Pubdate: 23 Feb 1999 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 1999 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Darren Gray CHURCHES JOIN DRUG TRIAL CALL Melbourne church leaders joined the call for a heroin trial yesterday, saying their welfare agencies had noticed an alarming increase in drug use and a drop in the age of drug users. The Anglican Church yesterday revealed its support for a heroin trial, and a senior member of the Uniting Church called for a heroin trial and clean injecting rooms for heroin addicts. Ms Colleen Pearce, the director of Uniting Church community services, called on the Prime Minister, Mr John Howard, to reassess his staunch opposition to a medically prescribed heroin trial. ``I believe he needs to listen to the voices of the people who are dealing with this issue on a day-to-day basis,'' she said. Although present strategies were working, they were not meeting everybody's needs, said Ms Pearce, who headed the church's drug and alcohol rehabilitation centre for seven years. The Reverend Ray Cleary, the chairman of the Anglican social responsibilities committee, said a heroin trial was needed because addicts most at risk of overdosing were not being reached by treatment services and outreach programs. Also, increases in heroin purity in recent years and variability meant addicts were even more vulnerable to a fatal overdose, he said. ``We are not at the present time stopping young people in particular from overdosing on heroin,'' Mr Cleary said. ``I think we are in a fairly desperate stage of trying to find what alternatives we need to address the present crisis.'' Ms Pearce said data from overseas suggested that clean injecting rooms reduced drug deaths and the transmission of blood-borne viruses such as hepatitis C, hepatitis B and HIV. They also provided a gateway to rehabilitation and counselling services, and freed ambulance services for other emergencies, she said. Mr Cleary said the Anglican Church had not developed a policy on clean injecting rooms. He said a heroin trial would need to be carefully evaluated. The Catholic Church, however, is unconvinced about the worth of a heroin trial. A spokesman for the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne, Dr Michael Casey, said: ``The Catholic Church in Melbourne is very keen to do more in this area, but we think that the evidence worldwide supports the Prime Minister.'' The Metropolitan Ambulance Service yesterday attended eight suspected heroin overdoses in the city and suburbs between 7am and 6pm. None was fatal, and most occurred in the afternoon. - --- MAP posted-by: Mike Gogulski