News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Senior Police Officer Calls for Heroin to Be Prescribed to Addicts to Cut Cr |
Title: | UK: Senior Police Officer Calls for Heroin to Be Prescribed to Addicts to Cut Cr |
Published On: | 2006-11-22 |
Source: | Independent (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 21:27:36 |
SENIOR POLICE OFFICER CALLS FOR HEROIN TO BE PRESCRIBED TO ADDICTS TO CUT CRIME
Heroin addicts should receive the drug on prescription from the
National Health Service to stop them stealing to feed their habit, a
senior police officer has suggested.
The idea, by Howard Roberts, Deputy Chief Constable of
Nottinghamshire, follows the success of schemes in Switzerland and
the Netherlands in turning repeat offenders away from crime.
In Britain most users are given the heroin substitute methadone, with
a few hundred being prescribed heroin a limited experiment. Mr
Roberts suggested that the scheme should be expanded, arguing that
addicts committed an average of 432 offences a year. Three-quarters
of street robbers test positive for heroin.
He told a drugs conference: "We should actively consider prescribing
diamorphine, pharmaceutical heroin, to those seriously addicted to
heroin, as part of a treatment programme for addiction. There is an
undeniable link between addicted offenders and appalling levels of
criminality, as heroin and crack cocaine addicts commit crime, from
burglary to robbery to sometimes murder, to get the money to buy
drugs to satisfy their addiction."
Mr Roberts also argued that the move would be cost-effective as it
would cost UKP 12,000 a year for each addict to be treated this way
under close supervision. It would be the best way to work with them
to beat their addiction - and they would not be on the streets
stealing to buy the drug.
"Of course, getting people off drugs altogether must be the
objective," he told an Association of Chief Police Officers'
conference in Manchester. "But I personally do believe we have lived
with the terrible consequences of relatively uncontained addiction
for far too long."
At the moment between 300 and 400 drug users receive heroin for their
dependency under a joint Home Office and Department of Health pilot
project in London, the South-east and the North. Addicts enrolled on
the scheme inject heroin under the supervision of clinical staff. A
report on the project is expected next month.
However, Professor Neil McKeganey, of the drug misuse centre at the
University of Glasgow, warned the move could increase levels of addiction.
He said: "We need to be very cautious here because in effect what one
is doing is rewarding addicts for their criminality."
The charity DrugScope said prescribing heroin could be effective for
some addicts. Martin Barnes, its chief executive, said: "It can have
health benefits for the drug user. There is compelling evidence that
heroin prescribing... is cost-effective in reducing drug-related
crime and other costs to communities."
Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said:
"Prescription of drugs to addicts is justified as long as it is part
of a strategy of rehabilitation and withdrawal."
In a separate development, a government adviser has suggested that
ecstasy and LSD should be downgraded from class A to class B substances.
Professor David Nutt, the chairman of the technical committee of the
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, told MPs it was anomalous
for ecstasy and LSD to be treated by the law in the same way as
heroin and crack cocaine.
Treatments for Addiction
An estimated 40,000 Britons reguarly use heroin, either by injecting
or smoking it.
The street price of the drug is between UKP 30 and UKP 100 a gram and
some addicts spend as much as UKP 15,000 a year on their habit. The
most common treatment is methadone, a synthetic drug similar to
heroin but less addictive.
A more expensive alternative is buprenorphine, which has been
prescribed by doctors since 2001. Some private clinics prescribe
naltrexone - a drug implanted in the abdomen or arm - to reduce the
craving for heroin. It is not available on the National Health Service.
Heroin addicts should receive the drug on prescription from the
National Health Service to stop them stealing to feed their habit, a
senior police officer has suggested.
The idea, by Howard Roberts, Deputy Chief Constable of
Nottinghamshire, follows the success of schemes in Switzerland and
the Netherlands in turning repeat offenders away from crime.
In Britain most users are given the heroin substitute methadone, with
a few hundred being prescribed heroin a limited experiment. Mr
Roberts suggested that the scheme should be expanded, arguing that
addicts committed an average of 432 offences a year. Three-quarters
of street robbers test positive for heroin.
He told a drugs conference: "We should actively consider prescribing
diamorphine, pharmaceutical heroin, to those seriously addicted to
heroin, as part of a treatment programme for addiction. There is an
undeniable link between addicted offenders and appalling levels of
criminality, as heroin and crack cocaine addicts commit crime, from
burglary to robbery to sometimes murder, to get the money to buy
drugs to satisfy their addiction."
Mr Roberts also argued that the move would be cost-effective as it
would cost UKP 12,000 a year for each addict to be treated this way
under close supervision. It would be the best way to work with them
to beat their addiction - and they would not be on the streets
stealing to buy the drug.
"Of course, getting people off drugs altogether must be the
objective," he told an Association of Chief Police Officers'
conference in Manchester. "But I personally do believe we have lived
with the terrible consequences of relatively uncontained addiction
for far too long."
At the moment between 300 and 400 drug users receive heroin for their
dependency under a joint Home Office and Department of Health pilot
project in London, the South-east and the North. Addicts enrolled on
the scheme inject heroin under the supervision of clinical staff. A
report on the project is expected next month.
However, Professor Neil McKeganey, of the drug misuse centre at the
University of Glasgow, warned the move could increase levels of addiction.
He said: "We need to be very cautious here because in effect what one
is doing is rewarding addicts for their criminality."
The charity DrugScope said prescribing heroin could be effective for
some addicts. Martin Barnes, its chief executive, said: "It can have
health benefits for the drug user. There is compelling evidence that
heroin prescribing... is cost-effective in reducing drug-related
crime and other costs to communities."
Nick Clegg, the Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman, said:
"Prescription of drugs to addicts is justified as long as it is part
of a strategy of rehabilitation and withdrawal."
In a separate development, a government adviser has suggested that
ecstasy and LSD should be downgraded from class A to class B substances.
Professor David Nutt, the chairman of the technical committee of the
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs, told MPs it was anomalous
for ecstasy and LSD to be treated by the law in the same way as
heroin and crack cocaine.
Treatments for Addiction
An estimated 40,000 Britons reguarly use heroin, either by injecting
or smoking it.
The street price of the drug is between UKP 30 and UKP 100 a gram and
some addicts spend as much as UKP 15,000 a year on their habit. The
most common treatment is methadone, a synthetic drug similar to
heroin but less addictive.
A more expensive alternative is buprenorphine, which has been
prescribed by doctors since 2001. Some private clinics prescribe
naltrexone - a drug implanted in the abdomen or arm - to reduce the
craving for heroin. It is not available on the National Health Service.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...