Pubdate: Sun, 9 Dec 2007 Source: Sunday Herald, The (UK) Copyright: 2007 Sunday Herald Contact: http://www.sundayherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/873 Author: Neil McKeganey Note: Neil McKeganey is Professor of Drug Misuse Research at the University of Glasgow NEIL MCKEGANEY ON DRUG MISUSE RESEARCH LAST WEEK politicians on the health and sport committee of the parliament were told that government spending on tackling Scotland's drug problem had topped UKP431 million. The winners and losers in how that money had been divided were drug enforcement, drug treatment and drug prevention. Drug treatment saw its share of the 2007 budget increase by 11% over the figure in 1999, while the allocation for drug enforcement fell by 9% over the same period. Drug prevention attracted only 11% of the drugs budget in 2007. Given that Scotland has a drug problem greater than almost all of our European neighbours, one might have thought that the proportion of the budget allocated to drug prevention would have gone up rather than down. The first question anybody would ask about a drugs budget nudging towards half a billion a year is whether that money is being wisely and effectively spent. Unfortunately, that is virtually impossible to answer. The reason is because of a number so small that you almost need scientific instruments to spot it. That figure is one third of 1%, which is the proportion of the drugs budget allocated to research. What this means in effect is that 99.6% of the drugs budget is being spent on the basis of evidence obtained on the basis of the remaining one third of one per cent. On the basis of those proportions, if we identify a successful way of tackling our drug problem in Scotland it will be a matter more of luck than judgement. What is more likely is that we will continue to throw ever larger sums of money at tackling the drug problem without really knowing if we are being effective. The scale of our ignorance in tackling Scotland's drug problem is staggering. Here are a few examples of things we should know but don't know. How many people on our UKP12 million-a-year methadone programme are leaving the programme drug-free? The answer: "Don't know". What is the effect of giving community sentences rather than custodial sentences to those found guilty of dealing drugs in Scotland? Again: "Don't know." And what do we know about the long-term effects on children of living with a drug addict parent? Is it better for them to continue to live with their parents or for them to be moved to a family without a drug problem? "Don't know". Importantly, these are not matters of abstract ivory tower concern, but are of enormous practical and urgent importance. In Scotland today we have doctors providing more methadone, to more drug users, at more expense, than at any time in the past. We have courts awarding community sentences to drug dealers and we have social workers struggling to decide whether it is in the child's best interests to live with their addict parents or to be moved to a place of safety. For the most part these decisions are being taken on the flimsiest possible evidence base. The current Scottish government may end up being more supportive of research in this area than previous administrations. It is a sad fact that they will have to do so little to achieve that laurel, but the prize will be in finding out whether the half-billion pounds of public money spent on tackling the drug problem is being wisely and effectively targeted. The answer to that question is a necessity, not a luxury. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake