WESTERN suburbs drug and alcohol experts have backed calls for a greater focus on harm minimisation than law enforcement in tackling drug use.
A report by not-for-profit think-tank and independent research body Australia21 has argued that tough-on-drugs policies have failed, putting control in the hands of criminal elements.
The report, The prohibition of illicit drugs is killing and criminalising our children and we are all letting it happen, concludes that low-level drug use should be decriminalised, with money spent on law and order redirected to prevention and treatment services.
“Needle exchange programs, a medically supervised injecting centre, methadone maintenance programs and the de-penalisation of minor cannabis offences that was introduced in [two] states and both territories have all produced measurable and demonstrable benefits,” the report states.
Research by the Turning Point Alcohol and Drug Centre showed ambulances attended 123 heroin overdoses in Maribyrnong in 2009-10, a 16percent rise on the previous year.
An Australian Institute of Criminology study showed that about four of every five detainees in Footscray police station during 2009-10 tested positive to a drug, and almost one in two was a heroin user.
Western Region Health Centre’s Health Works in Footscray provides primary health care services, including needle exchange, for drug users.
Health Works program manager Bernadette Suter said: “We still believe harm reduction is an important and effective part of public health policy.”
Isis Primary Care addiction programs manager Paul Gibbs called for
more focus on early intervention. “The approach Australia’s taken has been the three-pillared approach – supply, demand and harm reduction – and I think there are elements that have been very successful: the harm minimisation approach in particular. We’ve actually led the world in some respect in harm minimisation.”
In a statement, Victoria Police Deputy Commissioner (Crime) Graham Ashton said decriminalising drugs was a simplistic idea.
He said police worked with the health sector to provide diversion programs for drug users. “It is important on some issues for a free society to say ‘no’. The destructive effect of illicit drugs on the lives of our families is one of those issues.”
Coalition spokeswoman Kate Walshe said the government had no intention of decriminalising drug use. It does not support injecting rooms.