Pubdate: Fri, 08 Aug 2014
Source: Independent  (UK)
Copyright: 2014 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/209
Author: Nigel Morris, Deputy Political Editor
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)

PROVIDING FOIL FOR ADDICTS WILL HELP THE FIGHT AGAINST HEROIN

Anyone who has witnessed the horrors of heroin at first hand knows it 
is a lethal drug that wrecks lives and tears families apart. Although 
its use has declined in recent years, particularly among young 
adults, it has still been responsible for thousands of British deaths 
over the past decade. Heroin use can never be safe, but it can be 
made safer, which is why today's announcement that aluminium foil 
will be made available to addicts is a sensible measure.

In the first place, the initiative will prevent deaths by encouraging 
users to report to treatment centres rather than sharing contaminated 
needles in bedsits and back streets. Having been put in contact with 
medical professionals, users will then be able to take a further step 
by agreeing programmes to tackle their addictions.

The move, which will be announced by the Liberal Democrat Home Office 
minister, Norman Baker, with the backing of the Home Secretary, 
Theresa May, will doubtless attract moralising criticism on the 
grounds that it legitimises drug use.

But it is a pragmatic instance of what works being put into practice, 
in the same way that handing clean needles to addicts is preferable 
to abandoning them to play Russian roulette with dirty needles, or 
that supplying methadone, itself highly addictive, is better than 
leaving them on heroin.

Many factors behind the drop in heroin use are beyond politicians' 
influence - it is a trend across Western Europe as drugs fall in and 
out of fashion with young adults more drawn to party drugs than to 
the deadly substances associated with middle-aged junkies.

However, Mr Baker's initiative can only help the fight against heroin 
addiction. What would be even more welcome would be for politicians 
to face up to the reality that our whole approach to controlled 
illicit substances is 40 years out of date and needs a complete overhaul.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom