Pubdate: 28 March 1999 Source: The Sunday Business Post (Ireland) Copyright: 1998 The Sunday Business Post Contact: (unsure) Fax: ++ 353 1 671 9407 Mail: Letters to Ed, 27-30 Merchants Quay, Dublin 8, Ireland Website: http://www.sbpost.ie/ Author: Christine Doherty GOING HYPER TO KICK THE HABIT The Eastern Health Board has switched direction in trying to combat drug abuse, and is backing Hyper, a bi-monthly magazine written by recovering addicts and aimed at young people. Getting the anti-drug message across has brought problems in the past for the EHB. The board came in for criticism from both the general public and drug addicts in 1998 when it ran a series of shock outdoor advertisements including Trip to Hell (Now Just IEP8) which showed an addict's leg with weeping sores. The advertisements created by Bell Advertising took a bronze at the Institute of Creative Advertising and Design Awards last year, but addicts writing in Hyper said they were misleading. One said that although the poster claimed heroin rotted your teeth, using the strapline Smile. You're On Heroin, in reality it is methadone, a heroin substitute, which damages addicts' teeth. The EHB's involvement with Hyper has brought the health authority praise from anti-drugs groups. The first issue is being funded through the EHB by Youthstart, an EU initiative for 18- to 20-year-olds. It is edited by journalist Stephen Mulkearn, and a team of 10 young people are learning communication skills, how to run a magazine, interview techniques, IT skills and taking their own pictures. The project manager, Gerry McAleenan hopes that after a year working on Hyper the trainees will have learned vocational and personal developmental skills along with gaining a working environment. "We are trying to give them the skills to market themselves. We think that instead of spending IEP76,000, which is how much it costs to keep one young person in jail, it is better to spend that money on a project like this one.," says McAleenan. "To keep two juveniles in custody for a year is the equivalent of doing a project like Hyper." Hyper, which stands for health, youth, promotion of education and rehabilitation, does not carry advertising, but it does have strong messages for young people. McAleenan has high praise for the EHB, and says it is a way of talking to young people in their own language, as opposed to other mediums which talk at them. In its first issue Hyper manages to combine hard reality, in pieces written by recovering addicts who talk about their first experiences with drugs, to problems with literacy and even aromatherapy tips for keeping healthy. The lead singer of Aslan, Christy Dignam, once announced by Gerry Ryan as being dead, shows he is still alive and well and still managing to stay clean of heroin. The first issue's 10,000 copies are already being distributed to EHB facilities, such as customer services in Dr Stevens Hospital, youth information centres and projects across Dublin. Groups in other parts of the country have expressed an interest in Hyper. McAleenan plans to send up to 1,000 copies to Belfast, where drugs are not as big as problem as in parts of Dublin, but are a growing worry for community groups. - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady