Pubdate: Sun, 30 Sep 2007 Source: Lancashire Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 2007 Newsquest Media Group Contact: http://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4381 Author: Pete Magill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) 330 EAST LANCS YOUNGSTERS ADDICTED TO DRUGS AND ALCOHOL DRUG and alcohol addiction among young people is said to be "out of control" with more than 330 are receiving treatment for their habits. The number of people aged under 18 getting help has trebled in much of East Lancashire in a year, with children as young as 11 coming forward, shock figures reveal. And the founder of an East Lancashire drugs charity said he was "horrified" by the increase in the number of young people's addictions. Drugs workers said that they now spent millions of pounds tackling the problem and that dealing with young people was "one of our biggest challenges". In Blackburn with Darwen, 81 people aged under 18 - of whom 24 were less than 16 years old - are currently receiving treatment - more than double the 39 in 2005. Some 252 are signed up for services in the rest of East Lancashire, including Burnley, Pendle, Rossendale, Hyndburn and the Ribble Valley. Across the county, the drugs epidemic among young people dropped from 2005 to 2006, from 169 to 106 children, but more than trebled by June 2007 when 358 were in treatment. The founder of Blackburn-based Those on the Margins of a Society (THOMAS), Father Jim McCartney said addictions were symptoms of deep-rooted problems that were not being addressed. Father Jim, who runs THOMAS which provides a drop-in centre for the homeless and help for ex-offenders, said he had helped addicts who started using drugs as young as 11 years old. The priest, based at St Anne's House, France Street, said: "The problem has definitely got worse during recent years and I don't know why it has got so bad. It's getting out of control. He said: "I have been here for 14 years and I am horrified at the increase in the number of young people that are passing through the drop in centre for drug and alcohol addiction. "There has been a rapid change over the last few years. "A lot of these people are drifting with no purpose." He blamed communication problems with youngsters and "society's increasing expectations of teenagers." Father Jim said: "There is a pattern with young people who get addicted to drugs and alcohol. They have often been excluded from school at an early age and drifted into crime in their early teens and it all goes downhill from that point. "By the time they arrive in early adulthood they realise they want to change their lives and the process of transformation begins." Two years ago the Lancashire Telegraph reported how drugs were so cheap in East Lancashire that youngsters were picking up an ecstasy tablet for cheaper than the price of a chocolate bar. Drugs workers said narcotics were being made more easily available for youngsters as the market among adults diminished in certain areas. Drugs services in East Lancashire are taking action to combat the problems. Early Break has won the contract to provide drug services for young people in Ribble Valley, Hyndburn, Pendle, Rossendale and Burnley. Established for more than a decade in Bury and Rochdale, it has set up a base at the St Philip's Grassroots Centre in Leeds Road, Nelson. The services it is offering include needle exchanges, counselling and support, relapse prevention and substitute prescriptions. Tom Woodcock, strategic director of Lancashire Drug and Alcohol Action Team, which commissions Early Break's services, said: "Dealing effectively with young people represents one of our biggest challenges. "Last year we invested millions of pounds in recommissioning the services available for young people with a substance and alcohol misuse problem. "This has provided young people with greater access to a specialised service tailored to their specific needs. This is reflected in the number of young people entering services for help. "In East Lancs 252 have accessed service in the first quarter of 2007. As a drugs and alcohol action team DAAT we also recognise the importance of educating young people to help prevent them from developing a substance misuse problem, and through our partnership we are engaging with young people as early as possible in schools and youth clubs." Recently a new drug treatment service was launched by the national charity Addaction in Bacup after it was discovered that young users were isolated from treatment services in Blackburn, Burnley and Accrington. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake