DDN April 2017 DDN April 2017 | Page 5

read the full stories, and more, online www.drinkanddrugsnews.com PHE LAUNCHES ONLINE NPS MONITORING TOOL ‘We want to encourage all frontline staff... to use the system, which over time will greatly increase our knowledge of these new substances.’ rosanna o’connor A NEW NATIONAL SYSTEM to monitor the effects of NPS has been launched by Public Health England (PHE) and the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA). The pilot scheme will also share treatment best practice between drug services, A&E departments, prisons, sexual health clinics, GP surgeries and other settings. All front-line health staff will be able to access the Report Illicit Drug Reaction (RIDR) system to anonymously report information about NPS and their effects, with the data then analysed to identify ‘patterns of symptoms and harms’. The information will be used to improve patient safety, ‘inform treatment guidance and help staff deal more quickly with unknown substances’, says PHE. While there is widespread concern about NPS use among vulnerable populations such as prisoners and homeless people, there is still little available guidance and the harms ‘are often poorly understood’ by frontline services, it adds. ‘The contents of NPS frequently change and their effects can be dangerous and unpredictable,’ said PHE’s director of alcohol, drugs and tobacco, Rosanna O’Connor. ‘Last year’s ban has helped reduce their easy availability, but we are still seeing the most vulnerable groups – particularly the homeless, prisoners and some young people – suffering the greatest harm from these substances. We want to encourage all frontline staff in settings such as A&E, sexual health clinics, prisons, drug and mental health services, to use the system.’ PHE has also published its latest hepatitis C data, with the most recent estimates suggesting that around 160,000 people in England – and 214,000 in the UK as a whole – are chronically infected. Injecting drug use ‘continues to be the most important risk factor’ for infection, says the document. ‘In 2015, 52 per cent of people who had injected psychoactive drugs, participating in the unlinked anonymous monitoring (UAM) survey of people who inject drugs, tested positive for antibodies to HCV, and this proportion has remained relatively stable over the past decade,’ it states. RIDR website at report-illicit-drug-reaction.phe.gov.uk Hepatitis C in England: 2017 report at www.gov.uk CIDER STRENGTH RULES THE GOVERNMENT has announced a consultation on options to amend the alcohol duty system so that rates ‘better correspond to alcoholic strength’. The consultation will look at the possible introduction of a new band to target ‘cheap, high-strength white ciders’ below 7.5 per cent ABV, as mentioned in last month’s budget, along with a new wine duty band to encourage the production of lower-strength wines. Alcohol structures consultation at www.gov.uk until 12 June. BIORESONANCE BUNKUM? The controversial intervention ‘bioresonance treatment’ was called ‘a new dimension in quackery’ by an expert on BBC Radio 4’s You and Yours. Edzard Ernst, emeritus professor of complementary medicine at Exeter University, commented on a programme from Castle Treatments, which costs up to £3,000 and involves wearing a pendant for 24 hours a www.drinkanddrugsnews.com day and taking detox pills. Researchers found the pendant to be made of plastic and incapable of giving off the promised ‘resonance frequency’ to ‘neutralise addiction’. ‘They say this is based on quantum physics, but it is based on pure bullshit,’ said Prof Ernst. ‘It is dangerous for your bank account and dangerous because if people are lured into bogus treatment they forgo effective treatment.’ BBC Radio 4’s You and Yours, 27 March episode, available on iPlayer LIBERAL MEASURES THE LIBERAL DEMOCRATS have called for the possession of drugs for personal use to be decriminalised as a way of easing overcrowding in Britain’s jails. There are now more than 11,000 people imprisoned for drug offences, the party says, while the overall prison population in England and Wales has nearly doubled in three decades. Meanwhile, a new Australian report by former police commissioners, judges and other senior figures is calling for decriminalisation as part of a widespread reform of that country’s drug laws. Drug-related deaths, crime and ill-health all continue to rise despite more than 80,000 arrests per year, says Can Australia respond to drugs more effectively and safely. Report at australia21.org.au DRINKS MIXER ALCOHOL CONCERN AND ALCOHOL RESEARCH UK have merged, the charities have announced. The merger will combine Alcohol Research UK’s ‘long history of research excellence’ and Alcohol Concern’s ‘strong advocacy and campaigning work’, with the latter’s assets and staff transferring to Alcohol Research UK, along with projects like Dry January. ‘The charities’ mission and activities complement each other perfectly and we look forward to determining the future strategic direction of the combined organisation in the coming months,’ said chair of the new organisation’s board of trustees, Professor Alan Maryon-Davis. MINIMUM ACTIVITY ENGLAND AND WALES should follow suit if minimum unit pricing is introduced in Scotland and proves ‘effective in cutting down excessive drinking’, says a report from the House of Lords Select Committee on the Licensing Act 2003. ‘It does not make sense for a decision for England and Wales to be postponed indefinitely,’ says the document, although the legality of mini - mum pricing is still being considered by the UK Supreme Court (DDN, December 2016, page 4). Select committee on the Licensing Act 2003: post-legislative scrutiny at www.publications.parliament.uk NPS PERSPECTIVES MORE THAN TWO-THIRDS OF YOUNG PEOPLE HAVE TRIED NPS ‘AT LEAST ONCE’ according to research commissioned by Addaction. While having to buy the previously legal substances from street dealers was regarded as an ‘inconvenience’, says the document, NPS use was also seen by young people as ‘heavily stigmatised’. ‘Frontline young people’s services have been creative in adapting to meet these emerging needs even in a time of tight budgetary pressures,’ said Addaction’s executive director of external affairs, Karen Tyrell. ‘It’s vital that those changes are informed by what we hear from people who have used NPS.’ Novel psychoactive substances insight report: the view from young people at www.addaction.org.uk More than two-thirds of young people have tried nPs ‘at least once’. Karen tyrell April 2017 | drinkanddrugsnews | 5