Grumpy Old Addict!

The author is a sixty something baby boomer who did drugs for 28 years and who has now been alcohol and drug free for 20 plus years. He has also worked with alcohol and other drug users for nearly as long and he shares his unique perspective on alcohol and other drug related issues.

Saturday, November 25, 2006

The next magic bullet.....

There were several interesting news stories this week:

On Thursday The Guardian run a story reporting that the total social and economic cost of class A drug use is around £15.4 billion a year. The research was commissioned by the Home Office and also reported that 90% of this cost was accounted for by drug related crime.

The Guardian followed this up on Friday with another story which reported that the UK has 327,426 "problem drug users" and that the country spent £5.9 billion a year on illegal drugs.

These figures again came from the Home Office.

What is going on here - there are supposedly 181,000 people in "structured drug treatment" in England and Wales (NTA figures).

This represents around 55% of the Home Offices "total number of problematic drug users" (if the numbers in treatment in Scotland and Northern Ireland were taken into account the figure would be even higher!)

Sorry - but I don't believe a word of it! All the research that I have ever seen suggests that the percentage ""in treatment" at any one time is not likely to be more than 25 to 33 % of the total. If the governments research is right then they aren't commisssioning very effective treatment are they ? I mean if a minimum of 55% of all problematic drug users in the UK are in treatment and its still costing £15.4 billion?

Last year we were being told that each £ spent on drug treatment produced savings of £9.50. On this basis we need to be spending say an extra £1.5 billion a year - on top of the roughly half billion already spent. That would represent a 400% increase!

Spend £2 billion a year and the total cost in theory comes down to zero. Yeah well, thats not going to happen anyway - and it wouldn't work if they did spend the money because there will always be "treatment resistant" individuals.

Interesting to compare the Governments expenditure on drug treatment to the cost nevertheless. Interesting to see that we spend 10 times as much on illegal drugs as we do on treatment!

My final news story of the week was widely reported - the suggestion that we ought to consider prescribing heroin instead of methadone. A senior policeman suggested that this would reduce drug related crime - and guess what, he is right! He is after all a policeman, and it his job to reduce crime.

I suspect that this would be even more successful than he thinks - for one thing the bottom would fall out of the drugs market as the dealers could not compete on price and quality against the NHS!

My job however has always been about treating individuals rather than finding solutions to social problems such as crime and from the treatment point of view I would predict the following:

  1. The numbers seeking treatment would greatly increase - many users do not seek treatment because they don't want methadone, it doesn't do what they want it to do. Many users who receive methadone on prescription use on top - for the euphoria that heroin provides and methadone does not!
  2. Not many people would ever complete treatment "drug free" - although perhaps a few more would than now as the withdrawals are reconned to be less severe!
Either way don't for a moment believe that the Governments aim is to provide quality treatment for the individual - it isn't and hasn't been for a long while now.

It is to save money, to increase its popularity by reducing crime and to reduce the spread of blood borne viruses associated with drug use into the general community.

They really don't care if individual addicts sit in a corner and dribble while life passes them by if that is what it takes to achieve those goals (which are legitimate goals by the way - but not the only ones!)

To this end I suspect that prescribing heroin will be the next "magic bullet" which is going to achieve these goals!

We have now gone full circle and are rapidly coming back to the point where we were in 1966 - in 40 years there are now around 200 times as many heroin addicts as there were last time that prescribing heroin was official policy.

Labels: , , , ,

Thursday, November 23, 2006

Prisons and Compensation

I wonder how far back the time frame is for making claims against the Home Office for being forceably detoxed from drugs on admission to prison?

Your author had this happen to him on 5 or 6 occasions while he was using drugs himself. Personally I believe that if I had received the nearly £4,000 compensation that the Home Office has paid out to nearly 200 individuals I would have used it all up on drugs on release and would have probably have killed myself in the process!

I would be interested to see how many of the recipients of this compensation end up dead within a month of receiving their money or their discharge from prison - whichever comes first.

Although this is not a laughing matter I have to admit that I would smirk a bit if their relatives were then to sue the Home Office for gross negligence - I think that most people who know anything about addiction could have told them that giving large sums of money to a using addict is asking for trouble. Like giving them a loaded gun.

Apart from all this I would like to clarify my position on this issue:

I have no problem with the idea of providing addicts (whether to illicit or prescribed drugs) with a proper, medically supervised detox on admission into prison. I do have a problem with the idea of maintaining addicts on methadone while they are in prison. This idea has only come about because some bureaucrat within the NTA and/or the current UK drug treatment mafia decided that giving addicts drugs equals treating addiction. Certainly the figures for those in treatment would show a dramatic fall if all those individuals who are merely given drugs that help maintain their habits were removed from the statistics.

Apparently the individuals concerned also objected to being subjected to "drug treatment programmes" while in prison - they were apparently treated against their wills and this was aginst their human rights!

A little bit of clarification would help here:

Prison drug treatment programmes in England are actually accredited as "offending behaviour programmes" rather than addiction treatment programmes.

Personally I have never liked this as I happen to think it makes for bad addiction treatment which should be about sick people getting well, not bad people getting good - although I also believe that the offending behaviour will inevitably be looked at in the course of any effective treatment programme.

For so long as prison drug treatment are accredited as offending behaviour rather than addiction treatment programmes however then fine, give the prisoners the right to decline them. However the consequence of refusing to do an offending behaviour programme - be it drug treatment, a sex offenders programme, anger management, Enhanced Thinking skills etc - ought to be loss of all priveledges, home leave and parole! We all have a right to make choices in life - but our choices always have a price attached! Why should this be any different?

Personally I can't wait for all the alcoholic prisoners demand parity!

Free booze for all prisoners who can demonstrate an alcohol problem prior to coming into prison! Now there's a thought - the Home Office are discriminating against alcohol addicts!

Labels: , , , , ,