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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Number of Drug Related Deaths Rises By 25% To All-Time High
Title:UK: Number of Drug Related Deaths Rises By 25% To All-Time High
Published On:2007-08-31
Source:Herald, The (UK)
Fetched On:2008-01-11 23:27:33
NUMBER OF DRUG-RELATED DEATHS RISES BY 25% TO ALL-TIME HIGH

The number of Scots killed by drugs rose by 25% in the past year to
reach the highest level ever recorded.

Figures published yesterday by the Registrar of Scotland showed there
were 421 drug-related deaths in 2006, 85 more than the year before
and 10% up on the previous high of 382 in 2002.

Heroin or morphine were involved in nearly 62% of the deaths, up from
58% in 2005, while the number of addicts who died with methadone in
their system increased by 25 to 97, calling into question its
continued use as a method of weaning heroin-users off the drug.

Ecstasy was involved in 13 deaths, up from 10 in 2005. The number of
deaths linked to diazepam fell from 90 to 78. Fatalities involving
cocaine also fell, from 44 to 33, despite concerns that the drug is
becoming more widely used across the country.

Drug deaths in the Greater Glasgow and Clyde NHS Board area increased
by 51 to 162, while Grampian saw its figure more than double from 23
to 47. All but 69 of those who died were over 25 as experts
attributed the rise in deaths to the ageing of the first-generation
of 1980s heroin users.

Kenny MacAskill, the Cabinet Secretary for Justice, said the
statistics proved that drug abuse was "perhaps the most significant
social problem of our time" and called for a "new consensus" on how
to tackle the problem.

He added: "This tragic death toll highlights the true scale of the
challenge we are facing. We need to improve access to effective
treatment and wrap-around care and get better at educating our young
people about the dangers of drug misuse, providing them with support
and protection for those affected by their parents' habits.

"And we must have the right systems in place to deliver the best
outcomes. Our new strategy must tackle demand as well as supply and
we will place renewed focus on education, tough enforcement and, of
course, new emphasis on diversion and prevention by offering more
young people opportunities in sports and the arts to build self-esteem."

Yesterday's report showed that the deaths of 280 people in 2006 were
directly linked to drug abuse, 76 more than in 2005.

In addition, 51 deaths were linked to accidental poisoning and 40 to
intentional poisoning, while the remaining 50 were classified as
"undetermined intent".

The registrar's figures go back to 1996, when the number of
drug-related deaths was 244. They chart the sharp increase in heroin
or morphine abuse.

In 1996, the drugs were linked to 84 deaths, but by last year that
figure had more than trebled to 260.

Writing in The Herald today, one expert says the statistics show that
the efforts of successive governments to tackle drug use have failed.

Neil McKeganey, who is based at Glasgow University, writes: "The
hundreds of millions of pounds spent on drug abuse treatment in
Scotland should by now have delivered a marked reduction in the
number of addict deaths.

"Instead, we are seeing the opposite - an increase in overall addict
deaths and a worrying rise in the number of deaths associated with
methadone, our number one addict treatment in Scotland."

Scottish Tory leader Annabel Goldie, describing the figures as
depressing and chilling, said: "We need a clearer strategy which
rehabilitates those caught up in a life of drugs and helps them on
the way to abstinence, while at the same time adopting a zero
tolerance attitude to drugs and especially towards drug dealers."

Ross Finnie, health spokes-man for the LibDems, said efforts to steer
people away from drugs must be "redoubled".

Labour MSP Hugh Henry said: "I suspect this is about more than just
money and what is really needed is a radical rethink by experts
working in the field."
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