Pubdate: Wed, 23 Jul 2008
Source: Herald, The (Glasgow, UK)
Copyright: 2008 Newsquest (Herald & Times) Limited
Contact:  http://www.theherald.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4784

THE DRUGS SCOURGE

Drug-users tend to die young, but we know surprisingly little about
those who survive the dangers of overdose or violence to which their
lifestyle makes them susceptible. A study of a group of injecting
heroin-users in Edinburgh reveals that even those who stop the most
dangerous forms of behaviour remain at risk.

Drug-related deaths in Scotland reached a record high in 2006 and a
recent report by the UN showed that Scotland has almost twice as many
drug-related deaths (at 8.2 per 100,000) as the rest of the UK and
comparable European countries. The Edinburgh research, carried out
over 10 years from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s, found that more
than half the users were HIV positive and that Aids-related illness
was replacing overdose as the main cause of death. That is largely due
to a switch from injecting heroin to oral drugs, both prescribed
(including methadone) and illegally-obtained ones.

Despite this, however, the overall mortality rate among drug-users and
former users will remain high owing to Aids. There are other worries
attached to their behaviour, including a high number of sexual
partners, with HIV now more likely to be acquired by sexual
transmission than by sharing needles.

The study confirms the other bleak long-term effects of drug use.
Two-thirds of the group had at least one child, but the majority of
the men and 16% of the women did not live with their children,
resulting in those who could not be cared for by the other parent
going to grandparents, being adopted, fostered or in residential care.

This research (carried out among patients in Muirhouse, an area with a
high concentration of deprivation) is published as Audit Scotland is
investigating the effectiveness of drugs policy in Scotland, in
particular the ?12m a year spent on the methadone programme. According
to the Edinburgh researchers, however, the decrease in injecting
predated the policy of prescribing methadone and they suggest an
increase in sentences both for dealers and people found in possession
of heroin, which "disrupted an active drug-using community" was an
important factor.

Their conclusion, that drug-users require long-term support for a
multiplicity of problems, follows a green paper from the Westminster
government which suggests that drug addicts on long-term benefits
should be required to attend treatment and rehabilitation programmes.
That is easier said than done: only 18% of the group abstained
completely from drugs during the course of the study, while 21% had
periods of abstinence and relapse. At a time when 50,000 people in
Scotland have a problem with heroin or other opiates, and proposals on
how to reduce associated problems include drug consumption rooms, or
"shooting galleries" where intravenous users can inject in a safe
environment, a coherent, effective drugs policy is urgently required.
This study stands as a warning that there are no short-term solutions.
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MAP posted-by: dan