Drink and Drugs News November 2016 | Page 13

Letters and Comment

DDN welcomes your letters

Please email the editor, claire @ cjwellings. com, or post them to DDN, cJ wellings ltd, 57 High street, Ashford, Kent tN24 8sG. letters may be edited for space or clarity.
PainfuL isoLation
I was very pleased to see your piece on support( or lack thereof) for those of us struggling with addiction to prescription and over-the-counter drugs( DDN, October, page 10). People often refer to mental health – rightly, in my view – as a‘ Cinderella service’ but it seems to me the same could be said for support for people whose problems are with legal substances, despite the truly heroic efforts of people like David Grieve.
In my experience the problem is not only that GPs are happy to dish out repeat prescriptions for the sake of a quiet life, and that there’ s little in the way of specialised support, it’ s also the attitude you can face when attempting to access generic drug services or attending groups or meetings – the general feeling can often be that, as you didn’ t buy your drugs from a dealer, your problems are somehow not nearly as serious or important.
More money for specialised support would obviously be very, very welcome, but it’ s hard to see how that’ s going to be a priority at the moment, and the BMA’ s proposed national helpline would also be a useful first step. But until we can address this hierarchical attitude that exists in some places then I’ m afraid
we’ ve still got a very, very long way to go. Name and address supplied
fouL Language
At the Conservative Party conference, a lesser reported fact is that Liz Truss, the new justice secretary( and Lord Chamberlain) referred to‘ junkies’ with the phrase‘ homes burgled to feed a junkie’ s habit’.
I am furious that she would use such a derogatory term on a national platform, and depressed to see the lack of notice the press took of her comments. The most vulnerable people in our society have blame heaped on them for a range of complex social and emotional problems, which are very far from simple to understand, let alone resolve. To determine( extremely simplistically) that crime is down to‘ junkies’ flies in the face of even the government’ s own evidence. The‘ modern crime prevention strategy’ illustrates clearly the significant falls there have been in shoplifting and burglaries – something which Ms Truss conveniently forgot, because it didn’ t fit with the narrative of the day.
We all need to do more to tackle stigma, and calling out language like this is the very least we should all do. Karen Tyrell, Addaction

Let ' s connect!

HAVE YOUR SAY BY COMMENTING ON OUR WEBSITE, FACEBOOK PAGE AND TWEETING US
In response to DDN retweet from @ BBCNews on‘ fix rooms’ plan set for approval
@ DDNMagazine @ BBCNews where is money coming from for this when basic drug services being cut?
@ BOPjo _ anne
@ DDNMagazine @ BBCNews great idea! hopefully rest of country will catch up, let’ s not let people die needlessly anymore
@ Jackinthos
Cardiff looked at DCRs as did Brighton … here’ s hoping Glasgow takes it to the doing stage, recent HIV cluster highlights need
@ KFxNews In response to‘ train your staff to empower service users with # naloxone’( Oct, p20): Wish we could. Still not available in my country [ NZ ] @ julianbuchanan In response to Pat Lamdin article( Oct, p16):
I had the pleasure of working with this guy – happy retirement Pat @ LauraWebbMktg
In response to‘ Punishing regime’( Oct, page 8):
@ WE _ ARE _ ANPUD @ INPUD @ DDNMagazine Well done here, I’ m quite sure a short phone call from @ POTUS would stop this murder @ lovelifewhy
In response to‘ How I became a social worker’( Oct, page 18)
Thanks DDN Magazine for the opportunity to discuss the topic of Social Work in Substance Misuse Services # socialwork # proud @ AlcoholDrugServ
@ hfeeneyASWP
Just read October’ s @ DDNMagazine. As usual 101 thoughts running through my mind. Great read! Have a read yourself
@ RecoveryDundee
/ DDNMagazine @ DDNMagazine www. drinkanddrugsnews. com

MEDIA SAVVY

The news, and the skews, in the national media
HEROIN‘ SHOOTING GALLERY’ to open in Glasgow for addicts to get hit as kids play in CRECHE Express headline, 31 October
SHOCKING MOMENT two women ' inject drugs while slumped in a doorway in broad daylight ' just yards from a PRIMARY SCHOOL Mail headline, 25 October
THE LESSONS OF A FAILING NATIONAL POLICY need to be learnt. The approach of harm reduction was born – under a Conservative government – in response to the threat of HIV. It saved countless lives. When focus shifted away from harm reduction, deaths began to rise. We welcome the incorporation of drug-related deaths as a measure in the outcomes framework. However, if death rates are an accepted measure of system performance, the current trend is surely evidence of system failure. BMJ editorial, 17 October
THE PROBLEM FACED BY PEOPLE WITH ADDICTION is not that they are unaware of the negative
consequences of their condition, but that they can’ t see a way out. If we want to end the opioid crisis, we need viral videos of recovery, not overdose. Maia Szalavitz, Guardian, 7 October
YESTERDAY, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research issued a report concluding that the troubled families programme had failed … All that money(£ 1.4bn), time and effort – for what? Just so a handful of people could show off at dinner parties and perhaps enjoy a glowing editorial in The Guardian. Like the controversial charity Kids Company founded by Camila Batmanghelidjh( another bottomless money-pit my husband opposed), the troubled families programme was kept going at massive taxpayers’ expense to
salve the consciences of politicians cowed by half-baked notions of political correctness. Sarah Vine, Mail, 19 October
THE MEDIA’ S TREATMENT of the troubled families programme, whose evaluation has recently been made public, cannot have cheered David Cameron in his last week as an MP. History does not look likely to be kind to his great social policy. We should, however, be grateful to the former prime minister for his quixotic attempt to do the right thing on a massive scale. Because in doing so he exposed the fallacy which has dominated social policy since 1945: the idea that the government is infinitely capable of solving social problems. Danny Kruger, Spectator, 29 October
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