DDN May 2017 DDN March2018 | Page 19

Letters and Comment DDN welcomes your letters Please email the editor, [email protected], or post them to DDN, cJ wellings ltd, romney House, school road, Ashford, Kent tN27 0lt. letters may be edited for space or clarity. ‘It seems self-evident that there is a useful piece of work to be done with those service users who smoke, while they are in treatment, to encourage them to make the switch to vaping as a part of moving toward a healthier lifestyle...’ The power of e-cigs road To recovery I am writing in support of Dr Neil McKeganey and his view on the prescribing of e-cigarettes (DDN, February, page 18). As a proponent of harm minimisation in all its forms and bearing in mind the alarming percentage of service users in their forties and fifties with a diagnosis of COPD, anything that can reduce the numbers smoking tobacco is to be welcomed. In 2008 at Build on Belief we did an impact evaluation and asked our service users how many of them smoked toba - cco. The answer was 73 per cent – more than three times the national average. In 2014 we repeated the evaluation and asked the same question. The answer didn’t change by a single percentage point and remained at 73 per cent. Then, in 2016 we did another, smaller survey in one borough and were astonished to discover the percentage of tobacco smokers had dropped to 50 per cent. The following year, we thought to ask how many of them used e- cigarettes. The answer was 23 per cent, the exact percentage of the recorded drop in tobacco smokers. Interestingly, the great majority of those who had switched to vaping were in treatment and identified as being in recovery. It seems self-evident that there is a useful piece of work to be done with those service users who smoke, while they are in treatment, to encourage them to make the switch to vaping as a part of moving toward a healthier lifestyle if they are unwilling or unable to give up tobacco. The health benefits would be enormous, and our research suggests that a significant number would, with a little support, do so. Tim Sampey, chief executive, Build on Belief I sincerely found the experience of the DDN conference really amazing as a new peer mentor for Turning Point Leicester. I had no help from the armed forces and left after 30 years both as an engineering apprentice and soldier, followed by be com ing an officer with the rank of captain. I was simply told ‘as an officer, sort yourself out!’ I had a well-won nervous breakdown and PTSD that will be with me for life. I take professional counselling once a month and have been abstinent from alcohol for nearly four years now. I left the armed forces 20 years ago and never once as a family man thought a road to hell was ahead. I now enjoy life with my lovely wife of some 47 years – without her support I know I would not be here. Trevor Mills, by email www.drinkanddrugsnews.com geT The picTure Natalie Davies’ outstanding analysis of the Cycle of Change (DDN, February, page 20) was let dow