Pubdate: Sun, 05 Aug 2012
Source: Herald, The (Glasgow, UK)
Copyright: 2012 Herald & Times Group
Contact:  http://www.heraldscotland.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4784

REVEALED: HEROIN CAUSES MORE HARM TO SCOTLAND THAN ANY OTHER DRUG

HEROIN causes the most harm to Scottish society despite the nation's 
appalling relationship with alcohol, according to a new study ranking 
the harm posed by drugs.

A survey of drugs specialists also found cannabis was considered the 
least dangerous substance, although it is labelled as a class B drug.

The top 10 of the drugs considered most dangerous, taking into 
account harm to both individual users and society, included four 
Class A drugs, two class B and one class C. Three legal substances 
were also included, with alcohol ranked fourth, solvents in fifth 
place and tobacco ranked sixth. However, ecstasy and magic mushrooms 
- - both class A drugs - were perceived as among the least harmful.

Lead author Dr Mark Taylor, an Edinburgh-based consultant 
psychiatrist, said the research aimed to try to shed some 
"perspective" on the drugs issue.

"We wanted to capture the various domains of harm, which we reduced 
to the categories of harm to self and harm to others - ie harm to 
society," he said. "We then wanted to get a sense - according to the 
addiction experts - of rankings relative to other substances.

"There is a whole debate about safety versus legality. Alcohol is 
clearly the drug of choice for our society but it is not without dangers."

The research, published by online medical journal BMJ Open, surveyed 
nearly 300 clinical experts from across Scotland, including 
psychiatrists, social workers, addiction nurses and GPs on their 
views on the harms of substances. Participants scored each substance 
from zero - no risk - to three - extreme risk - on nine different measures.

To assess the "social harm" of a drug, issues such as the costs to 
the NHS, violent behaviour, neglect of children and financial 
problems were taken into account.

Taylor, who holds honorary senior lecturer posts at both Edinburgh 
and Glasgow universities, said the study aimed to reproduce previous 
work led by former chief drugs adviser to the UK Government, 
Professor David Nutt - who sparked controversy after publishing a 
drugs harm ranking list five years ago.

Nutt was sacked from his position as chair of the Advisory Council on 
Misuse of Drugs in 2009 after clashing with MPs over claims that 
alcohol and tobacco were more harmful than many illegal drugs, 
including ecstasy and cannabis.

He also suggested taking ecstasy was no more dangerous than riding a horse.

Taylor said the Scottish research involved a larger number of experts 
than previous studies, and one surprising finding was how "benign" 
cannabis was perceived to be.

One factor may be high potency cannabis was not in widespread use at 
the time of the survey. But Taylor added the experts surveyed - who 
all work in addiction services - may also not see many people who 
have a problem with the drug.

"As a general adult psychiatrist, I see quite a few people who have 
come to grief due to excessive cannabis use, often related to 
precipitating a psychotic illness or paranoid illness," he said. "The 
addiction experts don't see that so much, as cannabis addicts often 
don't seek help. Nevertheless, we were surprised at how low the 
cannabis ranking was and also the ecstasy ranking to a certain 
extent, considering it is a class A controlled drug."

The study suggests that a new method for ranking drug harm - separate 
from that used in the criminal justice system - should be introduce 
to help guide health policies.

It concluded: "Increasing public awareness of the potential for harm 
of all the drugs examined whether legal or illegal and finding ways 
of reducing the demand for psychoactive substances should be the 
focus rather than imposing harsh penalties for their use."

Dr Evelyn Gillan, chief executive of Alcohol Focus Scotland, pointed 
out alcohol was the only drug which ranked more highly for social 
harm than personal harm in the study.

"The impact of alcohol's harm to people other than the drinker comes 
in many forms, ranging from problems with family members and friends 
to strangers in the street," she said.

"Despite the devastating effect of alcohol on people's lives, 
drinking and drinking to excess is viewed as normal behaviour in our 
society, while drug use is generally viewed as more risky and problematic."

However, Gavin Partington of the Wine and Spirit Trade Association 
said: "This study appears designed to support the view of a minority 
who wrongly seek to equate alcohol with harmful illegal drugs. It is 
not a view shared by the vast majority of Scots who enjoy drinking in 
moderation."

Inspector Tommy Crombie, national drugs co-ordinator for the Scottish 
Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency, said all kinds of substance misuse 
posed risks to users and placed significant costs on justice, health 
and social systems.

"Those who are tempted to use illegal drugs should be under no doubt 
these substances are harmful and can cause serious health 
implications," he said. "Cannabis, for example, remains the most 
widely misused illicit drug in Scotland and evidence does exist to 
show that the drug is harmful, particularly stronger strains."

That view was backed by Marjorie Wallace, chief executive of mental 
health charity, SANE.

She said: "We receive daily evidence that the long-term use of 
'skunk' cannabis can trigger frightening psychotic episodes, causes 
relapse and may bring about severe mental illnesses such as schizophrenia."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom