DDN April 2017 DDN April 2017 | Page 17

letters and comment DDN Welcomes your leTTers Please email the editor, [email protected], or post them to DDN at the address on page 3. letters may be edited for space or clarity. ‘While headlines and media discussion report numbers and systems, we need to focus on individuals.’ DeaDly SeriouS I enjoyed both attending the recent DDN national service user involvement conference, and reading the coverage in the latest issue of the magazine. Meeting and networking with some fantastic projects from around the country really opens your eyes to the innovative work that is going on, especially in the face of reduced resources. However the one element of the event that made the most impact on me was the session around drug- related deaths, which engaged with the MEDIA SAVVY DEAD MEN AND WOMEN were walking the streets of central Manchester this week. Some of them, their faces wan and eyes open but filled with a terrible vacancy, stumble forward with arms out- stretched. Others stand stock- still like shop mannequins, seemingly unconscious but upright, or slumped forward, as commuters scurry past with their heads down… These are the victims of Spice Andrew Malone, Mail, 10 March RISE OF THE ZOMBIES: Cheaper and more addictive than crack, Spice is the synthetic drug that turns users into the 'living dead' in minutes and is ruining lives across Britain. Mail headline, 10 March ‘ZOMBIE' DRUG side effects to be recorded on national database. Telegraph headline, 22 March www.drinkanddrugsnews.com HEROIN ABUSE is a subject surrounded by horror and myth, frequently exaggerated and increasingly viewed by medical opinion – and the courts – as a sickness rather than wrongdoing. What is not in doubt is that this drug often does grave damage to those who take it, and that some of them pay for their habit through vicious, selfish crime, in audience and asked for their personal experiences. The session highlighted that while headlines and media discussion reported numbers and systems, we needed to focus on individuals and the human tragedy being created. Though there may be multiple reasons for the increase in drug related deaths, including access to treatment, social deprivation, and wider health care issues such as hepatitis C, one that delegates kept returning to was stigmatisation and how drug users are often viewed to ‘have brought it on themselves’. Unfortunately while we can't wave a magic wand to increase funding levels and improve treatment for all, challenging stigma and highlighting the human tragedy of addiction and in particular drug-related deaths is something that can be done. There are some fantastic campaigns that do this such as ‘Support Don't Punish’ and the Remembrance Day events in July, but I would be keen to hear of any more projects or initiatives that local groups like ours can get involved in. John Matthews, by email If you are involved in any campaigns that challenge stigma, please let us know. Be a knockout! We are gearing up for our fourth annual recovery games for the Yorkshire and Humber region and are looking for ways to support the event. We usually host it at a local water park near Doncaster and it is an ideal opportunity for groups of individuals to come and participate, as well as family, friends and children. The event is based around It’s a Knockout, with groups of approximately ten taking part in trials throughout the day, with a final obstacle course race to decide the winning team. Year on year we have seen more than 400 people attend and last year over 600 people joined us and took part in our fantastic ‘colour run’ and games. This year we are keen to invite other organisations to help support the games, as they are a fantastic opportunity to celebrate visible recovery and tie into the ‘five ways to wellbeing’. If you are interested in sponsoring this event, or are able to contribute in any way, please contact me on 01302 303902 or [email protected]. Stuart Green, service manager, Aspire The news, and the skews, in the national media some cases against friends and family… It costs UK taxpayers an estimated £300m a year to provide methadone, but very few who take it, perhaps 5 per cent, abandon their habit. They might have done so anyway. Mail on Sunday editorial, 5 March THE WESTMINSTER KILLER was another lowlife jailbird, who had been in prison three times for (among other things) stabbing a man in the face… A former school friend says he began to go downhill after he started smoking cannabis in his teens. Even if he gave up later, cannabis is linked to long- term, lingering mental illness. He is also said by some who knew him to have been a bodybuilder, so he may have been taking steroids – these powerful mood-influencing drugs were also used by the Norwegian mass- murderer Anders Breivik, the rampage killer Raoul Moat, and the Orlando mass-killer Omar Mateen. I doubt we'll ever know, since the authorities, obsessed with finding links to a bearded supremo in an eastern cave, are almost totally uninterested in the amazingly strong correlation between mind-altering drugs and crazed violence, and so don’t find out. Peter Hitchens, Mail on Sunday, 27 March ALL TOO MANY ARE IN PRISON because of our failed, woefully misguided ‘war on drugs’: not just the possession and distribution of arbitrarily criminalised substances, but other crimes linked to the trade. Black Britons are far more likely to be stopped and searched on suspicion of possession, and far more likely to be charged and incarcerated if they are found with drugs. Lots of well- to-do white youngsters e xperiment with drugs at some point, but are unlikely to suffer a sanction with life- changing consequences. Owen Jones, Guardian, 7 March April 2017 | drinkanddrugsnews | 17