Pubdate: Fri, 04 Dec 2015 Source: Advertiser, The (Australia) Copyright: 2015 Advertiser Newspapers Ltd Contact: http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/news/opinion/sendletter Website: http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1 Author: David Caldicott Note: Dr David Caldicott is an Emergency Medicine Specialist at the Calvary Hospital in Canberra and a former Rah Emergency Department Clinician. WE NEED TO INCREASE THE CHANCES OF OUR KIDS SURVIVING THEIR UNAVOIDABLE BRUSH WITH DRUGS - WITH the Stereosonic music festival coming to Adelaide tomorrow, parents will be asking, "What do we need to do to keep our children safe?" This follows the tragically predictable death at the Sydney event last weekend of a yet another young Australian. It's as if we are faced with some sort of horrendous "toxicological terrorism" - we don't know where the next death will be, just that inevitably, there will be another. Having become a parent myself in the decade since I last wrote about drugs in The Advertiser, it's a question that has become a very personal one for me. Our relationship with drugs, as a species, is a complicated one. We've always used them, in some shape or form. In older times, their use was more often associated with the search for spiritual enlightenment, or communing with one's deity, than the widespread use we are so afraid of acknowledging today. How did this ever come to pass? When the prohibition of alcohol was repealed in the US in 1933, it was widely considered as having been a failed experiment. It had resulted in the emergence of brutal gangland warfare, dangerous ethanol substitutes, and profiteering. Harry Anslinger - the man in charge of an army of unemployed prohibition agents, needed another scapegoat - which he found in marijuana. And so began the evolutionary arms race that is The War on Drugs. To facilitate transport and profit, naturally occurring products were refined, purified and distilled - coca to cocaine, opium resin to heroin, and ever increasing strengths of cannabis. Products evolved and developed in a rapidly cycling game of "whack-a-mole", where the only effectively funded response was to prohibit and prosecute every product that could elicit a psychoactive reaction. This response has always been politically driven, from Nixon, through Reagan, to our own John Howard's " Tough on Drugs" approach. Successes have been measured in tons of drugs seized, or numbers of users arrested, but not in lives saved. Predictably, like a bacterial infection treated with the wrong antibiotic, the market has now finally developed resistance. Drugs are researched and ordered online, paid for by crypto-currencies, and delivered by Australia Post. They are undetectable by sniffer dogs and standard urine tests. A now truly global economy serves as catalyst for trade in both licit and illicit products. Our children have a more uncertain future, and higher levels of anxiety, than any preceding generation, and yet we blame them for seeking tribal and chemical consolation in congregations of like-minded individuals. I have always been sceptical of those declaring "wars" on anything. In response to last week's latest heart-rending loss, NSW law enforcement has spoken about the need to "escalate" their war and "create cultural change". Given how attempts at "cultural change" by police elsewhere in the world usually pan out, perhaps that's an option on which we should pass. When it comes to drugs, we are faced with a difficult decision as parents. Is it more important for us to increase the chances of our children developing resilience, and surviving their unavoidable brush with drugs in those impulsive adolescent years, or to hope that somehow we will achieve that which has never been achieved anywhere, a drug-free country. You get to pick one - not both. I know which I think is more likely. How about you? When you back an escalation of that which is clearly not working, or cannot learn from the lessons of history, you are demonstrating the same misunderstanding of science as immunisation sceptics or homeopaths. As a parent, which would you prefer for your children; evidence-based policy, or policy-based evidence? Science or ideology? Because the evidence from Portugal, a little country that was brave enough to buck the international pressures to "keep digging" back in the early part of this century, has shown healthcare outcomes relating to drugs that are globally unrivalled. Their children are safer from drugs there than ours are here. And more countries are joining them. I have been an advocate for "pill testing", or "drug checking" as it's now called, since the early 2000s. This November marked the decade anniversary of the AMA's call for a trial of pill testing in Australia. This started as an article about why we should introduce pill testing in Australia, 10 years after it should have been introduced. All the arguments have already been made. Responsible parents are now going out and doing the research themselves, and backing the policies shown to work elsewhere, anywhere. Pill testing or drug checking is merely a very small part of what we could do - what we need to do - to keep our children safe. Our recently appointed Prime Minister has called for us to be "innovative", to be "nimble" and "disruptive". If we can do that with drugs policy, we can keep our kids alive. If we don't, we won't. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom