News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: PUB LTE: Tackling Heroin |
Title: | UK: PUB LTE: Tackling Heroin |
Published On: | 2002-02-13 |
Source: | New Scientist (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-24 21:01:58 |
TACKLING HEROIN
The American media's attitude to drugs is alarming and unhelpful (2
February, p 44). But the British media seems no less deaf where criticisms
of its fashionable but rather defeatist attitude are concerned.
Maia Szalavitz cites American and British studies as evidence that abuse
prevention is impossible, yet such a result is no surprise in nations with
some of the worst drug problems in the Western world. Harm reduction
methods like the Swiss experience with heroin clinics and the proposals in
Szalavitz's article do seem to combat some social problems resulting from
drug abuse. But there is a seeming reluctance on both sides of the debate
to look at ways of combating the causes of abuse itself.
Telling people not to take drugs isn't going to work if the problems of
stress, depression, poverty, poor education, lack of alternative
recreational activities and all the other factors that lead to drug abuse
aren't addressed. Throughout the world, rates of drug abuse are increasing
fastest in areas where such problems are severe.
Heroin clinics, a stopgap measure to reduce the effects addicts have on the
rest of society, do nothing to alleviate the problems of the typically
deprived abusers themselves or to prevent more lives being wasted on the
drug. In this climate is it any wonder that the problem is getting worse?
It's time both sides saw drugs as what they are, a symptom as much as a
cause of social problems. Trying to treat drug abuse in isolation from its
social context is akin to trying to cure pneumonic plague with cough
medicine, and it's past time to take a broader perspective.
PHILIP BOWLES High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire
The American media's attitude to drugs is alarming and unhelpful (2
February, p 44). But the British media seems no less deaf where criticisms
of its fashionable but rather defeatist attitude are concerned.
Maia Szalavitz cites American and British studies as evidence that abuse
prevention is impossible, yet such a result is no surprise in nations with
some of the worst drug problems in the Western world. Harm reduction
methods like the Swiss experience with heroin clinics and the proposals in
Szalavitz's article do seem to combat some social problems resulting from
drug abuse. But there is a seeming reluctance on both sides of the debate
to look at ways of combating the causes of abuse itself.
Telling people not to take drugs isn't going to work if the problems of
stress, depression, poverty, poor education, lack of alternative
recreational activities and all the other factors that lead to drug abuse
aren't addressed. Throughout the world, rates of drug abuse are increasing
fastest in areas where such problems are severe.
Heroin clinics, a stopgap measure to reduce the effects addicts have on the
rest of society, do nothing to alleviate the problems of the typically
deprived abusers themselves or to prevent more lives being wasted on the
drug. In this climate is it any wonder that the problem is getting worse?
It's time both sides saw drugs as what they are, a symptom as much as a
cause of social problems. Trying to treat drug abuse in isolation from its
social context is akin to trying to cure pneumonic plague with cough
medicine, and it's past time to take a broader perspective.
PHILIP BOWLES High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire
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