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Focus on recovery for Scottish drug addicts



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Published Date: 25 May 2008
SCOTLAND'S new drug strategy will focus on helping addicts into recovery rather than treatment programmes.
Community safety minister Fergus Ewing is expected to unveil the Scottish Government's drug abuse plan to Holyrood later this week.

And the key theme will be for treatment services to go beyond harm reduction and to help addicts to become drug-fr
ee.

Ewing said that drug users had "the right to the same care and treatment as the rest of us and shouldn't be treated as second class citizens".

He said: "It is essential that people experiencing drug problems have access to a range of wider services including employment, housing and health that help them to move on and rebuild their lives.

"I believe we need to get better at encouraging each service user's separate vision of recovery by reducing practical barriers to services, while giving people hope by acknowledging that recovery is achievable.

"We need to give the many talented and committed people who work to tackle drugs problems, and the millions we invest, a clearer focus and sense of common purpose than we have had in the past."

Ewing added: "People want a new vision. They want us all to raise our aspirations and believe that people who use drugs should recover and move on. Our focus will be on recovery."

But he warned that the "scourge of drugs" would not disappear overnight, adding: "The implementation of our vision for action to tackle drugs will take months and years to achieve."

The minister said the impact of drug abuse "destroys families, damages communities and costs our society millions of pounds".

He also argued that work to improve the economy and tackle problems such as deprivation would also have an impact in the fight against drugs.

Ewing said: "I strongly believe that if we can successfully grow the economy allowing more opportunities in work, enhance children's experiences in their early years, reduce deprivation, and improve our nation's mental health we will have a positive impact on drug misuse."



The full article contains 341 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 24 May 2008 7:50 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Drugs policy
 
1

alex paterson,

embra 25/05/2008 11:17:54
Wonderful,lets get these people back to a normal life.
2

Peter O'Loughlin,

Beckenham 25/05/2008 17:37:07
Great news, though none befor time, for far too long, so called harm reduction methods have been allowed to dictate treatment, in turn treatment has taken precedence over recovery.

Harm reduction cannot reduce the mental physical and spiritual damage already caused by drugs of destruction, nor can ongoing use, reduced or otherwise, suggestions to the contary have no empirical evidence to support them.

Most addicts would like to be drug free, but interventions offered by current harm reduction treatment strategies have wilfully ignored their needs in favour of ideological, social learning theories actively promoted by the pro drug lobby which also lack empirical evidence of effectiveness.

A principle feature of addiction is the loss of control, see the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental disorders and the Internatinonal Classification of Mental and Behaviour Disorders.

If addicts could control their intake they would not be addicts, a fact which the pro drug lobby has been desperate to conceal in their attempts to bring about the legalising of drugs of destruction.
3

labrat,

usa 28/05/2008 14:28:44
Addiction causes a chemical malfunction in the addicts brain. It is a FACT medical science has proven time and time again. Once addicted, an addicts brain no longer works like a "normal" persons. BECAUSE OF THIS, even if they stop using drugs and make all the right decisions, they can still be very very miserable people. What good is it to be clean, if your just as miserable as you were on drugs?

ALl these programs would be wonderful, and are clearly needed....but so is methadone because none of these addicts will be able to fully invest in rehabilitation services like vocational training--if their brains aren't even working normally!

Methadone is to addiction as lithium is to bipolar
Methadone is to addiction as dilantin is to epilepsy

WE need to stop looking at the only success indicator for an addict as being "drug free"....we do not look at ANY OTHER MEDICAL ILLNESS as successful ONLY if the person is able to stop taking medicine. We need to look at ways to give these people back their lives, but they should be able to ENJOY that life or what is the point.

Would you want to live the rest of YOUR life constantly craving something you can't have (cravings are treated by methadone), being depressed (treated by methadone), being in pain (treated by methadone) or unable to feel joy (treated by methadone).

I am sure I will get a whole lot of people saying "well they deserve it, they knew what they were doing when they did drugs!"

But let me ask you this? When you have a beer on the weekend, or a glass of wine at dinner--are you CHOSING to become an alcoholic?

OF COURSE most drug addicts would LIKE to be drug free. UNFORTUNATELY, many of them CAN"T be and still have a normally functioning brain! I am sure most people taking meds FOR ANY chronic illness WISH they didn't have to take it....only people with depression or diabetes who take meds aren't made to feel like it's a character flaw that makes it so they have to take medication.

 

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