, should be monitored by CCTV in their homes, to make sure they are safe. In reality, children of heroin addicts can't even count on getting a social worker. Older addicts clearly find it harder to quit. Many registered users are on methadone, the catch-all heroin substitute, but it kills too. There were 97 deaths after taking the drug last year and treatment remains hard to get. Mr Liddell stressed that the resources just aren't there to deal with the sheer scale of addicts - around 50,000 "problematic" users who need treatment. In Greater Glasgow, which accounted for a third of deaths, there is hope. Not for a cure or a boom in scarce treatment, but for a practical way to keep some drug users, old and young, alive. The city's addiction services team have started dishing out UKP5 doses of a medicine that can save the lives of those who overdose. It is part of a year-long pilot project, launched this spring, to see if free Naloxone for users and their families will make a difference to the tally of drug deaths. It already has. Four users have been saved by Naloxone since March. They were all given the medicine by other addicts. The whole project, supported by the team's superiors at the local council and health board as well as Scottish Drugs Forum, costs UKP26,000. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek