Pubdate: Fri, 22 Jan, 1999 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 1999 David Syme & Co Ltd Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Contact: A5 Author: Darren Gray DRUG TRIAL CALL ON OVERDOSES Victoria's soaring drug overdose toll has sparked renewed calls to test medically-prescribed heroin programs and safe injecting rooms for heroin users. Key drug and alcohol groups said yesterday it was time for more action to halt drug deaths. Yesterday, The Age revealed that up to 10,000 drug overdose victims were treated in Victorian hospitals each year. Hospital emergency department doctors fear the overdose tally is rising, and say most of these overdoses involve legal and prescription drugs. New figures from the Metropolitan Ambulance Service also reveal how dramatically the number of drug overdoses has increased recently. Last month, the ambulance service attended an average 31 drug overdoses (including alcohol) per day. In January 1997 Melbourne ambulances attended an average of only 15.5 overdoses daily. Mr Bill Stronach, the chief executive officer of the Australian Drug Foundation, said health authorities had to adopt alternative strategies to tackle deaths and problems associated with illicit drug use - ``the ones we are all a bit scared of, like safe injecting places, like prescribing heroin for users''. He also suggested ``beefing up the methadone program and beefing up the needle and syringe exchange programs because they've been shown to be effective''. Mr Stronach said overseas heroin trials had been shown to reduce crime, stabilise people and get them back to work. However, it was also important to continue drug education and information programs and to crack down on drug traffickers, he said. Mr David Crosbie, the chief executive officer of the Alcohol and Other Drugs Council of Australia, said researchers knew much about the circumstances of heroin overdoses. For instance, about 30per cent of fatal heroin overdoses involved benzodiazepines, and another 30per cent involved alcohol, he said. What was needed was greater resources to fight the drug problem and more political will, he said. ``We need to reconsider a range of options including safe injecting rooms, prescribed heroin for dependent addicts, and extending treatment and prevention programs,'' he said. A month ago the chief executive officer of VicHealth, Dr Rob Moodie, made a similar call. Professor David Penington, the man who chaired the Premier's Drug Advisory Council inquiry, said there was no simple solution to the drug overdose problem. He said there was a distinction between people who abused prescription drugs and illicit drugs. A State Government spokeswoman said it had adopted one of the most comprehensive and multi-disciplinary approaches to the drugs issue in the country. ``We don't believe we can stop drug abuse ... (but) we can minimise the harm of drug abuse.'' The Government was spending $100million over four years on the Turning the Tide Strategy to limit the harm from drugs, she said. - --- MAP posted-by: derek rea