Pubdate: Fri, 4 June 1999 Source: Scotsman (UK) Copyright: The Scotsman Publications Ltd 1999 Contact: http://www.scotsman.com/ Forum: http://www.scotsman.com/ Author: STEPHEN BREEN and JAYNE SAVVA FAILED DRUG SERVICE 'RISKS LIVES OF YOUNG' 'Young people are going to experiment with drugs. All we can do is inform them of the dangers - There has never been a successful Just Say No campaign.' Mike Cadger YOUNG people are risking their lives because Scotland's drug services are failing to provide adequate information, a drugs conference was told yesterday. The service is outdated and is failing to address the problem of the rising number of youths taking recreational drugs such as ecstasy andamphetamines, delegates at the one-day seminar at Stirling Royal Infirmary heard. Mike Cadger, the co-ordinator of Edinburgh's Crew 2000, said that drug taking was an integral part of youth culture and drug services should provide information rather than simply condemn them. He told the conference, organised by the Scottish Drugs Forum, an umbrella organisation for the country's drugs organisations, that this type of objective information service should be more readily available all across Scotland. He was supported by Natalle Morel, of the Blast Recreation Drug Project, in Inverness. She said more education was needed and claimed that young people ignored the Scottish Office's anti-drugs campaigns because they were too dull. Mr Cadger said the Scottish Office strategy was more concerned with harm reduction programmes, such as giving methadone to heroin addicts, than with providing information to prevent young people from developing drug problems. He told the seminar, Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Youth?: "Specialist services like ours should be adopted more generally across Scotland. We neither commend drugs nor condone drugs. We offer young people information on drugsso they can make informed choices. "For example, if someone wants to take ecstasy, we tell them they are more at risk if they have a heart problem or kidney condition. "Young people are going to experiment with drugs anyway. All we can do is inform them of the dangers so they will do less harm to themselves. "There has never been a successful Just Say No campaign. It is time the Government grasped the nettle." He said a recent survey conducted by his group found eight out of ten people had used drugs and seven out of ten had taken them in the past year. He claimed that anti-drug programmes in schools were not working because teachers were seen as authority figures connected to law enforcement. Ms Morel said: "Young folk are not taking any notice [of the anti-drug campaigns] because they are so dull. Teenagers are sophisticated customers - just look at the way computer games are advertised. "There are rehabilitation programmes which give out methadone but nothing to educate young people before it gets to that stage. "Young people are potentially damaging their health both mentally and physically because they don't know enough about drugs." Donna Main, the Scottish Drug Forum's national development officer, said the conference, which was attended by 100 delegates ranging from youth groups to drug agencies and the police, was aimed at finding a common strategy to tackle drug misuse. "Today's services were set up in the Eighties when the main problem was heroin injecting amongst white male addicts," she said. "Although there is a need for these services, there is now a new group of young recreational drug users who are not being catered for." The Scottish Office denied its approach was out of date. A spokeswoman pointed out that the latest strategy, which was launched in March, was based on widespread consultation and was supported by the Scottish Drugs Forum. "The strategy establishes a new framework of co-operation across agencies and communities in the implementation of a programme of comprehensive action across Scotland. "Young people are very much seen as part of the national partnership." Alistair Ramsay, the director of the Government-backed Scotland Against Drugs campaign, said Mr Cadger was wrong to assume that drug-taking was the norm among young people. Agencies had to give a clear message that drug-taking was wrong. Mr Ramsay, who was not at the conference, said: "Our message is absolutely clear that young people should stop starting to take drugs. The message built around the notion that they are all going to do it is quite profoundly wrong. "We have got to say taking drugs is not the norm and need to recognise that if young people's subculture takes it on board that it is cool to take drugs, we have to establish that it is not cool. I believe we have to have a differential approach with drug prevention, drug education programmes catered for a range of young people's needs." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck