Pubdate: Sat, 31 Oct 1998 Source: The Weekend Australian (Australia) Contact: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/ Section: Page 20 Author: John Heller, Bear Stanley THE BOTTOM LINE: HEROIN TRIAL COULD SAVE LIVES I HAVE never used heroin myself but lived with and loved an addict. She was the daughter of Duncan Campbell (Addicts Deserve a Dose of Empathy, Opinion, 29/10) and it was I who found her - too late - on our kitchen floor. Jennifer's desperation to break free from her addiction, and the courage she showed in battling it, will be an inspiration to me for the rest of my life. The problem of how to deal with heroin addiction and help those in its trap is an extremely complex one. While methadone can bring some stability to an addict's life, it is far more difficult to get off than heroin and is a trap in itself. Naltrexone deals with the physical addiction, but does nothing to help someone cope with a life suddenly devoid of opium's rose-coloured glasses. The failure of the recent attempt to run a trial on administering heroin to addicts makes me angry. A trial - nothing more - to see if it would help people and save some lives. The self-righteous among us seem to think that if heroin were legally available, then everyone would race out to use it - except for themselves. What a low opinion of others these people have. Their arrogance leaves me speechless. Who can say whether the availability of such a clinical heroin treatment might have meant that Jennifer would still be with me. We may never know. JOHN HELLER Darlinghurst, NSW I SINCERELY hope the Prime Minister has read Thursday's Opinion page article by Duncan Campbell. We should end at once the so-called "war on drugs". This war is one waged against the citizens of Australia. A war in which the casualties are: The children addicted, the years people spend in prison for no offence against another, the deaths from overdoses, the infections with AIDS and hepatitis. Legalise the lot, so people won't have to turn to crime to buy unknown powders containing potential hazards, paying thousands of times the intrinsic value. Law enforcement is an abject failure. Let the medical community deal with it, not the courts. BEAR STANLEY Atherton, QId - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski