Pubdate: Thu, 14 Jan 1999 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Page: 8 Contact: Website: http://www.smh.com.au/ Author: (1) PUB LTE, Tony Trimingham, (2) PUB LTE, Stuart Loveday, Dr Paul O'Brien, and Dr Gillian Deakin NO EASY SOLUTIONS TO HARD-DRUG ABUSE I was hoping the winds of change in the Coalition might bring more sense and compassion into its strategies on dealing with drugs and take us away from the present auction on law and order. If the quality of its potential ministers is measured by Andrew Fraser (Herald, January 12), then heaven help us. His four strategies for eliminating drugs from prisons are: sniffer dogs, ending methadone maintenance, banning visits to drug users, and forced Naltrexone treatment. Now he has come up with a real doozey - all drug overdoses to be attended by police and for it to be mandatory for medical staff to call police to every drug overdose they treat. In our efforts to save lives, we have been trying to encourage police to avoid drug overdose attendance so that friends of users can safely call help when needed. If this policy comes in, deaths will increase. I eagerly await Mr Fraser's next initiative - concentration camps for drug users, perhaps. TONY TRIMINGHAM, WILLOUGHBY, JANUARY 12 _____ [LETTER #2] Clear evidence from the '70s, '80s and '90s shows time and time again the "war on drugs" to be futile, whatever resources and brilliant minds are applied to the problem. Hepatitis C (HCV), a virus transmitted through blood-to-blood contact, is transmitted at the rate of 11,000 new infections each year Australia-wide. Ninety per cent of cases arise as a result of people sharing drug-injecting equipment. HCV is one of the major harms that must be reduced. Hepatitis C: the Neglected Epidemic, the recent landmark bipartisan report by the NSW Parliament's Standing Committee on Social Issues, highlights the personal, social and economic costs of hepatitis C. It emphasises the importance of supporting the principle of harm minimisation to help control the transmission of HCV. To say that harm minimisation strategies are "defeatist" indicates a sad level of ignorance. It is exactly these strategies which have made Australia a world leader in managing to contain the spread of HIV. These strategies are starting to show an effectiveness in slowing the spread of HCV without increasing illicit drug use. We need a wide range of strategies to help defeat hepatitis C, and to help defeat harmful illicit drug use. Let's stop emphasising the things that don't work. Find the things that do work. And let's approach the problem rationally, once more. STUART LOVEDAY Executive officer Hepatitis C Council of NSW DR PAUL O'BRIEN Northern Rivers division of GPs DR GILLIAN DEAKIN Eastern Sydney division of GPs Sydney JANUARY 12 - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady