Pubdate: Tue, 23 Nov 1999 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 1999 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Richard Baker HEROIN BOOM IN THE COUNTRY A statewide study has found an increase in heroin use in regional and rural Victoria. The chairman of the Victorian Rural Heroin and Methadone Project, Dr Rodger Brough, said evidence tabled in the report Between a Rock and a Hard Place showed that more country people were involved in methadone programs and needle exchanges. "This would seem to indicate a growth in the number of people with heroin addictions in country Victoria," Dr Brough said. Doctors and pharmacists in regional Victoria were interviewed, with most saying they were treating more people with drug problems. Dr Brough, drug and alcohol physician for the Southern Healthcare Network in Warrnambool, has treated drug-dependent patients in the south-west for almost 15 years. For most of that time he has had between 10 and 20 patients a year receiving methadone treatment. But since 1997 that number has risen to between 60 and 80. "In the first 10 years I was working here we had very few deaths from heroin overdoses but in the past few years we've seen a lot more," he said. "I know from clients that there is no longer a need for them to go to Melbourne to get heroin because it is available here. It has certainly become a more obvious problem." To counter deaths from heroin overdoses in Melbourne, the Premier, Mr Steve Bracks, has appointed Professor David Penington to head the committee overseeing the setting up of five injecting rooms. Although Dr Brough applauds the Government's intentions, he said the committee should act on the number of overdoses in country Victoria. "I don't think safe injecting rooms are going to be a successful option in regional and rural Victoria," he said. "Safe injecting houses are going to be a lot harder to sell politically in rural Victoria and I would argue that we need to look at other strategies to slow the overdose rate," he said. One strategy on which he would like to see more debate is the issuing of Naloxone to known heroin addicts in rural Victoria. Naloxone is the reversal agent of heroin and is administered by drug paramedics to overdose victims. Dr Brough also believes that injecting rooms would not work in rural areas because of the difficulty in accessing them anonymously. He said heroin addicts in metropolitan areas could visit the injecting rooms without fear of being discovered by people they know, but addicts in regional Victoria would find it impossible to use the injecting rooms without being seen. "Anonymity is such a big issue for regional Victoria. Even the drug use seems to be hidden. We don't have an equivalent to Smith Street ... the actual selling of the drugs might not be visible in country areas but the effects are there," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst