Pubdate: Sun, 11 Jan 2009 Source: Sunday Mail (Australia) Copyright: 2009 Queensland Newspapers Contact: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/editorial/letter Website: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/sundaymail Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/435 Author: Rosemary Odgers DRUG-RELATED PARAMEDIC CALLOUTS UP 15 PER CENT Paramedics are treating more than 30 Queenslanders a day for drug-related conditions including overdoses, a rise of 15 per cent in two years. New figures reveal that ambulance officers across the state attended 11,429 cases involving drug-affected people last year. Opposition Leader Lawrence Springborg said the figures were proof the Government was not doing enough to tackle the growing problem of drugs in the community. He called for a review of drug awareness campaigns to ensure they were targeting the problem. "We've known for years that Queensland is the amphetamine capital of Australia and these figures show the problem is getting worse and yet this government has sat on its hands," Mr Springborg said. "We need zero tolerance to drugs, harsher penalties for people caught trafficking and supplying drugs, and money spent on better drug awareness campaigns rather than on ads promoting the Government." But Police Minister Judy Spence rejected the Opposition's suggestion the Government was soft on drugs. Ms Spence said about 10 per cent of prisoners in Queensland were jailed for drug offences. "The Government and the Queensland Police Service are continually increasing our resources and arrests with respect to drugs, and Queensland Health run continuous drug awareness campaigns," she said. "Parents and indeed all members of the community need to join with government to help society understand that far from being harmless and recreational, illicit and illegal drugs can lead to hefty fines, prison sentences and in the cases of drug use, death." The war of words follows the tragic case of Rosie Bebendorf, 28, who died on New Year's Day after taking two ecstasy tablets allegedly bought from a Fortitude Valley nightclub. Her grieving parents have pleaded with young people to stay away from party drugs. Kroy Day of the union representing ambulance workers said the latest figures supported anecdotal evidence that paramedics were dealing with more drug cases. But he said drug and alcohol abuse had always been part of their workload, and paramedics were more concerned about the growing level of violence associated with drug use. "The Government has increased penalties for people who assault officers but what we don't want is people to be deterred from calling us (to cases involving drugs)," he said. "We're not interested in being a police force. They will only be called if there is a safety issue for our members." The latest figures, obtained by the Opposition through a Question on Notice, revealed paramedics attended 11,429 drug-related cases including overdoses in 2007-08, compared to 11,214 the previous year and 9907 in 2005-06. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin