Pubdate: Fri, 9 Oct 1998 Source: Scotsman (UK) Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Author: James Rougvie and Robert Tate DRINK BIGGER MENACE THAN DRUGS, SAYS POLICE CHIEF THE Government's drugs tsar, Keith Hellawell, was yesterday forced to defend Government policy as Fife's chief constable warned alcohol was a greater menace in Scottish society. During the launch of a drive to raise awareness of alcohol problems with school-age teenagers, Chief Constable James Hamilton said alcohol abuse was a far greater problem than drug abuse. Its effects were spread over several decades in contrast to the short-term effects of drugs. Last week, Henry McLeish, the Scottish home affairs minister, said drug abuse was the greatest evil facing society. On a visit to Erskine yesterday, Mr Hellawell, the former West Yorkshire chief constable who has been appointed UK Coordinator of the Government's anti-drugs strategy, insisted that alcohol had not been excluded from his remit. The direction of the Government's campaign had been strongly challenged earlier by Fife police and health workers, who claimed that drink was a greater menace with a disproportionate amount of resources applied to fighting drug abuse. They said that politicians should take the responsibility for placing alcohol much higher on the agenda and putting its dangers on the same footing as illegal drugs. There were 19 deaths in Fife last year with a direct link to alcohol while eight people died through abuse of recreational drugs. It has been estimated there are 44,000 deaths in the UK each year attributable to alcohol, but this figure does not include deaths which may have had a root cause in alcohol such as strokes or accidents. Deaths due to liver disease caused by alcohol rose by two thirds in the decade to 1994 and the mortality rate from that cause doubled among 15 to 44 year-olds in the same period. Mr Hellawell, who was attending a drugs conference, agreed that alcohol was closely tied in with the drug problem. "If you look at the estimated 20,000 people being treated in England, about 55 per cent of them are addicted to heroin. The remainder are addicted to legally prescribed drugs. The links between alcohol and drugs and tobacco and drugs are quite substantial." He added that there was growing evidence of links between cannabis, alcohol and mental health. Earlier, Mr Hamilton had criticised parents for introducing children to alcohol on festive or social occasions, pointing out such an attitude to drug-taking would be unthinkable. Ann Patrick, a Fife chief inspector, said teenagers had been getting mixed messages about drugs because alcohol seemed to have been forgotten. "There is certainly more crime on a Friday and Saturday night caused by alcohol than through drugs, whether it is breach of the peace, assault or vandalism." Bill Miller, Fife senior-health promotion officer, said tobacco was the biggest killer and alcohol came second before drug abuse. He said: "Alcohol is a drug and it should be placed on exactly the same footing as other drugs." The emotional and psychological damage done to families by an alcohol abuser had never been taken into account, despite the fact that the NHS spent between UKP150 million and UKP2 billion treating the effects of alcohol abuse each year, he added. Janice Munro, an alcohol development officer, said that drug agencies now outnumbered groups set up to combat alcohol abuse, adding: "There is a disproportionate amount of money being spent fighting drug abuse .. There seems to be a national strategy for drugs but none for alcohol." - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry