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Making alcohol services accessible

SONY DSCAvoiding the airlock

Entering alcohol services can feel like a trap to the uninitiated. Mark Holmes looks at why technology may offer more people the support they need to make changes to their drinking

The first time I was about to step into an alcohol service, I was petrified. I asked myself questions such as, ‘What will I find behind the doors? Will people be drunk? Will they be nice to me?’ As I entered through the heavy wooden door, I smelt the disinfectant and my anxieties heightened. The door slammed behind me with another door in front of me. Welcome to the ‘airlock’. Behind the glass to my right was a worker, the scene akin to stepping into a secure facility. The friendly worker asked me what I had come for. I explained that this was my first day at work as an alcohol nurse specialist.

Once inside, I was met with energy and empathy from staff towards service-users and enthusiasm for specialism of the field of addiction. My first impressions of the ‘airlock’ nevertheless raised a question: if I was scared to enter this building, how can we expect those that need our support to overcome the fear they feel on entering our services?

There are many reasons why people may not seek support with their drinking. The stigma of entering an alcohol service remains a major one. We know that despite the high numbers excessively drinking, the majority of people at risk of alcohol-related harm are not accessing services. In its 2013 publication, 15:15 the better case for access to alcohol treatment, Alcohol Concern highlighted that only 6 per cent of dependent drinkers are in contact with treatment services at any one time. Retention is also a problem, with national and international statistics indicating that 40–60 per cent of people who enter alcohol treatment services drop out within as little as two sessions. If we want to achieve the Department of Health’s alcohol needs assessment research project benchmark of engaging 15 per cent of the problem drinkers in a given area in treatment, then alcohol services must not only deliver high quality specialist support but also find innovative approaches to reaching risky drinkers.

Is technology the answer?

Telehealth technology is increasingly being looked to as a way to reach people with all sorts of health advice, information and support, with the most promising option offered by Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP). But what of the ‘therapeutic alliance’ and that magic ingredient, rapport, I hear you say? VoIP has been proven to be on par with face-to-face contact in terms of the quality of human interaction (Roberts, Vlahovic, Dunbar 2013).

The acceptance of telehealth solutions to alcohol misuse and other health issues should not be a surprise, with the general population spending more and more time online. Last year, Ofcom reported that ‘we’re now spending more time using media or communications than sleeping.’ With so many people having access to the internet and becoming increasingly comfortable with its use, there is a real opportunity for alcohol treatment providers to take alcohol interventions to an online audience.

Online intervention

Alcohol action charity HAGA, based in north London, has gained a reputation for innovation and has recently focused on bringing a variety of technological innovations to the early identification and treatment of alcohol misuse. In particular, they have strived to attract those drinkers that are currently under-represented in alcohol services – typically those increasing and higher risk drinkers scoring 8-19 on the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) – and to offer them psychosocial interventions in the right place at the right time.

HAGA first developed an online screening, advice and referral tool, DontBottleItUp (dontbottleitup.org.uk), and then DrinkCoach (www.drinkcoach.org.uk), a smartphone and tablet app. Around 40,000 people visited DontBottleItUp in 2014 and it is currently commissioned in seven local authorities (with four more due to launch in the next month). Working with Alcohol Concern recently, they piloted offering VoIP-based interventions to higher risk and mildly dependent drinkers identified via DontBottleItUp.

This initial pilot was successful, with service users and staff giving excellent feedback. Qualitative findings are soon to be published, with service users reporting the main advantages as ease of use, avoiding their concerns about going into an alcohol treatment service, and the relative anonymity of the interventions. One told us that: ‘The main appeal was that it was easy; I didn’t have to go anywhere. For me it was the only option, when other options weren’t available.’

Staff also found the concept of VoIP sessions acceptable, with the benefits of no travel times between sites, the ability to see more service users in their working day and potentially accessing a new cohort of people seeking help for alcohol problems top of their list of advantages. There were positive experiences too in delivering the sessions despite some initial anxieties about using their therapeutic skills in a different medium. A HAGA worker commented: ‘I found the session more comfortable than I expected. I had concerns about if the interactions would be “cold” – ie difficult to build up a therapeutic relationship.’

The pilot is now turning into a mainstay online alcohol extended brief intervention appointment option, launching in Haringey this month via DontBottleItUp, and more widely in April.

Even though ‘airlocks’ have largely become a thing of the past, the poor image of alcohol services looms large in the public psyche. Developing online alcohol support is one way that HAGA is striving to break down the barriers experienced by people affected by alcohol misuse, and to open the door onto new options for change.

Mark Holmes is telehealth coordinator at HAGA, a charity working with and on behalf of people, families and communities affected by alcohol, www.haga.co.uk

 

Letters and comment from the drug and alcohol sector

Letters, comment, drug and alcohol sector, substanceThe DDN letters and comments page, where you can have your say about the drug and alcohol sector.

To be included in the next magazine, send your letters and comments to claire@cjwellings.com or to 57 High Street, Ashford, Kent TN24 8SG. Letters may be edited for space or clarity – please limit submissions to 350 words.

 

Veteran support

I read with interest DDN‘s recent article about veterans in treatment (DDN, December, page 6). Firstly, I was wondering where you found the statistical data to back up the quote that ‘military veterans do not tend to do well in traditional treatment settings.’

I work for Veterans Aid, a UK charity that assists ex-service personnel in crisis. I’m responsible for coordinating all of the drug, alcohol and/or gambling treatment services for veterans who present to the charity. For the past six years we’ve supported around 40 veterans per year into treatment and, as far as I’m aware, this is the only service in the country tasked with specifically doing this. I don’t know of any other service that holds data relating to ex-servicemen and women in treatment (average age, verified service, length of service, time spent since leaving HM armed forces, substances used, treatment completion, etc).

Rather than sending all of our clients to one veteran-specific treatment centre, our approach is to match the most appro­ppriate programme with clients who’re suitably motivated. This ethos appears to be absolutely the right way forward, as our statistics tell us that veterans actually do even better than civvies in treatment in terms of completion.

While I understand the writer Jacquie Johnston-Lynch wanting to promote her service, I think it’s crucial that we chall­enge the media perception of veterans as ‘damaged goods’, and the claim that they’re more likely to fail in treatment does the community no favours whatsoever. Indeed, such claims could dissuade people from coming forward to access help, or for care managers across the country to rethink their help offered.

Veterans Aid has seen a great number of people complete treatment and go on to rebuild their lives. It’s really important that veterans are given as much support and encouragement to access treatment as possible.

Phil Rogers, Veterans Aid, London

 

Debilitating stigma

Given your recent conference report, Community chest (DDN, November, page 9) and the subsequent letter from Laurie Andrews (DDN, December, page 18), it may be appropriate to clarify here precisely the point I was making at the RiTC conference. My point was not whether we call addiction a ‘disease’ or a ‘disorder’ or an ‘anti-social behaviour’. I’m not terribly concerned about that. What does worry me is the promotion by some of the idea that this is a problem which is intrinsically incurable.

It isn’t. Hundreds upon hundreds of addicts every year get out from under their addiction. Some will do so by completing a programme in a therapeutic community. Some will attend mutual aid meetings. Some will simply stop. All will be hampered by a stigma that says, ‘I won’t employ this ex-alcoholic because sooner or later he will start drinking again and give me major problems.’ Or, ‘I don’t want this ex-heroin addict living next to me because she’ll start using again and be a danger to my children.’

How do I know this as an employer or a neighbour? Well, all the treatment profess­ionals tell me that this is incurable. And this is the root of the stigma. Try applying as an ex-addict for a job as a policeman, or a nursery nurse, or a teacher. Can’t be done. The stigma is all-pervasive and debilitating. And it’s based on a belief that addicts never change and will always go back to their bad old ways.

Now it’s always convenient to blame the media for this stigma but in truth, significant numbers within the treatment and fellowship camps are promoting the same message. ‘This is incurable,’ they say. ‘The best we can do is to manage it with medication.’ Or, ‘This is incurable. The best we can do is to manage it with regular attendance at meetings.’ Both messages encourage a view of addiction that supports a belief within the general population that recovery is a chimera.

I’m not attacking any particular type of intervention here. Nor am I arguing that addiction isn’t a serious problem, often with serious physiological complications. But I am saying that it behoves us as treatment pro­viders or supporters or recovery advocates, to celebrate recovery wherever we find it. To hunt it down where we can’t find it. And to aband­on forever the defeatist mantra of the ‘incurable disease’ (or ‘disorder’ or ‘anti-social behaviour’).

Rowdy Yates, president, European Federation of Therapeutic Communities; senior research fellow, Scottish Addiction Studies, University of Stirling.

 

Nice little earner

Of course addiction isn’t a disease (Laurie Andrews, DDN letters, page 18), and is only generally speaking an illness, malady or sickness. Furthermore, it is because its true nature has not been widely identified and admitted that progress in curing addiction has been slow.

It is vital to recognise the absurdly obvious – that if an individual never uses a particular addictive substance, he or she will never become addicted to that substance. They cannot, because it is the addictive substance itself that generates the addiction. Not ‘blame the user’, ‘abuse’ or ‘misuse’, but straight­forward ‘usage’ on two or more occasions.

Twenty-five to 30 per cent of users are more susceptible to intense addiction than others, but in all cases it is the actual fact of ‘usage’ which initiates and holds in place the addictive condition the drug generates.

In addition to illicit drugs such as cannabis, cocaine and heroin etc, ‘hypnotic and addictive reinforced demand substances’ (which include the benzodiazepines, the ‘Z’ drugs, chloral drugs and derivatives, plus clomethiazole, and some of the anxiolytics and barbiturates) can have the same physical and psychological effects. And because they are dangerous, all of these are ‘prescription-only’ drugs, and thus a matter of physician specification rather than patient selection.

Bearing in mind that for all the officially reported UK addicts on illicit substances, there are many more addicted to prescription drugs, paid for by the taxpayer. All of which makes prescription drug production and distribution a nice little earner.

Elisabeth Reichert, school head, East Sussex

 

Hidden Menace

I recently read in the national press that there has been a huge increase in the prescribing of gabapentin and pregabalin medication, both associated with addiction or its treatment.

It seems to me that this could be a hidden menace awaiting the attention of medical and addiction professionals. I addressed this within my own service but was met with some reluctance to pursue it, as it was viewed as non-addictive and the drugs were being prescribed by doctors who must be aware of the implications. I did some ringing around and it seems that these medications are regularly prescribed within the prison service and may be seen as less problematic when compared to other medical requests within HMP.

I fear that failure to address this relatively new addiction will mask individuals’ recovery from more obvious drug and alcohol problems. Services should work together to elicit change from those promoting this medication.

Ken Crawford, by email

 

Recovery crawl

Annemarie Ward is absolutely right to high­light the reducing support of local authorities for addiction rehabilitation and recovery (DDN, December, page 18). But in these ‘cash-strapped-days’, can we really blame them?

If psychiatric professor John Strang’s four-year time-wasting ‘piloting’ of payment by results (PbR) had produced a viable system for providing 12 months free of addictive sub­stance usage and thus an effective basis for delivering the coalition’s 2010 drug strategy, local authorities would be rushing to imple­ment that brilliant strategy. But Strang has merely proved that OST, methadone and buprenorphine can still only deliver a less than 3 per cent abstinence result, and that residen­tial 12 steps still delivers only a 20 to 30 per cent abstinence result over a four-year period.

So, in respect of the requirements of the coalition’s drug strategy, local authorities are being asked to invest in recovery programmes that have a far greater likelihood of failure than success. Would you?

In addition to spreading the false idea that addiction is incurable, the infamous PbR ‘pilots’ have been used to hide the fact that there exist alternative approaches to addiction recovery other than continuing OST addiction to prescription medication.

In fact those alternatives (based on training in self-help resurrection of personal responsibility and resumption of control of one’s life) have not only been excluded from the ‘pilots’, but have also been regularly attacked by lobbying and black propaganda because certain vested interests know that training in self-help addiction recovery is the sure way to lasting abstinence for a clear majority of substance addicts.

Kenneth Eckersley, CEO Addiction Recovery Training Services (ARTS)

Government backs plain tobacco packaging

The government has announced that it backs the public health case for introducing standardised packaging of tobacco, with MPs set to vote on the issue before the general election. If passed by parliament, regulations could be in force by May 2016.

The proposed regulations would standardise the packaging of all cigarettes and hand-rolling tobacco for retail sale, including mandatory colours of ‘dull brown’ for outer packaging and white for the inside, with brand and variant name the only permitted text apart from health warnings and marks to tackle illicit trade. The decision was reached after ‘carefully considering the evidence’ and other relevant information, says the government.

Plain packaging was introduced in Australia in 2012, while previous plans to introduce the legislation here were dropped from the 2013 Queen’s Speech at the same time as proposals for minimum unit pricing (DDN, May 2013, page 4).

‘Having considered all the evidence, the secretary of state and I believe that the policy is a proportionate and justified response to the considerable public health harm from smoking tobacco,’ said public health minister Jane Ellison. ‘I now propose that we lay regulations for standardised packaging in this parliament to allow for them to come into force at the same time as the European tobacco products directive in May 2016. In doing so we would be bringing the prospect of our first smoke-free generation one step closer.’

The European tobacco products directive will also include a ban on flavourings, including menthol.

The move has been welcomed by health bodies, including Cancer Research UK. ‘By stripping cigarette packs of their marketing features, we can reduce the number of young people lured into an addiction, the products of which are death and disease,’ said the charity’s chief executive Harpal Kumar, while the Faculty of Public Health called it ‘fantastic news for our children’s health as well as common sense’.

Alcohol industry ‘can’t be trusted’ on responsible drinking

The drinks industry ‘can’t be trusted’ to promote responsible drinking and is ‘undermining its own pledges’ to encourage safer use of alcohol, according to a new report from Alcohol Concern Cymru.

Among the examples cited in Creating customers is how Guinness and Smirnoff owners Diageo encourage publicans to urge customers ordering a single spirit measure to ‘make it a double’, while stating that people drinking irresponsibly is ‘not good for them, for society or for our reputation’. Bulmers owners SAB Miller, meanwhile, pledge not to target their marketing at anyone under the legal drinking age while also stating that ‘the younger generation have a much sweeter palate – we are playing to that’.

The corporate responsibility statements of drinks companies tend to concentrate on opposition to activities that either are already illegal – such as selling alcohol to children – or which carry a strong social stigma, such as drink driving, while emphasising the importance of ‘responsible’ drinking – a term that is simultaneously hard to define and ‘primarily assigned to the consumer’ rather than producers or retailers, says the report.

Alcohol Concern is calling for statutory rather than self-regulation, with ‘meaningful sanctions’ for non-compliance, and for messages about the safe use of alcohol to avoid ‘ambiguous concepts such as “responsible”’ and be drawn up by a body independent of the industry.

‘The big question is whether the people who make more profits the more alcohol we drink are really the best people to advise us on how to use it safely and healthily,’ said Alcohol Concern Cymru director Andrew Misell. Alcohol producers should have ‘no role in drawing up information or policy on safe drinking’, he stated.

‘Positive portrayals of alcohol, whether in programming, through product placement, or advertising encourage drinking. Where alcohol advertising is permitted, we believe the UK should follow the French example of only allowing factual messages and images that refer to the characteristics of the product: its origin, composition, strength, and means of production,’ he said. ‘Images that show drinking as part of an attractive lifestyle or social occasion should no longer appear in adverts.’

Treatment complete?

Steve-Brinksman_w01WEBWhy are we failing so many people with hepatitis C, even those already in drug treatment, asks Dr Steve Brinksman

There is still a lot of – sometimes heated – debate about whether drug services should be recovery or harm-reduction based. Yet I rarely hear the same passion when we talk about treating viral hepatitis.

Services will talk about high levels of BBV screening and uptake of hepatitis B vaccination and yet have tiny numbers of service users going into hepatitis C treatment. Now I admit that I am biased – a good friend and colleague, who did more than anyone else to show me how important it was to treat drug users, died of hepatocellular carcinoma, caused by his hepatitis C. To my mind the failure to get people into treatment that will not only potentially save their lives but also save large amounts of NHS funding is a travesty.

We have effective and ever-improving curative treatments and yet many people languish in primary care and community-based services knowing they have chronic hepatitis, without referral. Perhaps we should stop talking about ‘hard to reach patients’ and start accepting that we have ‘hard to access treatment services’ instead.

We need to acknowledge that the current provision of BBV care for those who are in drug treatment is failing. And if we can’t get those who are being seen regularly and supported by clinicians and key workers into treatment for their viral hepatitis then what hope of treatment is there for those who aren’t on substitute prescribing and who are not in established treatment?

Treating active people who inject drugs has been shown to be effective, and reducing the pool of people with chronic infection can help lessen the spread. We need to create systems to support people into and through treatment and these are the sorts of outcomes that should appear in primary care and community-based drug treatment tender specifications. Public health, primary and secondary care all working together – perhaps we could call it something radical like a National Health Service!

At the SMMGP conference in Birmingham in October we heard about a pilot project in Birmingham where the specialist hospital staff will be going out into primary care and delivering treatment alongside service users’ regular reviews and key working sessions. I know similar services exist in Newcastle, Nottingham and London.

The newer anti-viral treatments are producing cure rates of more than 90 per cent, even in the more difficult to treat genotypes of hepatitis C. Even newer treatments promise ‘tablet-only’ therapies that will minimise many of the side effects and adverse events seen in current treatment, albeit at greater financial cost, but these will still be cost-effective interventions. The only way we can advocate for these treatments to be available for our service users is to have the right systems in place to make sure that they are screened, referred and supported through treatment. The health gains for someone who has successful viral hepatitis treatment are immense and at least as important as them being ‘discharged treatment complete’.

Steve Brinksman is a GP in Birmingham and clinical lead of SMMGP, www.smmgp.org.uk. He is also RCGP regional lead in substance misuse for the West Midlands

Never a dull moment

With a general election that could shape the sector for the next five years and beyond now looming, DDN looks back on another dramatic year in the drugs field 

January issueJANUARY

The year kicks off with the government announcing that its ban on the sale of below-cost alcohol is to come into force in the spring. The legislation is instantly derided as ‘laughable’, ‘confusing’ and ‘close to impossible to implement’ by Alcohol Concern chief executive Eric Appleby, whose organisation – along with many others – still wants to see minimum pricing instead. Alcohol charity Drinkaware, meanwhile, announces ‘radical’ changes to its governance arrangements following an independent audit and criticisms over industry links.

FEBCOVERFEBRUARY

DDN’s national service user conference chalks up a seventh successful event with Make it happen! in Birmingham – ‘emotive speakers with real passion and drive’, says PHE. As Russia prepares for the Sochi Winter Olympics, activist Anya Sarang tells DDN about the stark consequences of her country’s ongoing opposition to opioid substitution therapy, and crime prevention minister Norman Baker accepts the ACMD’s recommendation that ketamine be reclassified to class B. Worryingly, more than a third of services surveyed for DrugScope’s State of the sector report say their funding decreased in the previous year, while Nick Clegg tells the Observer that ‘if you’re anti-drugs, you should be pro-reform’ and there’s shock as actor Philip Seymour Hoffman becomes the latest high profile drug casualty.

March coverMARCH

MPs demand action on liver disease, warning that ‘today’s complacency is tomorrow’s catastrophe’, with deaths increasing by a staggering 40 per cent in the space of a decade. Activists still have Russia in their sights as they warn that its annexation of Crimea means that the peninsula’s drug users are now at the mercy of its ‘highly repressive’ and ‘deeply punitive’ approach, while harm reduction organisations brand the joint ministerial statement issued at the UN’s Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) in Vienna a ‘capitulation’ to hardline states.

April 2014APRIL

A hard-hitting report from Adfam says that children are being put at risk by a lack of proper safeguards around OST prescribing, while NICE says needle exchange services need to do more to support users of performance-enhancing drugs. Meanwhile, Stanton Peele casts a critical eye at the 12-step approach in the pages of DDN. ‘Like carp infesting a lake drive out other species, AA and 12-step treatment rule out other, often more effective approaches,’ he writes, ensuring a full-to-the-brim letters page in the following issue.

May DDNMAY

Positive trends in the use of long-established drugs risk being overshadowed by the relentless increase in new synthetic substances in an ‘increasingly complex and damaging’ drug market, says a comprehensive report from EMCDDA. PHE figures showing a continuing fall in the number of opiate and crack users leave ‘no room for complacency’, agrees the agency’s Roseanna O’Connor, and home secretary Theresa May announces an overhaul of stop and search following Release’s damning report from last year.

June DDNJUNE

Turning Point’s medical director Dr Gordon Morse writes that it’s time for commissioners to start considering ‘evolution over revolution’ in DDN, while more than 100 cities worldwide see demonstrations as part of the Support. Don’t Punish campaign for more humane drug policies.

ddnjuly

 

JULY

The government’s announcement of a new set of pledges as part of its controversial ‘responsibility deal’ with the drinks industry leaves health campaigners unimpressed, while new figures show rates of drug use among secondary school pupils ‘considerably lower’ than a decade ago.

Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 16.46.39AUGUST

Scottish drug-related deaths fall by 9 per cent, after two years of record high figures, with the Scottish Government pointing to the success of their take-home naloxone programme. Legislation finally comes into force allowing drug services to provide aluminium foil, and an all-party group of MPs calls for health warnings to be put on all alcohol labels. There’s also a sure sign that things are changing when a Sun editorial says it’s time for a rethink on drugs policy.

Sep14

 

SEPTEMBER

In contrast to last month’s encouraging news from Scotland, a sharp rise in drug deaths in England sparks alarm in the field, with DrugScope expressing ‘serious concerns’. The CQC sets out its new approach to inspecting drug and alcohol services and promises the sector that it will ‘focus on the issues that matter’, while the annual UK recovery walk hits number six in Manchester.

OctoberOCTOBER

The Home Office’s study of international drug polices finds ‘no apparent correlation’ between the toughness of a country’s approach and levels of use, setting off a media frenzy, and crime prevention minister Norman Baker accuses the government of ‘suppressing’ the document, which has been ready for months. Less than a week later he resigns, stating that working with home secretary Theresa May was like ‘walking through mud’.

Nov

 

NOVEMBER

Fewer than half of those infected with hepatitis C know they have the virus, warns PHE, with around 90 per cent of the 13,750 hepatitis C infections diagnosed in the UK in 2013 acquired through injecting drug use, while the ACMD rejects the concept of time-limited substitution treatment. ‘There’s still an appetite in bits of government to re-ask the question about time-limited methadone, but the evidence remains the evidence,’ ex-NTA chief Paul Hayes tells DDN. Right on cue, Iain Duncan Smith pens a Sunday Telegraph piece under the headline Now fight the methadone industry that keeps addicts hooked. Finally, DDN celebrates its tenth birthday with a special anniversary issue. ‘I thought they’d taken leave of their senses,’ writes ex-FDAP chief Simon Shepherd of the time DDN’s publishers told him they’d quit their jobs to set up the magazine.

DECEMBER

As DDN looks to its 11th year, preparations are well underway for the next service user involvement conference, The challenge: getting it right for everybody, in Birmingham next February. See you there!

 

Break free

Peter BentleyWith many service users struggling to find meaningful paid or unpaid employment, Peter Bentley tells DDN about a new educational course that encourages individuals to make the most of the skills they already possess

Most of the barriers to employment that people feel they encounter are self-imposed beliefs – the endless negative attitudes of, ‘People like me never get a break,’ ‘There are no jobs anyway,’ or ‘I have a right to benefits’. These attitudes often become the excuse for inaction, leaving the individual further and further isolated and distanced from their real aspirations.

Skills-Tu Employment is an educational course aimed at skilling people who are distant from the labour market by exploring all of these commonly held beliefs and encouraging learners to adopt a more positive outlook.

We initially developed the course after we were approached by Working Links Wales in 2012 – they realised that their clients who had been through the Intuitive Recovery abstinence programme were doing well employability-wise, and had a much more positive outlook than some other clients.

The programme is aimed specifically at ETE (education, training, employment) and getting people into work. It is an accredited classroom-based course that is delivered by peers who have themselves overcome considerable challenges in their lives and gone on to forge meaningful careers.

Many of our learners have considerable challenges to gaining employment and volunteering opportunities. The programme aims to change their outlook, so that they see these challenges as opportunities to demonstrate problem-solving skills, which will impress potential employers.

Learners are encouraged to take control by accepting responsibility. The course introduces a rational, problem-solving process to learners, while challenging the negative self-imposed barriers often present in the mindsets of people who have experienced problems and disappointments in their lives.

Once learners start to look closely at their belief systems, they begin to recognise that they support inactivity over action, unemployment over employment, and continued dependence on the state over personal independence and responsibility. These individuals have amazing skills, often learned while dealing with very considerable life problems, and yet they rarely see those skills as valuable assets.

Writing endless CVs and filling out application forms can be a discouraging exercise for many learners. When presented on a CV, a history of offending will always make an employer less likely to hire an individual, which in turn reinforces a negative mindset.

We focus our learners on using their natural assets in a positive, constructive way. There are very few employers who would not be impressed by an individual who has turned their life around – it’s all about how to communicate this in the right way.

It’s also important to recognise that the vast majority of jobs are not advertised and therefore require a different route to approaching the employer. A big part of it is getting good intelligence of who is the real decision maker and then making a plan of action on how best to approach this individual and be remembered. The Skills-Tu course teaches learners to look at all of the channels of communication when job hunting, and addresses everything from body language to personal hygiene – anything that could pose a barrier to getting the job.

Since launching the course in August 2012, we now deliver the programme across Wales, the South East, London and our traditional home ground in the North West. We have also developed our relationships with the Work Programme providers and have a customer list that includes Working Links, G4S, A4e and Rehab Job Fit.

Our background in, and promotion of, abstinence, delivered by peers, means that we have also been able to identify new presentations and support them into treatment services. What we have found as we have developed the course within the Work Programme and at Job Centres is that we are able to open up drug and alcohol treatment to learners.

As a peer-led organisation, recruitment for programme tutors is done through the graduate base. That means that the programme is delivered by people who have been through the process themselves, and this makes all the difference – they have ‘been there, done that’, and create a positive model for learners at the beginning of the process. All tutors are paid, so they are living, breathing examples of the process working and of what can be achieved.

Peter Bentley is founder and managing director of Intuitive Recovery.

Letters

LettersThe DDN letters page, where you can have your say.

To be included in the next magazine, send your letters and comments to claire@cjwellings.com or to 57 High Street, Ashford, Kent TN24 8SG. Letters may be edited for space or clarity – please limit submissions to 350 words.

  

Competent compassion

I am writing in response to Chris Ford’s letter (DDN, November, page 10) about ‘misbehaving’ in order to actually give people good and safe treatment. I am afraid that Chris is correct in believing it is time to make a stand. Things will only get worse unless we resist this focus on a numbers-based ‘successful completion’ culture and return to what makes good quality individual care.

I will declare an interest at this point. I recently ‘misbehaved’ and was made unexpectedly ‘redundant’ in an urgent ‘restructure’.

The good news is that it enabled me to spend time developing a concept that I’d had in my mind for several years. There is now a (basic) website which explains it further – www.competentcompassion.org.uk

The concept is that whoever delivers whatever treatment, and wherever that is, the way to measure its quality should be ‘does it demonstrate competent compassion’? If the person delivering help isn’t competent, then disaster looms. If they aren’t compassionate then it is unlikely to be helpful, and may well be ignored. Competence and compassion are not mutually exclusive – in fact they are both essential and in one phrase they sum up the essence of good quality care.

Wouldn’t it be good if that was the first quality standard by which we measured ourselves and our services – not how many people we can get off a script (for example)?

Competent compassion rises above all the arguments about harm minimisation v recovery, NHS v non NHS, script v abstinence etc. I am looking for this to be taken up by as many people and organisations as possible – locally and nationally. I really hope that commissioners in particular can grasp and use this concept of what quality services should look like.

Please visit the website and do comment and give feedback. Perhaps we can make a change before it is too late – even if it involves some misbehaving.

Dr Joss Bray, substance misuse specialist

 

Wake-up call

If funding for cancer prevention, treatment and recovery support was being cut while cancer mortality rates were rising there would be a national uproar, yet funding for the treatment of substance use disorders is being cut at a time when alcohol and other drug-related deaths are increasing.

The recently published Review of drug and alcohol commissioning from the Association of Directors of Public Health and Public Health England revealed that 48 local authorities in England will be reducing funding for drug and alcohol services either during 2014/5 or 2015/6, and 12 local authorities during both years. A further ten local authorities may reduce funding in 2015/6 dependent on local reviews and another 57 have not yet made a decision.

A third of local authorities reported uncertainty about future funding of residential services and some also reported ‘little need for alcohol and drug services for young people’. The Association of Directors of Public Health has even attempted to spin a positive narrative around this disinvestment in the report.

After 2015/6 the public health grant in England will no longer be ring-fenced and cash-strapped local authorities will be free to spend the money on anything they wish. There is no statutory requirement for them to spend it on evidence-based prevention, treatment and recovery support interventions for substance use as there is for cancer, and they need to be funded in the same way.

The UK Recovery Walk charity is the leading national recovery advocacy organisation and we feel it is our duty to speak out when other service providers and charities don’t, for fear of losing funding. We will provide support and work with any individuals and organisations who want to highlight and challenge plans to disinvest in local services. Please contact us on info@ukrecoverywalk.org if we can help.

Annemarie Ward,

CEO, UK Recovery Walk charity, www.ukrecoverywalk.org

 

Diseased thinking

At the RiTC conference Rowdy Yates told mutual aid fellowships, ‘Stop calling it (addiction) a disease…’ (DDN, November, page 9).

AA co-founder Bill Wilson said, ‘We AAs have never called alcoholism a disease because, technically speaking, it is not a disease entity. For example, there is no such thing as heart disease. Instead there are many separate heart ailments or combinations of them. It is something like that with alcoholism. Therefore, we did not wish to get in wrong with the medical profession by pronouncing alcoholism as a disease entity. Hence we have always called it an illness or malady – a much safer term to use.’

Clearly addiction is not healthy; but even a layperson can tell the difference between being sick or unwell – and having a disease.

Laurie Andrews, Essex

 

Paul’s gospel 

I have always admired Paul Hayes as a politician but never his policies in regard to recovery from addiction.

To spend 12 years on persuading politicians to move addicts from heroin to methadone (akin to moving whisky drinkers to free supplies of vodka) when he well knows that since 1966 there has been an addiction recovery training programme available at 169 centres (including prison units), indicates that he was either deaf to what has been succeeding in 49 other countries for 48 years, or that he had some other reason for pushing fail-to-cure ‘treatments’ in Britain.        

The pretence that drug addiction is ‘incurable’ is based on the 25 to 30 per cent of heroin users with no intention or desire ever to quit their habit. But the other 70 to 75 per cent, having failed to quit on numerous – often daily – occasions, still want to quit, but just don’t know how. Their problem is not willingness to quit, but lack of training in how.

The government’s National Audit Office and Professor Neil McKeganey tell us that the average overall cost to the taxpayer of every methadone prescription user is over £47,000 per annum and also indicate that less than 3 per cent of such addicts will reach abstinence in their lifetime.

However, the cost of putting a drug or alcohol addict through a 26-week residential self-help addiction recovery training programme is under half that, and delivers relaxed abstinence for life in 55 to more than 70 per cent of cases first time through the programme, with another 5 to 15 per cent succeeding following a shorter refresher course.

Nearly four years on since psychiatric professor John Strang was appointed to run eight payment by results ‘pilots’ (which he based nearly exclusively on the OST medication principles promulgated by Paul Hayes), we have no report but only rumours that the OST gospel – according to both Paul and John – just doesn’t work to deliver abstinence, relaxed recovery or other possibilities of payment by results.

Self-help addiction recovery training delivers all those results, so why are Paul and John trying so hard to pretend it doesn’t exist?

Kenneth Eckersley, CEO Addiction Recovery Training Services (ARTS)

 

A prize for your thoughts

Thanks to all of you who have filled in our readers’ survey so far. We’re very grateful for all of your feedback and suggestions and will be using them to plan next year’s DDN. The closing date for winning our £50 Amazon voucher is 15 December, so visit this link now to fill in the survey and be in with a chance of the prize!

Thank you also to the truly wonderful individuals and organisations who have supported our Christmas card campaign (centre pages) to help fund this issue. With the magazine circulated free of charge to all our readers, and not paid for by subscription (not a lot of people know this, according to our readers’ survey!) we are sincerely grateful for your help in mitigating the losses from the seasonal dip in advertising which normally helps us to pay for producing, printing and posting the magazine.

A very merry Christmas from the team at DDN!

Media savvy

Who’s been saying what..? DDN’s round-up of what’s being said in the national papers  

Parliament’s response to this week’s report on the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act shows that psychoactive substances are the last taboo to afflict Britain’s elite. It has got over past obsessions with whipping, hanging, sodomy and abortion, but it is still stuck on drugs. There is no point in reading the latest research on drugs policy worldwide. It is spitting in the wind. The only research worth doing is on why drugs policy reduces British politicians to gibbering wrecks.           

Simon Jenkins, Guardian, 1 November

 My blood boils when I hear loony liberal politicians (I’m thinking Nick Clegg) and middle class do-gooders telling us that ALL drugs should be legalised… Don’t these lettuce-munching liberals realise millions of mums and dads all over Britain are fighting tooth and nail to keep their kids away from drugs?

Carole Malone, Mirror, 1 November

The Lib Dems knew there was no hope of the Conservatives agreeing to change the law on drugs. They are so sure of this that they have not even bothered to work out whether they want to decriminalise or legalise cannabis. They are happy simply to pose as the party of opposition that they used to be, repeating old soundbites about ‘losing the war on drugs’. Nick Clegg knows that there is a market for this comforting rhetoric among a minority of the electorate, and he knows that this minority is larger than the 8 per cent of voters currently intending to vote Lib Dem.

John Rentoul, Independent, 4 November

The special loathing I encounter for telling the truth about drugs is so virulent that it sometimes comes close to frightening me. This is an enormous campaign for selfish pleasure. If it succeeds in achieving the legalisation it dreams of, and which is the real aim of this relentless lobbying, there are gigantic profits to be made and huge taxes to be raised.

Peter Hitchens, Mail on Sunday, 2 November 

The culture of prescribing methadone has proved incredibly stubborn and difficult to break. There is still a huge amount more that government must do, so that in practice treatment is about full recovery instead of maintenance… This approach requires that we fight vested interests and challenge the status quo.

Iain Duncan Smith, Sunday Telegraph, 16 November

Russell Brand is a classic dry drunk. He has that hyperactivity that characterises many of those who, having once relied on drink or drugs, find themselves restlessly sober, trying to fill that gap by furious over-production as a way of absorbing their new-found energy… In Revolution, he not only testifies to his belief in God and ‘the power of people to manifest, here on earth, a society that represents holy principles’, he actually puts forward the AA’s own ‘Twelve Traditions’ as his best model for society at large. It’s worked for him and so he ordains the same for everyone.

David Sexton, London Evening Standard, 4 November

Pregnant women with a drinking problem – like anyone with a drinking problem – need support rather than censure. Anyone who has the welfare of the child at heart, rather than the punitive desire to teach someone a lesson, can surely see that.

Joanna Moorehead, Guardian, 5 November

Copenhagen cannabis

The Danish government has just rejected proposals for ‘contained legalisation’ of cannabis, designed to limit drug misuse and remove profit from the criminal market, deciding instead to step up policing. Blaine Stothard reports

CannabisOn 26 May 2014 in a joint letter from the ministers for health and justice, the Danish government rejected the proposals submitted by Københavns Kommune (Copenhagen City Council) to establish a time-limited ‘controlled legalisation’ of cannabis in the city. The ministers’ decision repeated previous reasons in response to similar past proposals. KK’s re-submitted proposals followed wide discussion and debate, political and public, in the city, and majority support for the proposals in the city council formed after the November 2013 local elections.

The proposals acknowledged the negative health effects that the use of cannabis can have. The council’s letter to the ministers, dated 19 March 2014, challenged the view that controlled legalisation would lead to greater availability and use of cannabis – one of the principal reasons for the government’s rejection of earlier proposals. The letter emphasised that the current situation, with an easily accessible illegal drugs market controlled by criminal organisations, does not work in a preventive way and involves many young people, often marginalised, in the criminal activities of importing, trading and selling cannabis. The council asserted that evidence suggests that implementation of the proposals could result in a containment of the use and misuse of cannabis, and remove profit from the criminal market.

The proposals included that:

•            The cultivation of cannabis become a legal activity based in Denmark.

•            Designated retail outlets be established across the city, similar to alcohol outlets in Norway and Sweden.

•            These outlets include staff able to give advice to potential purchasers and existing users who may be experiencing problems associated with their cannabis use.

•            The council extend parallel prevention campaigns and activities.

•            Assessment and evaluation of the impact of the scheme be undertaken, with a view to assessing whether the scheme should become permanent.

The ministers’ response rejected the proposals and the rationale. The principal reason, once again, was that the use of cannabis is associated with a range of negative health effects. This argument is part of a wider governmental view that the use of all euphoriant substances other than for medicinal purposes should remain prohibited. Doing so, the response claims, is in itself preventative. The second reason given was that the proposals, by giving approval to the use of cannabis, would increase accessibility, use and ill effects, and the reduction of criminality associated with the illegal drugs market is best countered by intense and targeted policing.

Current practice and legislation therefore remain intact. Research and evidence obtained by Københavns Kommune and others indicate that cannabis is widely available throughout the city; is frequently sold alongside other illegal drugs; and that the market is controlled by criminal groups, who have used violence and shootings to protect their market share. The drugs market situated in the Christiania district – ‘Pusher Street’ – continues to operate, implicitly separating the markets for cannabis and other drugs, and accepted or tolerated by the authorities, less so by local residents.

Blaine Stothard is an independent consultant in health education.

www.healthed.org.uk

 

Cautious optimism

Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 14.34.10Just because minimum pricing is on the back burner doesn’t mean it’s time to get despondent, hear delegates at Alcohol Concern’s annual conference

‘I think we’re actually in a better place to reduce the harm from alcohol than we have been for some time,’ Alcohol Concern’s president, Professor Sir Ian Gilmore, told delegates at the charity’s annual conference, Facing our alcohol problem: taking back our health and high street.

‘As professionals, our messages are much more joined-up and complimentary than they were a few years ago,’ he said, plus there was much better sharing of evidence internationally and the media and public were more onside. ‘Just because MUP [minimum unit pricing] has rolled into the long grass in Westminster and become becalmed in Brussels regarding Scotland, I don’t think we need to be depressed.’ It was a matter of ‘being ready on all fronts’, he stressed.

Two key fronts, however, were the general public and treatment services. In terms of the former, ‘If you put it in the context of city centres and children being safer then they do get it’, and a crucial area to focus on was harm to others. ‘The harm to third parties is hugely greater than with passive smoking, which was what helped to swing public opinion there.’ Regarding treatment services, it was vital to keep emphasising that they were ‘incredibly good value’ in terms of the cost savings to the system, and also to ‘do a really good PR job on our colleagues’, he told delegates. ‘There’s still a huge stigma around alcohol dependence.’

There was ‘no doubt’ that patients were suffering because of a ‘judgemental and nihilistic’ approach on the part of some professionals, agreed Dr Michael Glynn, NHS England’s national clinical director for GI and liver disease. ‘There’s this sense of “well, you can’t do anything for them”. There’s still a long way to go in terms of changing attitudes.’ It was also essential that every health professional should be vigilant, he stressed. ‘Everyone has to understand that they can make a difference – the concept of “every contact counts”. Anybody involved in health – and other professionals – can give an intervention, even with very little training.’

‘Too often the debate on alcohol is a debate on anti-social behaviour, rather than public health and prevention,’ said shadow public health minister Luciana Berger. ‘It’s not like we’re short on evidence on the damage that alcohol does.’

The government’s responsibility deal showed that it was too close to vested interests to take the necessary action, she told the conference. ‘There’s a difference between listening to the concerns of industry and being dictated to by them,’ with the scale of the challenge too great to rely on a ‘non-binding and piecemeal’ deal. Labour’s approach would be to put the ‘needs of the population, not industry’ first, she said, with targeted action on pricing, labelling, licensing and education.

Although a Labour government would ‘strengthen efforts’ on higher-strength, low-cost products, when questioned on minimum pricing she said that her party was considering ‘a range’ of options. ‘We don’t think MUP as currently modelled is the way to go on this, but we’re looking very carefully at this issue.’ Labour was, however, committed to reviewing the licensing system and making public health a mandatory factor in licensing decisions.

Presenting the government’s view, new crime prevention minister Lynne Featherstone told the conference that MUP was ‘not permanently off the table, but we didn’t feel it was sensible to proceed while it’s being challenged in the courts’ regarding Scotland.

The government had ‘challenged the industry to do more, and it has responded’, she stated, with six new responsibility deal pledges over the summer (DDN, August, page 4). ‘We also want to cause a cultural shift in the nation’s attitude to alcohol,’ while moving public health to local authorities presented ‘tremendous opportunities’, including the framework for ‘commissioning the right sort of responses’ to alcohol problems. ‘There’s a massive appetite for partnership working and local solutions.’

In terms of tackling promotion it was vital that adverts were not targeting young people directly and ‘encouraging them to be part of an unhealthy drinking culture’ said Chante Joseph of the Youth Alcohol Advertising Council (YAAC), with social media in particular ‘pushing the boundaries’.

‘A lot of companies will target university students during Freshers’ Week, for example,’ she said. ‘A lot of it is incredibly inappropriate, and there are no real deterrents.’ Advertising regulations also were ‘weak and vague’, such as ‘not using actors under 25 – it’s these vague codes that allow them to tackle young people’. 

‘We’ve learned with tobacco that the only way to deal with the problem is to take away the marketing,’ said Professor Gerard Hastings of the University of Stirling. ‘It’s like trying to deal with malaria without trying to deal with the mosquito. If we’re really serious about this then the only solution is an outright ban.’

The problem was ‘power’, he told the conference. ‘Massive companies that are so large they no longer just control us as consumers, they control our leaders as well. Corporations have the power to ignore, make up and break the rules, and with social media they now have the power to be my mate. More and more, they have the power to create our realities.’

Marketing became toxic when wedded to the massive power of corporate alcohol, he said. ‘We desperately need red lines. We have to get serious and say, “marketing is driving this problem. The only solution is to remove marketing.” The lesson from tobacco is that half measures just don’t work, so we need to absorb some of that ruthlessness of the corporate sector and be really single-minded and determined about what we want and where we’re going.’

Vital connections

Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 14.26.26Communities and conversation are key to making recovery a reality, delegates heard at Addaction’s annual recovery conference. Jill Stevenson reports

Communities working together was a central theme of Addaction’s fourth National Recovery Conference last month. The annual get-together looked at how peer support and combined neighbourhood/group action could provide the catalyst to further recovery from addiction for thousands of individuals. It also helped launch the charity’s new campaign, the Big Ambition, which seeks to empower communities to fight substance misuse from within.

Set in Glasgow, the two-day conference pulled in more than 500 delegates from throughout the UK and beyond. Key speaker on the first day was Globalisation of Addiction author, Professor Bruce Alexander.

Vancouver-based drugs and addiction researcher Alexander – who shot to fame through his celebrated ‘rat pack’ experiments – began by announcing that it would be the last time he travelled abroad.

He looked back on how much had been achieved in terms of drug treatment and recovery since his start in the field in the early 1970s, but warned against complacency, saying that there was much still to be done.

‘I’m not saying the idea of the Big Ambition is wrong – far from it,’ he commented. ‘But rather it doesn’t go far enough. More battles have to be won. We need to turn communities around and get people all thinking along the same lines.’

One of the battles to which Alexander referred was the ongoing tension between those who wholeheartedly believed in abstinence and those dedicated to harm reduction. He warned that it was important not to become embroiled in such tensions and urged both sides to work together as part of the same movement.

Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 14.27.44‘There are many paths across the swamp,’ he said. ‘Some drug users will take the same path, others will advocate for another. The main thing to remember is that it’s all about the individual, and it’s whatever works for them that is important.’

He added that ‘some people believe that if they fail at one path and find redemption in another then they believe that first path won’t work for others either’, and that was ‘simply wrong’.

Alexander pointed to various historical milestones in the field of addiction including the introduction of harm reduction methods, the building of communities, widespread recognition of addiction recovery and the loss of credibility in the ‘war on drugs’.

The 1940s and ’50s were ‘the Dark Ages of addiction’ and even when he was growing up in ’70s America, drug addiction was classed as ‘evil’ and ‘sinful’. Police brutality was commonplace, he added, and prison was viewed as punishment rather than an opportunity for rehabilitation. It was accepted that any heroin user could expect to spend half of his or her life behind bars. Over the past few decades he had witnessed ‘amazing changes’ in the perception and treatment of addiction.

Reiterating the importance of local support he said, ‘People recover from addiction better when they re-establish a place in their community.’

Launching Addaction’s new Communities Fund – which will award £300 to individuals or groups for community projects – the charity’s director of UK operations, Gervase McGrath, said he believed that recovery from addiction could extend beyond the individual to their community. The awards would seek to recognise local projects such as tidying up an elderly neighbour’s garden or organising a sports day for local children.

‘There are plenty of examples of community recovery out there,’ he said. ‘They didn’t do it with the help of resources, experts or money but rather by harnessing a determination and commitment from within.

Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 14.26.40‘Healthy communities are ones which have common goals and work together to face challenges. We want to help create the conditions which will allow this to take place.’

Former VSO head of UK volunteering, Michaela Jones – who celebrated six years in recovery this year – also advocated for communities, and particularly conversation.

‘I don’t know what made me sick,’ she said, ‘But I know what keeps me well, and that’s getting out there and talking to people – and in doing so ignoring my natural instinct to remain isolated.’

Social connections, she said, were the cornerstones of our lives and her focus was now on a continual way of life rather than the active stages of addiction and recovery. This was made far easier, she said, with the existence of ‘conversation cafés’ which offered her both space and interaction with like-minded individuals.

Former Coronation Street actor Kevin Kennedy also extolled the virtues of conversation cafés and said he found the idea of a ‘dry bar’ a far more attractive meeting place than a ‘dusty church hall with plastic chairs’ – a step towards making recovery ‘sexy’. ‘I gave up drinking – not living,’ he added.

Kennedy, who has been in recovery from alcohol addiction for 16 years and runs a charity that helps businesses manage the recovery of employees with addiction problems, told the audience he’d like to change the perception of addiction and other mental health issues.

He is also an advocate of the American idea of job applicants revealing they are in ‘long-term recovery’ on their CV – ‘chiefly because this says more about you as a person than any qualification ever could,’ he added.

Yaina Samuels, founder of Cardiff social enterprise Nu-Hi Training and winner of the Welsh Government‘s citizenship award earlier this year, explained how everyone working for her company – including herself – had personally experienced addiction and were now delivering training. They had recently rolled out a programme for more than 1,000 employees at Cardiff City Council.

‘Who better to deliver training than people who have been through the whole process of addiction themselves?’ she said, advocating a ‘conversation café’ approach. ‘To me, recovery meant getting my life back. It meant health and it meant having conversations with people which didn’t centre on drugs.’

Offering a personal perspective, comedienne Janey Godley – herself from Glasgow – revealed how heroin addiction had caused the death of her brother, prescription drugs had meant she’d regularly come home from school and find her mother ‘out cold on the kitchen floor,’ and her father had been in recovery from alcohol for 34 years.

It was a group of bereaved mothers in the East End who had started the biggest addiction recovery group in the city, and the initiative had made her look again at her own life.

‘I used to look down on drug dealers when I lived in the East End,’ she said. ‘Yet at the time I was a pub landlady selling booze. I asked myself what the difference was between the two and realised there really wasn’t one.’

Jill Stevenson is a freelance journalist based in Glasgow

In mind and body

Max DalyThis year’s HIT Hot Topics conference delved into neuroscience to challenge our perceptions of drugs and drug taking. Max Daly reports 

The fervour around crack cocaine reached such a level of hype in the US in the 1980s, neuroscientist Dr Carl Hart told the 2014 HIT Hot Topics conference, that at one point black civil rights activists teamed up with the Ku Klux Klan to combat America’s new Public Enemy No.1.

In 1989 the KKK launched the ‘Krush Krack Kocaine’ initiative, to rid the streets of Lakeland, Florida of crack dealers. People selling crack were legitimate hate targets at the time – they’d been described by Jessie Jackson, the Democrat civil rights activist and Baptist minister, as ‘death messengers’ and ‘terrorists’. Incredibly, the KKK initiative was ‘welcomed’ by the local National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

Crack hit the black community hard. Around 80 per cent of those convicted for crack offences were black. Harsh new anti-crack laws introduced by President Ronald Reagan meant that those caught with crack received prison sentences up to 100 times more severe than for the powder form of cocaine, more commonly used by white Americans.

Dr Hart became curious about a drug that had so damaged his community in Miami. He wanted to know more about the drug being mentioned in such fearful tones by his heroes Gil Scott-Heron and Public Enemy. Dr Hart decided to leave his job in the US airforce, where he had spent time based over here in Swindon, and returned to the US to study neuroscience in order to understand crack’s effect on people’s minds and bodies.

The subsequent research he conducted into the psychology of crack cocaine use has since become famous. What he found blew holes in the accepted narrative – that crack cocaine was an entirely new drug that transformed addicts into mindless zombies intent on violence and getting their next fix. Hart’s experiments, where crack users were given a choice between $5 and a rock of crack, found that half the time, these ‘crack addicts’ went for the money. In other words, they made rational decisions.

‘A small amount of money was enough to shift their drug-taking behaviour. This made me rethink the crack narrative,’ said Hart. A similar experiment he conducted among crystal meth users yielded the same kind of results – the drug users did not blindly lunge for the drugs. ‘I realised that the vast majority of people who use this drug don’t have a problem. Look at Rob Ford. He could use crack and be mayor of Toronto. He was a jerk, but he could use crack and be mayor.’

Dr Hart said exaggerations around crack and crystal meth – that they cause brain damage, obliterate rational thought and are uniquely novel compounds – are perpetuated more by design than by accident.

Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 14.14.12The public has been misled about drugs. Why is this? It serves a function. It allows us to target people who we don’t like. We can’t say we don’t like black people, but we can say we don’t like an activity they are involved in, such as taking crack. This narrative helps to avoid dealing with the real problems of the poor, that if we get rid of crack, we don’t have to talk about bad education, bad housing and so on.’

Our understanding of drugs is further skewed, Hart told the annual conference in Liverpool, because scientific research only looks at drugs from one angle. He said that America’s drug science body, the National Institute on Drug Abuse, funds 90 per cent of global research on drug abuse. And the focus of NIDA’s research is the pathology of drugs.

As a result, Hart said, there is a disproportionate amount of information in the media about the bad effects of drugs, ‘creating an environment where drugs are seen as evil and there is a focus on eliminating drugs at any cost’. Hart says researchers fail to understand other aspects of drugs because their salaries depend on failing to understand them.

‘The future is bleak if we rely on science to lead the way, because the story that goes with the data is often distorted.’ He said the war on drugs had been a success for the criminal justice and health industries, which have raked in huge profits as a result.

But it’s not all bad, said Hart whose book High Price was published last year. While admitting that providing attractive alternatives to drugs is ‘a big job’, there is a way people can change the narrative and reduce the harm. He sees decriminalisation and harm reduction as vital. Meanwhile drug users need to ‘get out of the closet and admit their use’, as President Obama has done, in order to normalise the use of drugs and get the debate into the mainstream.


Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 14.15.23A more open discussion about drugs will reduce the levels of what one speaker at the conference referred to as ‘intoxophobia’ – discrimination against people who use drugs. Russell Newcombe from 3D Research told delegates that while minority groups such as women, the BME community and gay people had gained legal rights in the UK, drug users had not. Despite a lack of laws to protect them, drug users are subject to discrimination across the board – including by employers, doctors, the welfare system and insurers. Newcombe suggested the government agrees to a drug users’ charter.

But as the long-time drug commentator Sara McGrail pointed out in her speech, any changes to drug policy – despite the best intentions of the Lib Dems in the last few months – are unlikely anytime soon. The drug issue, she said, is not a vote winner, instead ‘it has been kicked so far into the long grass that we can’t see the pitch anymore’. That drugs will be off the agenda for the next election is a shame, said McGrail, because harm reduction has been ‘decimated’ and services have been cut at a time when austerity is preparing the ground for potentially more problematic drug use.

Katy MacLeod of the Scottish Drug Forum said that research she has carried out has revealed that it is among society’s most socially excluded people that new psychoactive substances are gaining a foothold, not just young people. Research at a Glasgow night shelter found nearly a quarter of its clients had tried synthetic cannabinoids, although most admitted they didn’t like it.

Despite being class C substances, GHB/GBL are the ‘most dangerous drugs on the planet’, according to David Stuart, substance misuse lead at 56 Dean Street, a drug charity based in London’s Soho. He said the drugs represented a big danger to the gay community, as did the use of other ‘chemsex’ drugs such as crystal meth and mephedrone. Stuart said the emerging chemsex scene had necessitated a need to create closer bonds between the fields of drug harm reduction and sexual health.

According to Professor Gerry Stimson, one the biggest developments in drug harm reduction in recent years has been the rise and rise of vaping. E-cigarettes could, as some economists have predicted, overtake their deadly tobacco equivalents in less than ten years. However, the success of vaping in reducing the smoking population has been accompanied by familiar fears.

Professor Stimson showed delegates a recent Twitter post by the World Health Organization (WHO) declaring that e-cigarettes ‘pose a risk to public health’. But he said fears that e-cigarettes could be a gateway to smoking and undermine government anti-smoking policy are reminiscent of opposition to clean needles and foil for heroin users.

He said it would be ‘unethical’ for governments to deny or discourage the use of life-saving products and said one of the ‘perverse’ consequences of over-regulating e-cigarettes was that there are now higher controls and constraints on them than on regular cigarettes.


Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 14.14.49At the start of the conference, organiser Pat O’Hare told delegates that now, almost all the taxi drivers he gets chatting to in Liverpool favour drugs legalisation. He said this represented a swing in the public mood. ‘I never thought in my lifetime we would see drug legalisation, but now I think we will.’ And few of those who listened to the final speaker of the day, Anne Marie Cockburn, whose 15-year-old daughter Martha died last year after taking MDMA, could deny that change is required.

She challenged the politicians who think current policy is a success to stand by her daughter’s graveside. ‘Martha became another face on a newspaper. I feel helpless when I see another death of a child. The law is past its sell-by date. I want drugs to be legalised because I want safety first. Please help me.’

As Dr Hart pointed out in his talk, before he died in 1987 the gay, black writer James Baldwin was marginalised for his views about drugs. He said no one should be sent to jail for drugs, that anti-drug laws were laws against the poor and that banning drugs did not stop people taking them. In fact, he said, lots of money was being made on the back of the dope laws. After hearing the latest evidence at this conference in 2014 it seems Baldwin, all those years ago, was something of a visionary.

Max Daly is a freelance journalist and joint author of Narcomania: How Britain Got Hooked On Drugs

Close to home

 Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 14.00.17Putting families first

The third Families First conference heard how the will for family support was there – even if the money was hard to come by

The Labour Party is totally committed to the families agenda, said Luciana Berger, shadow minister for public health. Addressing the Adfam/DDN Families First conference, she said her party was looking at how it could work with families further.

‘We don’t just see through the lens of the Troubled Families programme,’ she said. ‘We don’t just see them as problems to solve.’

Megan Jones from Public Health England (PHE) said that while commissioning increasingly focused on delivery, outcomes and value for money, ‘we can make a case for solid value for money for family services.’ The needs of families were now being taken seriously, she said, and statutory requirements and treatment providers would play a key role in leading the drug and alcohol field into this brave new world.

‘Why do commissioners always give the money to the big organisations, when we do all the work?’ asked Maddy Vaz of the charity Sanctuary Family Support. Berger responded that clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) needed to be held to account. ‘There’s nothing to stop anyone in this room turning up at their health and wellbeing board,’ she said.

Alex Boyt, service user coordinator in Camden, spoke of the ‘really harsh environment out there’, with just one family worker in his London borough, while Dr Martyn Hull said general practice was the ideal place to support families. ‘Don’t dismember shared care,’ he said. Investment needed to take place in primary care, so that GPs knew how to help families deal with harder-to-spot problems such as dependency on new psychoactive substances.

Lisa Sturrock of WDP’s children and families service pointed out that for many children school was a safe place – ‘so exclusion’s an issue’. Support also needed to be holistic, she said, and there was discussion about how families could draw strength from the recovery movement.

‘We need to make the case for people recovering at a pace that suits them,’ said Boyt, while Maya Parker of Nacoa said ‘we have to use what’s already there – use each other.’

This kind of mutual support was demonstrated effectively by Claire Robinson, who explained how her organisation, Props, was formed for ‘women to prop each other up’. From meeting in each others’ kitchens ten years ago because of the lack of support and investment in family services, the group had became a close-knit team that made carers feel listened to.

‘Respite is an important part of making sure people are physically and emotionally well,’ she said. ‘We had over 300 referrals last year and that’s just the tip of the iceberg.’

The current landscape was ‘challenging’ with ‘all of us expected to do more for less’ and the threat of many small services disappearing. But Props was determined to survive, she said. ‘With a small organisation you feel that personal responsibility and that gives you the edge and determination to make things happen.’

‘We’ve heard about the challenges of the future,’ said Adfam’s chief executive Vivienne Evans, closing the conference. ‘The need hasn’t changed, though the way we deal with it might have.

‘We’re trying to combat stigma and we need to have a movement – like the recovery movement – to shout louder. Come on, let’s think. Luciana Berger talked about hidden heroes in families, but there are also hidden sufferers.’

****

Bringing a busy day of presentations, debate and networking to a close, Emma reminded the recent Families First conference why family support is worth fighting for. Here’s an extract of her story 

For the first few years of my life I was unaware that my mum was any different to any other. She would be there to collect me from school; a beautiful vision of long dark hair and big brown eyes. I never noticed the slight wobble on her heels or slurred speech – these things meant little to a seven-year-old. She would be there every day to take us to school and waiting to walk us home. She would be there to cheer us on during sports day or see our nativity plays.

I was about 11 the first time she went ‘away’ to hospital for a rest. My little brother and I went to stay with nan – her warm comforting home was our place of sanctuary. Nan took care of everything and we thrived there.

I was a model pupil at the time and it didn’t seem to matter too much that mum stopped showing up to watch performances, games or go to parents evening. My bubble burst when mum didn’t collect my younger brother from school one day and the local vicar took him home to find she had overdosed on Valium and alcohol. She claimed it was accidental, but that was the moment my childhood ended.

An ambulance took mum away and she was sectioned to the dreaded D block – a place whispered about in hushed tones. Only dad could visit her and on Sundays she would come out and we would go to country parks. The vibrant woman that I adored so much as a little girl was gone; she was just a shadow. Her sadness was palpable even then and I would count the hours till it was time for her to return to her sanctuary and we could return to ours.

I could list the awful, embarrassing and sometimes violent moments that followed in the years after. There was the day I came in from horse riding and she went to slap me because I had muddy boots. In her drunken state she missed, but I was faster and full of anger and one slap from me sent her flying to the floor. She didn’t get up. My brother and I stood over her. I thought I’d killed her – and for one tiny moment I hoped I had, stopping that feeling of unending dread of the increasing times she would turn into a drunken mess and seek attention through declarations of terminal illness, or attack us mentally, verbally or physically.

I hadn’t killed her; she had just passed out drunk. We dragged her into her chair and left her to sleep it off. When she woke up she had wet herself, such was her stupor. My loathing for her at that moment cannot really be put into words, and yet she couldn’t remember any of it.

I went from being a model student to disruptive one and teachers would ask what was wrong. My excuses were varied but never the truth – a shameful secret I kept from everyone. I couldn’t tell them the reason I hadn’t handed in my homework was because I had been busy cleaning up her vomit; or making tea for the family, desperately trying to restore some normality to our chaos; or that I had lain awake all night after a screaming match with a mad woman.

After leaving school I went to college and work. I went through a phase of going out on weekends and drinking to complete oblivion. I wanted to know what the attraction was; why she found such comfort in it. I found no comfort there, it only led to more vicious rows and after one particularly horrendous weekend, when I failed to come home, she threw me out.

Screen shot 2014-12-01 at 14.00.47I discovered I was pregnant on Christmas Eve 1986 and Laura Louise was born on 24 May 1987. That sweet baby saved my life. Finally all the love I craved from my own mother I was able to bestow on my perfect baby girl.

Sadly her father resented the fact that I had heaped the responsibility of being a parent on to him and our relationship slid into a cycle of mental and physical abuse. When a job came up with a local carpet company I applied hoping the extra money would make life better for us all and fix things. It was there that I met Glenn, who became my husband and a true father to my little girl – 20 years later we are still together and happy as a family.

Mum had a massive stroke at 59 and for a time she forgot she drank, and was sober. I visited and cared for her; we had a precious few months together with love and clarity. I had a mum, even if it was for a short time, and she was doing really well when sadly the wrong person stepped into her life again. She chose a path that led eventually to complete organ failure, dying alone in a hospital with no one there to hold her hand and tell it was okay to let go, or that she was loved.

I didn’t grieve for mum, after all no one really expected me to. Was she worthy of grief? After all, she had chosen alcohol over her family. Then I read an article in a newspaper, which directed me to an online charity called COAP – a place where young people can talk openly and confidentially about their feelings, and seek help and advice. Finally I could reach out and turn my negative experiences into something positive.

I realised I wasn’t facing my own demons or coping with my own grief, so I saw a Cruse counsellor who urged me to seek closure. I found mum’s final resting place and wanted to ensure that those who loved her and needed closure could say goodbye, knowing she was finally at peace. Dad kindly bought a plaque for her, even though they had been divorced many years before. On a summer’s afternoon recently we all gathered together and gave mum a fitting goodbye. Saying goodbye to mum and giving her forgiveness was a huge part of my journey; it helped enormously as forgiveness is easier to carry than bitterness.

Addiction has a ripple effect like a stone dropped on a pond, affecting everyone it touches. We need to break down those barriers of shame and silence, which is why groups like COAP and DrugFam are vital. Young people need to feel they are being listened to and that they are not alone. We can’t change their lives, but we can listen, share experiences and support them, helping them find peace and closure.

 

What price life?

NaloxneThe failure to roll out naloxone distribution in England prompted a multidisciplinary group to meet in London to campaign for change. DDN reports

Last year there were 765 deaths related to heroin and morphine in England – a sharp rise of 32 per cent from the 579 deaths in 2012. The reasons for this failure are the subject of much debate, with many in the field suggesting that enforced detox and being encouraged to leave treatment too early are strong contributory factors.

But what is certain for the growing number of service users, treatment workers and medical professionals who have formed themselves into an action group – now called the Naloxone Action Group (NAG) – is that many of these deaths could have been prevented if naloxone had been available to use as an intervention to reverse overdose.

At the Action Summit on Naloxone (from which NAG was formed) held at Bleinheim’s headquarters in London last month, the agenda was split between sharing information and updates on naloxone, looking at examples of good practice from areas of effective distribution, and forming an action plan to challenge every area of the country that was slow or reluctant to roll out distribution and training.

Before arriving at the summit, participants had been asked to complete a questionnaire about the availability of naloxone in their area, the drivers for availability and the barriers to distribution both locally and nationally.

‘From participants’ responses there’s a marked variation,’ said Dr Chris Ford, clinical director of IDHDP, who chaired the meeting. ‘One area had total provision, most areas had nothing…. There is a definite postcode lottery. We’re going back to the bad old days and it stinks.’


The group identified those most at risk, with Professor John Strang referring to evidence that more frequent deaths happened during early stages of methadone treatment and early days of release from prison. One important factor to concentrate on was that many people died in the presence of friends, so the group agreed it was incredibly important – and an obvious move – to involve these potential ‘first responders’ with naloxone distribution and training. Families were also ‘absolutely crucial’ – ‘we want to get away from it being revolutionary to it being normalised,’ he said.

GPs would need to prescribe naloxone to patients and authorise family members to collect it and do the training. Oliver Standing from Adfam said that his experience of running a bereavement project had shown that families were ‘desperate to be involved’, while Jamie Bridge of the International Drug Policy Consortium (IDPC) and the National Needle Exchange Forum (NNEF) said ‘having family voices in this will be invaluable – it will make commissioners care.’ The idea of involving recovery assets such as family also ‘fits beautifully into the recovery framework’, said Fraser Shaw of Compass.

Elsa Browne of SMMGP added that her organisation had launched an e-learning module, written by Dr Kevin Radcliffe, to help with training. Around 100 people a month were doing it, ‘and the evaluation is brilliant’, she said.

John Jolly, Blenheim’s chief executive, brought the discussion back to the critical lack of action in England.

‘What’s happened in politics?’ he asked. ‘In May 2012 the ACMD recommended that naloxone should be more widely available, that the government should ease restrictions on supply, and that people should be better trained to administer it.’ The ACMD also commented on Scotland’s strategy running, Wales’ strategy being about to run, and England having no policy. ‘There are some great areas of good practice in England, but it’s very patchy,’ he added.

A letter from the Department of Health was shown to the group. It was a response to Dr Judith Yates’ letters to public health minister Jane Ellison, in which she pressed for answers on the lack of action. The letter assured Dr Yates that, following the ACMD’s advice, PHE and the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency were ‘working on amending medicines regulations to allow the wider distribution and administration of naloxone’. But new regulations would not come into effect until October 2015, ‘the earliest practicable date’ to avoid the distractions of the general election campaign.

The overwhelming reaction of the group was that this was ‘choosing to do nothing’ as October would not be within this government. ‘We’re not happy with the date that’s been set,’ said service user activist Kevin Jaffray. ‘A date a year from now leaves space for another 32 per cent rise in deaths. There’s been a constant rise since 2009.’

Steve Taylor, programme manager for alcohol and drugs at PHE, was invited to give a response to the situation. ‘We’re not kicking things into the long grass – things will have started to take place by October,’ he said, agreeing that ‘anybody walking out of the door with a methadone script and not naloxone is ludicrous.’

Any changes made in October would not make a huge amount of difference, he added, saying ‘there are things you can be doing’ that didn’t require any change in legislation. It was our responsibility ‘as doctors and clinicians’ to prescribe naloxone to people on methadone treatment, he said, and it could be given to families for the named patient. ‘What is it that’s going to change, that we don’t already do?, he asked.

PHE was looking to produce a briefing by the end of this year, using expertise to advise on what arrangements for wider provision might be. ‘But,’ he advised the group, ‘there is not going to be a national programme in England because of localism.’

Rhian Hills from the Welsh Government and Kirsten Horsburgh from the Scottish Drugs Forum shared their experience of naloxone strategy in each country, both of which had shown a decline in drug-related deaths since the strategies’ implementation. Wales had made a commitment back in 2008 to reduce drug-related harm and deaths, and had set up a national group that included police and paramedics. Demonstration sites had followed, evaluated by the University of South Wales, and the main recommendation to roll out the programme was completed in November 2011.

A decline in deaths of 53 per cent spoke for itself. ‘I don’t think it’s rocket science,’ said Hills. ‘It’s simple, it saves lives. It’s down to commissioners – get your priorities right.’ Involvement of service users – ‘the experts’ – had been really important in making risk logs, and from there, distribution had been increased to carers and their engagement encouraged. ‘Naloxone should be second nature,’ she said.

Kirsten Horsburgh acknowledged there had been ‘challenges and barriers’ in Scotland, starting from having one of the highest rates of drug-related deaths in Europe. But a national naloxone programme, launched at the end of 2010, had responded to common circumstances – that the average age of victims was 40, that they were not in treatment and likely to have had a recent period of abstinence, and that they were likely to die in their own or a friend’s home with witnesses (other drug users) present.

A Patient Group Direction (PGD) had been sent out to nurses and pharmacists in community addiction teams, needle and syringe programmes, harm reduction teams and the Scottish Prison Service, and Lord Advocate’s Guidelines allowed naloxone to be supplied by staff working for services in contact with people at risk of opiate overdose, such as in hostels. Anyone supplied with naloxone had to do training to make sure they were confident.

‘The key messages are prioritise the supply of naloxone to people who use drugs, make it normal in services and ensure people on ORT [opioid replacement therapy] have a supply,’ she said. ‘Make the training brief – just a ten minute chat – and involve peer trainers. All this potentially saves hundreds of lives.’

On 4 November the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended expanding access to naloxone, from just medical professionals to people likely to witness an overdose in their community, including friends, family members, partners of people who use drugs, and social workers. The report emphasised the safety of the drug, the ease of administering it, and its potential to reduce 69,000 deaths a year globally from opioid overdose.

The group around the table in London agreed that action was needed now, and there was no need to wait for PHE’s October 2015 directive to make each area of the country accountable for including naloxone in its localism agenda.

Dr Judith Yates gave the example of Birmingham’s progress – a process driven by doctors, nurses, pharmacists and service users, rather than commissioners.

‘Naloxone kits have become normal – we hear about reversals every month,’ she said. Dr Yates had trained drug workers from local service Swanswell, who were in turn carrying out training. ‘We don’t do risk assessments – we give naloxone to all first responders, we give it to everyone who uses drugs,’ she explained. ‘We have stories of residents in hostels saving each others’ lives.’

‘We’re obsessed with controlled drugs, but this is like giving an asthma inhaler, not methadone,’ added Emily Finch of SLAM. ‘I’ve signed hundreds of naloxone prescriptions.’


 

At NAG’s second meeting on 21 November, the group prioritised the need to overcome the obstacle presented by localism, which prevented England from having a national naloxone strategy.

‘PHE’s October deadline is disappointing, but it’s less than a year away. Of more concern is that we can’t have a national strategy because of localism,’ NAG chair John Jolly told DDN. ‘We agreed the need to bring this to the attention of politicians as well as clinicians. Naloxone distribution is not a minority sport, it’s day-to-day business. If you’re giving opiate treatment, you should be giving naloxone.’

With thousands of doses administered by ambulances, clear messages on distribution from the ACMD, and the Medicines Act ‘clearly empowering every citizen to use it’, there should be no obstacle to making naloxone available in every part of the country, he said. The recovery agenda was directly relevant: NAG identified that those most at risk were those starting on a journey of recovery, and emphasised the need for training alongside naloxone distribution.

‘We need to be identifying areas that are delivering good practice and naming and shaming areas that aren’t,’ said Jolly.

A fighting chance

Jacquie Johnston-LynchMilitary veterans do not tend to do well in traditional treatment settings. Jacquie Johnston-Lynch explains how Tom Harrison House is tackling the challenges head on 

I met Peter and Simeon a few months ago, but both of them had been known to me, as they were always to be seen street drinking and sleeping rough in Liverpool City Centre. Peter had been on the streets for nearly 12 years. He served in Northern Ireland, and on returning to Liverpool after his eight years of military service, he felt like he never fitted in – that no one understood him, and no one really wanted to. Where his closest relationships had previously been with other squaddies, he soon found a new relationship with alcohol.

Now 46 years old, Peter is finally having a crack at this thing called recovery. The same for Simeon, 58, who has been homeless for nearly 20 years. Over the years, many workers approached Simeon to chat about potential treatment options, but were always met with a refusal. Albeit a polite and jovial refusal, it was still a ‘no’. Asked why he finally agreed to go into detox and rehab he answered, ‘Because this place is for military veterans, and the only time I felt like I had a family was when I was in the army.’

Alcohol misuse has been an inescapable way of life for many who have served in the armed forces. Alcohol has always been associated with rituals and camaraderie and historically was seen as a means of managing difficult situations out in the field – the so-called ‘rum ration’ in the Royal Navy was only abolished in 1970. The levels of alcohol use and misuse during military service often increase when personnel return to civilian life, amplifying its negative effects both for men and women. It’s why we see so many ex-service personnel within the criminal justice system, often for offences of drunkenness, fighting and spousal abuse. In the health services we see increased hospital admissions for poisoning, injury, dependency and addiction.

A member of the armed forces with a drinking problem is a major cause of concern in the military. Once the problem has been identified, commanding officers have to take action to correct it and this often leads to discharge, contributing to the numbers of early service leavers. Misuse of prescription medication and some illegal drugs are also on the increase, but there are very few statistics on this as the Ministry of Defence has not been as responsive as, for example, the USA Department of Defense. However, the MOD is working hard to start shifting the drinking culture and looking at new ideas, such as dry bars, coffee clubs and gaming and WiFi leisure activities on base. I have built up links with army Colonel David Wheeler and we both recently attended an all-party parliamentary group at Westminster, to discuss these issues raised by Alcohol Concern to the minister for the armed forces, Anna Soubry MP.

As head of service in my previous job I noticed that military veterans were not doing very well in treatment. They seemed to have a lot of difficulty engaging in interpersonal group therapy. Many got really agitated with some lines of enquiry made to them by the so-called ‘civvies’ in the group, and some would not go anywhere near expressing emotions.

One guy told us that he couldn’t share his experiences in the group because he felt so ashamed of what he had been a part of when on a tour of duty in Northern Ireland. Other non-military people had asked him if he had ever killed anyone, and why he acted so aggressively against the Irish. Another described drinking a bottle of vodka most nights to help him sleep, as he couldn’t remove the images and smells from an incident he’d been involved in during a tour in Afghanistan.

Having become known in Liverpool for setting up UK firsts in the recovery movement, I was contacted by Paula Gunn in early 2013. Paula, who had set up The Bridge House abstinence-based housing project, wanted to create something for ex-service personnel as she too had noticed a repeated pattern emerging through her work. She was very persuasive and passionate in asking me to come and work with her to lead on this new project and the result was Tom Harrison House (THH) – the first military veteran specific addiction treatment centre in the UK.

Paula founded the charity and named it after her grandfather, Tom Harrison, a naval man who served during World War II. She has now been 17 years in recovery herself, but while in the grip of active addiction, she was comforted by her grandfather who told her of his experiences in the navy and gave her stories of hope and inspiration.

We set about gathering evidence of need for the centre. This proved to be an arduous task, as there was no UK-based evidence on the benefits of a military-specific treatment centre. So I looked to the USA, where far more research has been done, even making a visit to the first ever veteran addiction treatment centre there, Ed Thompson House, which is part of the Samaritans Village services in New York City.

The experience of observing for a day in this treatment centre really blew me away. As I talked to all the guys in the centre and the staff who worked there, I had not one single doubt that THH would be as much needed in the UK as Ed Thompson House is in the USA. There was such inspiration there. I knew we could replicate what they had created, in the cultural context of the UK.

THH has been commissioned to run a pilot project of six months’ treatment space for the new programme I developed. The programme is evidence-based, health and wellbeing-focused, with a clear and assertive linkage to mutual aid. Because of the risk of triggering any symptoms of other co-occurring disorders, the programme doesn’t have a huge focus on psychotherapy – instead it promotes self-efficacy, physical and emotional health, discipline, structure, life skills and community engagement. The culture of the programme is kindness, co-operation, curiosity, generosity, honesty and acceptance. The team here comprises professionals from a variety of relevant backgrounds and brings a mixture of recovery, therapeutic and military experience.

Because military veterans are much less likely to seek out help for mental health issues and addiction due to feeling that this is a sign of weakness, THH sees people who are often very ill, have spent many years in active addiction, and many have co-occurring disorders and have been homeless for lengthy periods.

With Merseyside having more than 30,000 ex-service personnel and an increased cohort of reservists, plus at least an additional 4,000 returning service leavers coming back to the area, there is no shortage of referrals for the project.

The team at THH are receiving referrals from other areas of the country too. Given that participants in Combat Stress residential programmes have to be clean and sober to attend and many other veteran-focused mental health care requires sobriety to engage in appropriate post-traumatic stress disorder treatment, THH will be the first point of call for those needing additional help and support to take the first steps to recovery. Additionally, during the last few weeks many other agencies have approached THH as they now want to replicate this model in their geographical area.

Peter has just become the first ever graduate of a military-specific addiction rehab in the UK and the first to wear a THH medal of accomplishment. We will continue to fly the flag for him and other veterans who have found it hard to cope and used substances to self soothe, leading to loss, shame and chaos. Our aim is to walk with them on a road of honour, hope and healing.

Jacquie Johnston-Lynch is head of service at Tom Harrison House


 

Trust in me

Gaining trust is one vital component of providing help to veterans, delegates at DrugScope’s annual conference heard

‘One of the difficulties of working with veterans is being able to find out who they are, where they are, and engaging with them,’ veterans’ substance misuse case manager at Combat Stress, Matt Flynn, told delegates at DrugScope’s conference. ‘Trust is a substantial issue. You need to be able to understand the shared lingo and the humour – that’s your way in.’

Combat Stress is piloting a network of substance misuse case management services across the UK, financed by the Big Lottery and the Armed Forces Covenant (Libor) Fund. As well as improving outcomes for veterans, the aim is to provide training to mainstream treatment services and become a specialist resource for any professionals working with veterans.

The organisation’s Wiltshire pilot is run in partnership with Turning Point in ‘a significant military area’, said Flynn – himself a reservist – with veterans estimated to make up at least 12 per cent of the local population.

Well-managed expectations are vital to a successful service, he stressed, as ‘veterans tend to come into treatment believing they’re going to be fixed at the end’, along with fluid care planning and regular reviews that allow people to ‘remain engaged and understand what their care pathway will look like’. Referral can come from veterans themselves or their families, the voluntary sector, assertive outreach, veterans’ agencies or the armed forces, and treatment ranges from guided self-help to residential and community detox, prescribing and one-to-one or group work.

‘There’s also a big role for exit planning,’ he says. ‘That’s crucial in terms of managing expectations. There are lots of different agencies across Wiltshire, and the work now is about drawing them all together and creating really good referral pathways.

‘Part of the challenge facing veterans is that they’re no longer the squaddie or the airman they once were. In substance misuse services they have to mix with “civvies” and, to be honest, they hate it. Part of the skill on the part of the nurses is being able to manage that.’

www.combatstress.org.uk

 

On the margins

Marcus-Roberts_2webDrugScope’s annual conference looked at equality and diversity in the sector at a time of shrinking budgets 

‘We seem to be living in an increasingly pinched and mean society, a political climate of intolerance towards marginalised groups,’ said DrugScope’s director of communications, Harry Shapiro, as he introduced Access all areas: equality and diversity in drug and alcohol treatment, the charity’s annual conference.

The UK’s treatment system had been shaped by the heroin epidemic of the 1980s and ‘90s, said chief executive Marcus Roberts, ‘and I’d argue that we’re in the long tail of that now’. An estimated 300,000 problem drug users was ‘still a lot, but significantly less than the 450,000 at the height of the epidemic’, and while the 2010 drug strategy was still built around a notion of dependency inextricably linked with deprivation, this no longer fitted ‘with emerging issues such as drug use among men who have sex with men, or use of image and performance-enhancing drugs’, he said.

These shifts were against a backdrop of an estimated 40 per cent reduction in local authority funding over the course of this Parliament, he pointed out. According to DrugScope’s State of the sector 2013 research, there were signs of disinvestment in services but ‘no sense yet that we’ve reached a cliff edge’, while the political debate was also entering a new terrain. ‘On the one hand there’s an increasing focus on the millions of people who take drugs without experiencing any significant harm, and another discourse focused on the role of drugs in deprived and marginalised communities.’ There were left wing and right-wing versions of both, but the fact remained that in terms of public perception, addiction was seen as the primary cause of child poverty, and it was likely that this was where the focus would be in the run-up to the next election.

‘UK drug policy is in many ways a success, and at a time when we’re asking people to invest in it, it’s important to focus on that,’ he stressed. ‘Discourses around winning and losing the “war on drugs” are not helpful. What happens next is partly dependent on what we say and do.’

Another issue that would be in the news ‘a hell of a lot’ before the election was immigration, said CEO of the Refugee and Migrant Forum of Essex and London (RAMFEL), Rita Chadha. Although access to treatment was a vital issue for her clients there were significant barriers, including difficulties with language and registering with GPs, fear of the authorities, and stigma, something that was also an acute issue with people involved the commercial sex trade, said team manager at Blenheim CDP, Maggie Boreham. ‘What biases do we as practitioners hold?’ she said. ‘Do we know how to ask the right questions? What training do we need for our staff?’

‘Many staff assume that a “white middle-class” culture is neutral, and appears nice and friendly to everyone,’ echoed strategic director for addiction and offender care at CNWL NHS Foundation Trust, Annette Dale-Perera. ‘It isn’t. We need to match services to local needs, so you’ll need “teams within teams”, and local needs assessments are particularly important – if you don’t look you won’t see.’ Stigma and ‘nimbyism’ were the risks that went alongside the opportunities presented by the localism agenda in a climate of ever falling per capita spend on health and social care.

‘One of the things we’ve rather belatedly realised is that the way the state is structured – centralised, in silos – isn’t designed to respond well to complex issues like people with multiple needs,’ said associate director for public service reform at IPPR, Rick Muir. ‘We need to end this fragmentation, and we need to ask people what they want – what will enable them to lead the lives they want to lead.’

Drug use was about three or four times higher in the LGB population, said Alastair Roy of the University of Central Lancashire, partly associated with ‘significant self-esteem issues’ but also changing patterns of use linked to ‘chem sex’ and injecting. ‘Localism might be the name of the game in drug treatment now, but these agendas only move forward with national leadership,’ he said.

‘We need a model that better understands and mobilises the social resources available to us in the community,’ said the RSA’s director of research, Steve Broome. This could mean more diverse partnerships or more co-commissioning, he said, as substance use was a ‘collective, social inclusion’ issue, with the ‘constant cycle of re-commissioning arguably not helpful in this respect’. More investment was also needed in mental health, he stressed, where the gap between rhetoric and reality was ‘shockingly large’.

‘If you can’t ensure that the most vulnerable and marginalised are going to be looked after, is the cost of localism to society too high?’ asked Karen Biggs of Phoenix Futures. ‘Decision making at a local level is generally better than a state, monolithic model,’ said Rupert Oldham-Reid of the Centre for Social Justice, ‘but marginalised groups tend to be less good at advocating for themselves. A statutory requirement for recovery champions on local health and wellbeing boards could be one answer’.

‘We have a world-class treatment system and a lot to be proud of,’ Marcus Roberts told the event’s closing session. ‘But we also have a lot to do and a lot to build.’  

Label calories on drinks, says health body

Calorie labelling should be introduced for alcoholic drinks, according to the Royal Society for Public Health (RSPH). More than 80 per cent of the public did not know – or incorrectly estimated – the amount of calories in a large glass of wine, says RSPH, while for a pint of lager the figure was almost 90 per cent.

While alcohol is currently exempt from EU food labelling legislation, the European Commission is to decide on whether to extend nutrition labelling, including information on calories, to alcoholic products. The RSPH is calling on both the EU health commissioner and the drinks industry to introduce calorie labelling, and says its research shows that 67 per cent of the public would support the move.

‘Calorie labelling has been successfully introduced for a wide range of food products and there is now a clear public appetite for this information to be extended to alcohol to help individuals make informed choices,’ said RSPH chief executive Shirley Cramer. ‘With two in three adults overweight or obese, and given that adults who drink get approximately 10 per cent of their calories from alcohol, this move could make a major difference to waistlines of the nation. While we continue to back unit labelling for alcoholic drinks, we believe that many people find calorie labelling easier to translate into their everyday lives.’

‘Toughness’ of drug laws no deterrent, says Home Office

There is ‘no apparent correlation’ between the toughness of a country’s approach to drugs and levels of use, according to a Home Office study of international drugs policies.

Drugs: international comparators reviewed different approaches ‘in policymaking and on the ground’ based on a series of fact-finding missions between May 2013 and March this year. Ministers and Home Office officials visited Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Japan, New Zealand, Portugal, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, the US and Uruguay, looking at issues including decriminalisation of possession for personal use, consumption rooms, heroin-assisted treatment, drug courts and supply-side regulation of cannabis.

‘Without exception, every country we considered sees drug use as undesirable,’ says the document, and while all were ‘taking steps to disrupt, reduce, or regulate supply’ there was a ‘variety of responses to the individual user’. In terms of the effectiveness of drug laws, researchers studied Portugal, which removed criminal sanctions for personal use in 2001, and the Czech Republic, where possession of small quantities is treated as an administrative offence punishable with a fine. They also looked at Japan, which operates a ‘zero tolerance’ policy with possession of even small amounts of drugs attracting lengthy prison sentences, and Sweden, whose approach to possession ‘has grown stricter over several decades’.

‘While levels of drug use in Portugal appear to be relatively low, reported levels of cannabis use in the Czech Republic are among the highest in Europe,’ says the report. ‘Indicators of levels of drug use in Sweden, which has one of the toughest approaches we saw, point to relatively low levels of use, but not markedly lower than countries with different approaches.’

The report discusses evidence of ‘improved health prospects’ for drug users in Portugal, with the caveat that these ‘cannot be attributed to decriminalisation alone’ and adds that it is unclear whether decriminalisation ‘reduces the burden on the police’. The country has, however, reduced the proportion of drug-related offenders in its prison population, says the report.

The document acknowledges that ‘what works in one country may not be appropriate in another’, with ‘the legislative and enforcement approach’ only one strand of a country’s response. It also stresses that there is ‘robust evidence that drug use among adults has been on a downward trend in England and Wales since the mid-2000s’ and that the UK’s ‘balanced approach enables targeted demand-reduction activity, and good availability and quality of treatment. Indeed, while in Portugal, we were encouraged to hear that drug treatment in the UK is well-regarded internationally.’

In terms of supply-side regulation of cannabis the document states that the policies in Uruguay and the US are ‘highly experimental’, with no evidence so far to ‘indicate whether or not they will be successful’ in reducing criminality.

‘The differences between the approach other countries have taken illustrate the complexity of the challenge, and demonstrate why we cannot simply adopt another country’s approach wholesale,’ said crime prevention minister Norman Baker. ‘The UK’s approach on drugs remains clear: we must prevent drug use in our communities, help dependent individuals through treatment and wider recovery support, while ensuring law enforcement protects society by stopping the supply and tackling the organised crime that is associated with the drugs trade.’ Publication of the report saw Baker accuse Conservative colleagues of ‘suppressing’ the document, which had been ready for a number of months. Less than a week later he resigned, and has been replaced by Lynne Featherstone.

The Home Office has also published the findings of its expert panel study of new psychoactive substances (NPS), and the government’s response which includes plans for a blanket ban similar to that introduced in Ireland in 2010, improved training for NHS staff and new PHE guidance for local authorities on integrating NPS into treatment, education and prevention work.

Drugs: international comparators; New psychoactive substances in England: a review of the evidence, and government response at www.gov.uk

Half of those living with hep C unaware of their condition

Around half of people living with hepatitis C infections are unaware that they have the virus, according to a new Public Health England (PHE) report. Nearly 14,000 hepatitis C infections were diagnosed in the UK last year, around 90 per cent of which were acquired through injecting drug use, says Shooting up: infections among people who inject drugs in the United Kingdom 2013.

Around two in five people who inject psychoactive drugs are now living with hepatitis C, says PHE, with half of the infections remaining undiagnosed, while about one in 30 of those who inject image and performance-enhancing drugs are also living with the virus. Interventions to reduce infections and diagnose them earlier need to be expanded, the agency stresses, with vaccinations and diagnostic tests ‘routinely offered’ to people who inject drugs and treatment made available to anyone testing positive.

Although reported rates of needle and syringe sharing have halved over the last decade, around one in seven people injecting psychoactive drugs still share needles and syringes and ‘almost one in three had injected with a used needle that they had attempted to clean’, says the document, with recent increases in the injection of drugs such as amphetamines and mephedrone also ‘cause for concern’.

‘With around half of those people living with hepatitis C still unaware of their infection, we need to do more to increase diagnosis rates,’ said PHE infections expert Dr Vivian Hope. ‘Ultimately, this will help reduce the current high level of infection we’re still seeing among people who inject drugs. Obtaining blood from people living with hepatitis C who inject drugs can be difficult due to poor venous access. Dry blood spot testing is an alternative method that avoids puncturing veins, and which has been proven to be reliable and simple, and acceptable to both people who inject drugs and drug service staff.’

There are now almost 110,000 people living with HIV in the UK, according to another PHE report, although the number of people being diagnosed with a late stage of infection has fallen from 57 per cent to 42 per cent in the last decade.

Shooting up: infections among people who inject drugs in the United Kingdom 2013, and HIV in the United Kingdom: 2014 report at www.gov.uk

ACMD rejects time-limited substitution treatments

Time limits on heroin substitution treatment such as methadone would ‘not benefit’ drug users’ recovery and would increase the possibility of relapse, according to a new report from the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD).

Imposing a time limit could also lead to other ‘significant unintended consequences’, it says, such as increased rates of overdose, blood-borne viruses and drug-related crime. The ACMD had been asked to consider whether there was a case for a maximum time limit by the Inter-Ministerial Group on Drugs.

Although there are no recommended time frames for OST maintenance in UK clinical guidelines, the issue of people being ‘parked’ on methadone has long been a controversial one. The report, however, found that while a ‘small minority’ of 10-15 per cent of service users received OST for five years or more, a larger minority ‘may not be in OST long enough to derive long-term benefit’. OST use is ‘episodic and relatively short’ for the majority of people, it says, with nearly 40 per cent stopping within six months. ‘The “being parked” analogy may not be correct,’ states the document. ‘Most people get out of the car and walk away.’

However, it was unhelpful to ‘focus on the medication alone’, stresses the report, with ‘concomitant psychosocial interventions and recovery support’ vital. OST should be seen as a ‘stepping stone’ on a path to overcoming dependency, said ACMD chair Professor Sir Les Iversen.

‘All the evidence suggests restricting access to OST leads to an increased risk of people relapsing, turning to crime to fuel their habits – and even dying from an overdose,’ said co-chair of the ACMD’s recovery committee, Annette Dale-Perera. ‘However, it is important to remember that medication alone will not lead to a successful recovery. OST should be delivered alongside therapy designed to change behaviour, as well as recovery interventions, to help people tackle their addiction and rebuild their lives.’

The findings were welcomed by DrugScope. ‘The notion that somebody who has been in the grip of a serious drug dependency for many years could be successfully treated to an artificial timetable has always been deeply flawed,’ said chief executive Marcus Roberts. ‘It also goes against the widely held consensus in the drug treatment and rehabilitation field that recovery should be self-determined as it is in mental health.’ However, his organisation remained concerned by anecdotal reports that some local commissioners ‘may be indicating their preference for time-limited solutions in the tendering process’, he said, adding that DrugScope would be ‘monitoring’ the situation.

The Home Office has also announced that it has accepted the ACMD’s advice to control the new psychoactive substances 4,4’-DMAR – known as ‘serotoni’ – and MT-45 as class A substances, following concerns about their safety. 

Time limiting opioid substitution therapy at www.gov.uk

News in brief

Opium increase

Opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan rose by 7 per cent to more than 220,000 hectares in 2013, according to UNODC figures, with opium production this year potentially up by 17 per cent and prices falling as a result. ‘We cannot afford to see the long-term stability of Afghanistan – and the wider region – derailed by the threat of opiates,’ said UNODC chief executive Yury Fedotov.

2014 Afghanistan opium survey at www.unodc.or

Naloxone alert

A patient safety alert on the use of naloxone has been issued by NHS England, where the drug is used to provide pain relief following surgery. There is a ‘risk of distress and death from inappropriate doses of naloxone in patients on long-term opioid/opiate treatment’ says the warning, with the NHS receiving details of three patient safety incidents – two fatal – resulting from failure to follow British National Formulary (BNF) guidelines.

More information at www.england.nhs.uk/2014/11/20/psa-naloxone

On the radar

Greater Manchester West Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust’s RADAR (Rapid Access to Alcohol Detoxification Acute Referral) service has been named non-age specific psychiatric team of the year by the Royal College of Psychiatrists. The service takes referrals from 11 acute hospitals, with a 97 per cent successful detox rate on its eight-bed ward. ‘Our RADAR ward is the first of its kind in the country and we are hugely proud of the service and the exceptional team who run it,’ said the trust’s director of nursing and operations, Gill Green. 

Carer questions

A ten-minute survey on professional training and development and the needs of carers has been launched as part of the Recovery Partnership/Alcohol Concern review of alcohol services.

The survey can be found at https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/XRPWR3J until the start of next year. 

Online anxiety

A new online learning tool on anxiety disorders has been launched by NICE, aimed at drug and alcohol teams, mental health professionals and GPs.

Available free at elearning.nice.org.uk

Costing it out

A new online survey on drug prices and drug spending has been launched by 3D Research. British adults who’ve used cannabis or other illegal drugs in the last year are invited to take part, with all responses completely anonymous and confidential.

Survey at www.surveymonkey.com/S/UK_DrugCosts_2014

NICE nalmefene

NICE has published its formal guidance recommending nalmefene, a drug that helps reduce cravings for alcohol in heavy drinkers (DDN, November, page 4). The drug, also called Selincro, is now available on prescription. ‘We are pleased to be able to recommend the use of nalmefene to support people further in their efforts to fight alcohol dependence,’ said director of NICE’s health technology evaluation centre, Professor Carole Longson.

Recovery cash

PHE has announced £10m of capital funding for recovery-focused services, with providers and local authorities invited to apply for a share of the pot. ‘An outstanding range of exciting and innovative recovery-focused projects received funding last year,’ said PHE’s director of alcohol, drugs and tobacco Rosanna O’Connor. As DDN went to press PHE released a new report, Drug treatment in England 2013-14, which showed drug recovery rates were slowing and that ‘there is a continuing need for increasingly tailored approaches to support a range of complex needs,’ said O’Connor.

Nitrous notes

New guidelines detailing the enforcement options regarding nitrous oxide have been issued by the Home Office. Aimed at local authorities and police, Guidance on restricting the supply of nitrous oxide for recreational use lists the uses and risks of the substance alongside the different legislative options.

Document at www.gov.uk 

SMART move

Former Alcohol Research UK chair, Professor Robin Davidson, has been appointed interim chair of UK SMART Recovery, formerly SMART Recovery UK. ‘I’m pleased to report that it is business as usual,’ said Davidson of the name change. ‘UK SMART Recovery remains extremely grateful to the partners, volunteers, and staff for their continued support and commitment. People who have benefited from the programme will continue to benefit from unhindered access to SMART meetings and services as this transition is being implemented.’

December 2014

Dec14In this month’s issue of DDN…

‘Alcohol misuse has been an inescapable way of life for many who have served in the armed forces… The levels of alcohol use and misuse during military service often increase when personnel return to civilian life, amplifying its negative effects both for men and women,’ says Jacquie Johnston-Lynch in this month’s DDN. She talks to the magazine about how Tom Harrison House is meeting the challenge of supporting veterans in treatment.

Click on the links below to read more, and don’t forget to join the discussion by commenting, tweeting and liking our Facebook page.

PDF Version / Mobile Version

 

ACMD rejects time-limited substitution therapy

Time limits on heroin substitution treatment such as methadone would ‘not benefit’ drug users’ recovery and would increase the possibility of relapse, according to a new report from the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD).

Imposing a time limit could also lead to other ‘significant unintended consequences’, it says, such as increased rates of overdose, blood-borne viruses and drug-related crime. The ACMD had been asked to consider whether there was a case for a maximum time limit by the Inter-Ministerial Group on Drugs.

Although there are no recommended time frames for OST maintenance in UK clinical guidelines, the issue of people being ‘parked’ on methadone has long been a controversial one. The report, however, found that while a ‘small minority’ of 10-15 per cent of service users received OST for five years or more, a larger minority ‘may not be in OST long enough to derive long-term benefit’. OST use is ‘episodic and relatively short’ for the majority of people, it says, with nearly 40 per cent stopping within six months. ‘The “being parked” analogy may not be correct,’ states the document. ‘Most people get out of the car and walk away.’

However, it was unhelpful to ‘focus on the medication alone’, stresses the report, with ‘concomitant psychosocial interventions and recovery support’ vital. OST should be seen as a ‘stepping stone’ on a path to overcoming dependency, said ACMD chair Professor Sir Les Iversen.

‘All the evidence suggests restricting access to OST leads to an increased risk of people relapsing, turning to crime to fuel their habits – and even dying from an overdose,’ said co-chair of the ACMD’s Recovery Committee, Annette Dale-Perera. ‘However, it is important to remember that medication alone will not lead to a successful recovery. OST should be delivered alongside therapy designed to change behaviour, as well as recovery interventions, to help people tackle their addiction and rebuild their lives.’

The findings were welcomed by DrugScope. ‘The notion that somebody who has been in the grip of a serious drug dependency for many years could be successfully treated to an artificial timetable has always been deeply flawed,’ said chief executive Marcus Roberts. ‘It also goes against the widely held consensus in the drug treatment and rehabilitation field that recovery should be self-determined as it is in mental health.’

However, his organisation remained concerned by anecdotal reports that some local commissioners ‘may be indicating their preference for time-limited solutions in the tendering process’, he said, adding that DrugScope would be ‘monitoring’ the situation.

Time limiting opioid substitution therapy at www.gov.uk

Half of those living with hep C unaware

Around half of people living with hepatitis C infections are unaware that they have the virus, according to a new Public Health England (PHE) report. Nearly 14,000 hepatitis C infections were diagnosed in the UK last year, around 90 per cent of which were acquired through injecting drug use, says Shooting up: infections among people who inject drugs in the United Kingdom 2013.

Around two in five people who inject psychoactive drugs are now living with hepatitis C, says PHE, with half of the infections remaining undiagnosed, while about one in 30 of those who inject image and performance-enhancing drugs are also living with the virus. Interventions to reduce infections and diagnose them earlier need to be expanded, the agency stresses, with vaccinations and diagnostic tests ‘routinely offered’ to people who inject drugs and treatment made available to those testing positive.

Although reported rates of needle and syringe sharing have halved over the last decade, around one in seven people injecting psychoactive drugs still share needles and syringes and ‘almost one in three had injected with a used needle that they had attempted to clean’, says the document, with recent increases in the injection of drugs such as amphetamines and mephedrone also ‘cause for concern’.

‘With around half of those people living with hepatitis C still unaware of their infection, we need to do more to increase diagnosis rates,’ said PHE infections expert Dr Vivian Hope. ‘Ultimately, this will help reduce the current high level of infection we’re still seeing among people who inject drugs. Obtaining blood from people living with hepatitis C who inject drugs can be difficult due to poor venous access. Dry blood spot testing is an alternative method that avoids puncturing veins, and which has been proven to be reliable and simple, and acceptable to both people who inject drugs and drug service staff.’

Report at www.gov.uk

 

The Challenge: getting it right for everybody

Conference

The 8th DDN national service user involvement conference

19 February 2015 – Second City Suite, Birmingham

We’re under no illusions that service user involvement is meeting its toughest challenge yet. The DDN conference will bring together inspiration and ideas from all over the country to debate what’s happening, put forward ideas on surviving and thriving, and gain strength from networking.

Our programme covers meaningful activism, building social capital, the naloxone campaign, alcohol support, tackling BBVs, skills sharing, messages for politicians, practical service user involvement at all levels, therapy zones, and a lot of interaction and debate.

To view the provisional programme, click here.

You can book your tickets by filling out the online booking form. If you book before 25 December 2014, you’ll also be entered into a prize draw to win £50 of Amazon vouchers!

For information on exhibiting or sponsorship packages, please call Ian on 01233 636 188 or email ian@cjwellings.com.

 

 

The Challenge interest form

[contact-form-7 id=”9602″ title=”8th DDN national service user interest form”]

Put calories on drinks labels, says public health body

Calorie labelling should be introduced for alcoholic drinks, according to the Royal Society for Public Health (RSPH). More than 80 per cent of the public did not know – or incorrectly estimated – the amount of calories in a large glass of wine, says RSPH, while for a pint of lager the figure was almost 90 per cent. 

While alcohol is currently exempt from EU food labelling legislation, the European Commission is to make a decision next month on whether to extend nutrition labelling, including information on calories, to alcoholic products. The RSPH is calling on both the EU health commissioner and the drinks industry to introduce calorie labelling, and says its research shows that 67 per cent of the public would support the move.

‘Calorie labelling has been successfully introduced for a wide range of food products and there is now a clear public appetite for this information to be extended to alcohol to help individuals make informed choices,’ said RSPH chief executive Shirley Cramer. ‘With two in three adults overweight or obese, and given that adults who drink get approximately 10 per cent of their calories from alcohol, this move could make a major difference to waistlines of the nation. While we continue to back unit labelling for alcoholic drinks, we believe that many people find calorie labelling easier to translate into their everyday lives.’

November 2014


Screen shot 2014-11-03 at 16.29.17In this month’s issue of DDN…

‘Patterns of use are changing’, ‘lack of funding will have a massive impact’, ‘we’ve got conflicting priorities’, ‘society doesn’t take addiction seriously’, ‘things can only get better!’ – these are just some of the opinions contributed for this month’s special issue to mark DDN’s ten-year anniversary.
 
What has the past decade meant to you and your role? What do you see as the most significant changes to the sector – and what will happen next? Join the discussion by commenting, tweeting and liking our  Facebook page. . . and please fill in our new reader survey – we’d love to hear from you!

PDF Version / Mobile Version

 

Media savvy

Who’s been saying what?

The state can only do so much. Most of us aren’t alcoholics. We just drink too much. With every drink, we make a decision. We need to make different decisions. But the state can shape attitudes and it can legitimately do so, citing the costs and losses that result when it does little or nothing. The state can do more without being accused of nannying. And it should.

Hugh Muir, Guardian, 3 October

How unrealistic of NICE – the body that decides which life-saving drugs the NHS can afford – to suggest anyone who drinks more than two large glasses of wine a day should be prescribed a pill costing £3 on the NHS by their family doctor… NICE needs to be disbanded – it’s not fit for purpose.

Janet Street Porter, Mail, 6 October

Our collective consumption has come under fire from NICE (possibly the most exasperatingly contradictory acronym ever coined). This august body, which normally preoccupies itself with the illogical restriction of lifesaving cancer drugs, has decided to interfere with our right to a family life that’s pleasingly fuzzy.

Judith Woods, Telegraph, 4 October

Macmillan’s Sober October campaign seems to have been brewed on the very idea that not drinking should be some publicly declared, universally admired, valiantly fought battle. Something to scream from the social media rooftops and compensate with sponsorship… We have become so used to drinking, eating, buying and downloading ourselves into a state of milky infant satiation that we have started to see self-restraint as something worth writing home (on Facebook, Twitter, email circulars) about.

Nell Frizzell, Guardian, 1 October

Given the percentages, it follows that everyone knows someone who has taken drugs. And the chances are that most of us know someone who acknowledges that they’ve had problems with drugs. In addition, it’s not unlikely that we’ve fallen victim to a crime committed by an addict funding his or her habit. The point is that drugs cannot be safely categorised as a niche activity or a passing fad. They are as much part of modern life as food banks or farmers’ markets.

Andrew Anthony, Observer, 5 October 

A long and expensive international PR campaign has fooled a willing elite (many of them drug abusers themselves) into believing that cannabis is safe when in fact it is one of the most dangerous drugs there is. So we shut our minds to all the evidence of the terrible harm it can do – even highly publicised killings by cannabis abusers.

Peter Hitchens, Mail on Sunday, 26 October

Colombians would dispute the claim that [Stephen] Fry repeated on Newsnight: that, with cocaine consumption, ‘I’m the only person I hurt’. For them, a long line, more of blood than of powder, links the smallholdings of Cauca or Antioquia to the toilets of Soho clubs. Cocaine-driven conflict in Colombia has cost 220,000 lives. The same upheavals displaced about 4.5m people from their homes… Self-righteous spliff-puffers who believe that their beloved herb stands on higher moral ground than cocaine should know about the Vietnamese children trafficked into Britain to work as slaves on cannabis farms.

Boyd Tonkin, Independent, 3 October

All in a day’s work – DDN 10 year special

Many things have changed over the last decade for the DDN team – staff, premises, and even the introduction of canine office mascots. But after ten years, everything still comes together on the magazine’s press day.

Screen shot 2014-11-03 at 14.45.54

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 It’s half past eight in the morning on the last Thursday of the month – the lights go up, the kettle goes on, and things are kicking off for another DDN press day. 

Throughout the last month, the team has been pulling together the different strands of the magazine, all the while juggling a number of other projects – some related to DDN, and some completely distinct from it. 

Claire, Kayleigh and David have been working on the editorial features, Ian and Annie have been pinning down advertising leads, and Jez has started the designing process for the upcoming issue. 

Today is the culmination of all of this effort – but there’s still plenty of work to be done. Jez prints out the features he has already created on Quark Xpress, and David gets to work proofing them for grammar, factual errors and anything else that is out of place. 

Claire uses the morning to read and edit any editorial that has come in past the deadline, as well as summarising her thoughts on this month’s issue for her editor’s letter. There is always some zero-hour fact to be checked or author headshot to be chased in – and Kayleigh’s morning is usually spent tying up loose ends. 

Meanwhile, Annie updates the mailing list – removing addresses that no longer need the magazine, and adding new subscribers. After ten years, DDN is still a free, self-funded publication, but we do ask that organisations pass copies around and share the magazine to help us keep costs down.

When Jez isn’t creating editorial pages, he and Ian work together to set adverts, so that our advertisers can see a proof before we publish the magazine – we want to offer everyone who advertises with DDN the best customer care we can provide.

Lunchtime arrives, and we’ve still got a long afternoon ahead of us – what’s on the menu can make or break the day. Publishing pups Ziggy and Bella go for a much-needed run (they’ve had an exhausting day of supervising the office, after all) and owners Claire and Ian pick up the team lunch order from the local sandwich shop on their way back. The team dig in to well-deserved sandwiches – the only quiet part of the entire day.

The afternoon rolls on, and Jez prints out the last few pages of the magazine to be proofread by David. Kayleigh is the next in line for the proofing process, making any changes that need to be made to each article, and giving them a second read-through.

Amendments to adverts are made – occasionally we get a last minute booking that we weren’t expecting, which is always a good problem to have. Ian creates an ad list for every issue, so that he knows what advert will go on what page. He works with Claire to decide what size each issue will be, depending on how much advertising we get and how much editorial there is, and finally Claire creates a flatplan for each person to work from.  

We’ve always been a small team, so press days usually entail a fair bit of multi-tasking for everyone. No hands are left idle, and it’s important that we keep our channels of communication open so that, even with several plates spinning at the same time, no mistakes are made. 

When all the editorial pages have been proofed and corrected, Claire has her final check through them before she signs off the editorial – Jez can then prepare them to be sent to our printers.

The day draws to a close, and the DDN team breathe a sigh of relief… until the next morning anyway, when the advert pages of the magazine are also finalised and prepared to be printed. Ian will take adverts right up until the end of the day – we depend on advertising to fund every issue, so every advert counts. Our accounts whizz Chrissie will then create invoices for all of our advertising clients, and get them out of the door with a hard copy of the magazine. 

In the afternoon, Annie makes recruitment and tender adverts live on the website – being featured online is part of the package when someone buys a print advert. Kayleigh prepares the editorial features to go up on the DDN website after the weekend – along with the virtual magazine – just in time for when the printed magazine will start landing on the desks of our faithful readers.

And just as you’re opening up your latest issue, we start thinking about the next.  

Let us know what you want from your magazine! 

Visit www.drinkanddrugsnews.com to complete our readers’ survey – and for your chance to win a £50 Amazon voucher.

Back in the day – DDN 10 year special

Three sector stalwarts, who were there at the start, look back at the birth of DDN 

Screen shot 2014-11-03 at 14.33.06When they threw everything into DDN I thought they’d taken leave of their senses, says Simon Shepherd

Back in the early summer of 2004, as director of FDAP, I’d agreed to meet two people from a public health magazine to discuss the idea of a special issue on substance misuse. We were due to meet in a hotel in Brighton, where I was based and they were covering a conference, but I couldn’t find them (it turns out they’d been just around the corner!). It was a lovely day and on the way back to the office I stopped for lunch by the beach. While I waited, they called and asked if they could join me there. I agreed but it soon became clear their company wanted money for their special issue, and that was never going to happen! 

As I got up to leave, they asked if I thought that there was a case for a regular magazine specifically about substance misuse and distributed free across the field. I sat down again. A couple of hours later we’d sketched out the bones of what it might look like, we’d even thought of a name, Drink and Drugs News, but in truth I couldn’t see how they’d make it work and didn’t really expect to hear from them again. 

When Claire and Ian called to say they’d decided to quit their jobs and throw everything into DDN I thought they had taken leave of their senses – but they were convinced they could make it work, and I agreed to help. 

Although we held regular meetings over the summer, I was astonished, when the first issue came out, by the magazine’s overall quality and the range of issues it covered. It’s amazing to think that all that was ten years ago now and, given the challenges they faced, that the magazine has not only survived but thrived in that time.

It’s hard to over-state the impact that DDN has had. While the Labour government set up the NTA in 2001 and committed significant funding to treatment, there really wasn’t much of a field back then. The sector was riven between two seemingly intractable camps, those committed to harm minimisation on one side, and the abstinence-based camp on the other, and there was little sense of substance misuse work as a profession. 

While I am not pretending that all is now rosy in the garden, there is a clear sense of the sector as a profession, and a shared identity which extends across the field as a whole. They obviously didn’t do it alone – I’d like to think, for instance, that FDAP played at least a small part itself – but DDN’s very existence, its comprehensive coverage of all aspects of substance misuse treatment, its commitment to editorial neutrality and the evidence base, and the outstanding quality of its writing, have all played a huge role. 

The success of DDN is of course all down to Claire and Ian, but I am glad we did eventually meet that day, or perhaps it would never have happened… 

Simon Shepherd, former chief executive of FDAP (now chief executive of The Butler Trust)

 

Screen shot 2014-11-03 at 14.33.17DDN started at a time of change, remembers Dr Chris Ford 

I can’t believe that DDN has been around for a decade – and haven’t they done a good job! I first met Claire at a conference just before publication of the first edition of DDN. We got talking and I instantly liked her. I was amazed that she hadn’t worked in this area before but she seemed to get it and there was born a great ongoing relationship, both with Claire and then the rest of the team. 

DDN started at a time of change and the magazine always kept us abreast of the changes. They always tried to present all sides of the argument, even at times when I wished they would be more biased! It was really exciting times for treatment in general practice (with the number of GPs involved in care of people who use drugs rising from below 1 per cent in 1994 to over 32 per cent of practices in 2012. This change was helped by the birth of SMMGP in 1995 (a network to specifically support primary care practitioners when there was nothing), our annual conference now in its 20th year, and RCGP training courses.

Claire and the team have always been a ‘can do’ lot – as a 90-year-old once told me ‘no such thing as can’t, you just take the ‘t’ off!’ So when I suggested a column about treating people in general practice called ‘Post-its from practice’, they were up for it. Then when the Alliance wanted to get to more people, the joint service user involvement conference was born, and is now in its eighth year. 

Although often uphill, everything seemed to be advancing until a government change, bringing with it a philosophy change. Recovery, as with any positive change and self-defined journey, is wonderful and we have always promoted that. But contracting services that provide ‘one size fits all’ and dramatically cutting budgets is not congenial to person-centred care, which for me is the only way possible. Set that in a climate of destroying the NHS and general practice, increasing privatisation of all treatments and the madness of constant re-tendering, and it feels a difficult time at the moment.

But I’m an optimist and there are so many amazing people both using and working in the sector I feel confident that things will again improve.

Thank you DDN for being there!

Dr Chris Ford, retired GP and clinical director of IDHDP

 

Screen shot 2014-11-03 at 14.33.24A letter from Prof David Clark, author of our hugely popular series of Background Briefings

Dear Claire and Ian,

Firstly, a huge congratulations for DDN’s tenth birthday! Can you fly me back for cake and champers?

Do you remember approaching Simon Shepherd (FDAP) and me (WIRED) all those years ago and asking whether we thought the DDN concept would work? Our answer was brief – ‘Yes!’ – and our enthusiasm obvious. Not that you needed much encouragement. You saw a niche and have taken DDN to where it is today.  

 I’d started WIRED (later Wired In) as a way of empowering people to overcome substance use problems at the end of the millennium. I left a successful 25-year neuroscience career and started working with real people. 

I knew that quality information and education was key to helping people recover and to improving addiction treatment. I knew that we needed to create hope and connect people.

 My colleagues and I started the news portal Daily Dose in 2001 and over the years a variety of other Wired In community based initiatives – personal stories, research, an online recovery community (Wired In To Recovery). Sadly, we always struggled for funding, so were limited in what we could achieve. Mind you, I’m very proud of what the Wired In team (Lucie, Kev, Sarah and Ash) achieved. 

One of my favourite activities was writing an educational column, Background Briefings, for DDN. It was fun and stimulating. I still remember Claire’s calls saying the deadline was an hour away! I was touched by the amount of positive feedback I received and still have each briefing in my study drawer.

Gosh, we had some good times then, didn’t we Claire and Ian? You were a very stimulating duet to work with… but I sometimes had to watch my health in the evening!

When I look back, the real highlight for me during this time was seeing people recover from their addiction. Their joy and gratitude was beautiful! So many of these people overcame great adversity… and then went on to help other people. Amazing!

They were exciting times and I feel really proud being part of that early recovery advocacy movement in the UK. Mind you, they were tough times as well, because there was shit flying around. The addiction care system is very resistant to change, in part because of vested interests. Ironic really, when people working in and overseeing the system were being paid to help people with addiction problems change their behaviour!   

For those of you wondering what I am doing now, I took early retirement from Swansea University in 2006 and moved to Perth, Australia in 2008. Last year, I started Recovery Stories (www.recoverystories.info) and Sharing Culture (www.sharingculture.info). The latter is focused on helping indigenous people in Australia (and further afield) overcome historical trauma and its consequences.

I am very excited by this latter project. It will be my toughest challenge, but I know that my close colleague, filmmaker Michael Liu, and I can make something happen if we can attract funding. I am appalled at the way that indigenous people in Australia are treated – and what they still go through – and I am very determined to help make a difference. They are beautiful people and their culture special. 

Maybe I can do another DDN Background Briefing one day?

Professor David Clark’s Background Briefings are available in our back issues in the magazine archive.

The main man

Paul HayesOne of the key figures in the story of drug treatment in England, ex-NTA head Paul Hayes talks to David Gilliver for DDN’s tenth anniversary issue. 

Paul Hayes was chief executive of the NTA from its inception in 2001 until the agency’s functions were taken over by Public Health England last year. He now works with a range of voluntary sector organisations including DISC, the Cyrenians and Family Action and is an honorary professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. 

Prior to the NTA he’d worked in the probation sector for almost 30 years, and was chief executive of the South East London Probation Service when he was asked to put himself forward to be chief executive of the new organisation. 

What attracted you to the NTA job?

‘There are two aspects. I’d led on drug and alcohol policy for the Association of Chief Officers of Probation for a number of years and I was working in Southwark when the first heroin epidemic hit, so I was acutely aware of the change in the environment – it was an issue that I was confronted with on a daily basis.

I was given a job developing drug policy for the probation service in London, and then when I became a chief I was given the national brief, so I’d worked in drug policy for many years before the NTA was created, and it was put to me that this might be a good thing for me to do. On a less positive note, the probation service was being restructured at the time and my job was being abolished, so in personal terms it wasn’t much of an ask – it was either the NTA or the dole.’ 

The NTA improved access, cut waiting times, oversaw reductions in drug-related deaths. How big was the difference it made to treatment in this country? 

‘Immense, absolutely immense – I firmly believe that. If you go back to the Audit Commission’s 2002 report, Changing habits, it describes the treatment system before the NTA was created. People waiting months, very early drop out, and what you got was what that particular service believed in – one of the things that report talks about is inconsistency in treatment and how it’s belief-driven rather than evidence-driven. But the most important thing really wasn’t the NTA, it was the money. 

The Blair government chose to invest an awful lot of money in drug treatment. Central government spend went up from £50m a year to about £400m – that was the direct spend, the criminal justice money was on top of that – and the real reason for the creation of the NTA was that Jack Straw, who was home secretary, basically didn’t trust Alan Milburn, who was health secretary, to spend the money on drugs if it was just given to DH. They wanted a new outfit to ride shotgun on it, so they created a quango jointly owned by DH and the Home Office primarily to oversee the money. 

We then decided to take on a best practice, performance management, commissioning oversight role to achieve that, but that wasn’t set in stone and it was actually very difficult to achieve, because we cut across a lot of the pre-existing assumptions about how things should operate, within both health and the criminal justice system. We had to fight quite a lot of Whitehall battles, battles with the health bureaucracy and the criminal justice system and local authorities, in order to create that space. But a lot of that comes back to the money. If you’re dangling cash around you’re given an awful lot more licence than if you’re not – “we want you to do all this new stuff, by the way here’s 400m quid to do it”. That makes life a lot easier.

So the performance management stuff was important, the leadership stuff was important, identifying best practice was important. But without the money, and the government’s commitment to spend the money – Gordon Brown’s money, Tony Blair’s leadership – we wouldn’t have got anywhere.’ 

Do you think Tony Blair’s contribution is something that’s acknowledged?  

‘Everybody hates Blair, but I think there may be different views in a different generation. From my point of view, leaving foreign policy aside and just focusing on drugs, the drug treatment sector does owe Blair a great debt – the central direction we got, particularly as a cross-cutting issue. Drugs wasn’t important enough to any one of the government silos to actually deliver it. It wasn’t important to DH, which is why Norman Baker’s call for drug policy to go to health would be a mistake, in my view – it doesn’t kill enough people and it doesn’t make enough people sick. As far as they’re concerned, drugs is very small beer, and it’s smaller now because it’s largely been capped off. It’s nowhere near as significant as tobacco, obesity, alcohol, cancer, dementia – if you’re running the NHS, how much attention are you going to pay to drugs? 

If you’re running the Home Office you’re rather more interested because of the drugs/crime link, but it’s still not top of your list of priorities – it’s one thing among many. If you’re interested in welfare dependency then it plays a role, but unless you’re Iain Duncan Smith it isn’t going to be near the top of your list of priorities either. So it matters at about the 5 per cent level to about half a dozen different departments, but not enough to any of them to really give it some oomph. The only point in our system where cross-cutting issues really come to matter is at the centre of government – at No.10 – because that’s the only place where they have to own all these different 5 and 10 per cents that stack up to being a real issue. 

So you needed not only the money, but a government that was structured to drive things from No.10, and that was how Blair did stuff. Obviously all of that – targets, performance management – became deeply unfashionable, and I think it’s very interesting that Nick Clegg is now saying he’s taking mental health seriously because he’s imposing targets on the system. The Lib Dems and the Tories spent years castigating the previous Labour government for too much focus on targets and bureaucracy, so I think it’s very interesting that they’re now learning – as most governments do – that localism and absence of central direction is a great theoretical prospect in opposition but it’s no way to run a government.’ 

Overall, what do you think the NTA’s main legacy will be? You’ve mentioned before that it might well be the National Drug Treatment Monitoring System (NDTMS).

‘I think it is, and I think it’s important that that’s been retained in Public Health England, because you need to know what you’re doing, to account for what you’re spending your money on, how many people you’re treating – heroin users or ketamine users. The world changes and you need to keep abreast of that – are you doing as well with men as with women, are black people getting a fair shake, is the North East performing as well as London? If you’re not asking yourself those questions then you’re not really able to address what’s going on and improve it, and you’re letting service users down. And unfortunately, in order to do that, you’ve got to do boring stuff like keying in information, and it has to be collected in a consistent way.

James Brokenshire, when he was on the front bench in opposition, read out the NDTMS definition for waiting times, I think it was, basically to take the piss out of it, and all the Tory backbenchers were laughing their heads off. Well, five years in they’re still using it.’ 

On that note, how much of a change did you see when the coalition government came in? 

‘Much less than anyone expected. There was a change in attitude – the NTA immediately became the enemy within, because we weren’t ‘their’ NTA. The important thing from our point of view was to hold on until PHE came in, because it was ‘their’ Public Health England. So PHE, even though it continued the same policy, was a good thing, whereas the NTA was a bad thing.

But this happens to all governments – all of sudden you’re in charge of stuff. You’ve got a set of ideas you picked up from think tanks, you come into government and instead of being able to make broad statements about you’ll do this and do that, all of a sudden what you think and what you say actually matters and you’ve got civil servants saying, “here’s the reasons why the other lot did these things that you spent the last five years saying were stupid.” You start looking at them and you go, “maybe it wasn’t so stupid after all – maybe there’s a reason for that. We still think bits of it are bonkers or ideological, but other bits of it maybe make more sense.” 

So what you can do is say to them, “you want more people to recover – here’s the sensible way to do that. You want that to happen at the same time as drug-related deaths not going up, as keeping a lid on crime, here’s the bits of what the other lot were doing that it makes sense to keep, and here’s the bits you could sensibly change.”

We were able, with an awful lot of help from some very, very smart civil servants in the Home Office and DH to get the key ministers to see that it was actually in their departmental interest, and in the interest of the country as a whole and of service users, to keep much more of the existing package than anyone would have dreamt they were going to keep from the simplistic IDS/Centre for Social Justice pre-election line. The other thing that helped was that IDS didn’t play his cards very well within government and wasn’t able to persuade Andrew Lansley and Theresa May to go down his route.’  

How many of those achievements of the NTA under threat now, do you think? 

‘To an extent, everything’s under threat. NDTMS isn’t under threat instantly –the solidity of it was exemplified I think when Oliver Letwin agreed that it would be used as the basis for the payment by results pilot, so instead of being vilified it was co-opted. How long PHE continue to invest in it, and exactly where it goes, is another matter. 

But there are significant signs of disinvestment from local authorities. Some of that might be legitimate – seeking better value – because investment in the sector went up so rapidly that it’s impossible to say that it’s all been as well spent as it should, but there are limits to how far you can actually cut back. People will want to readjust between drugs and alcohol, people will want to spend on what I’ve previously called “narrow public health” – most of the benefits around drugs accrue in terms of crime, welfare dependency etcetera, which historically have never been very important to public health. Locating public health in local authorities should make it easier to make that argument, but there is a sense in which that success that you’ve acknowledged is largely invisible in the media and political circles.’ 

I was just about to come on to that.

‘So you’ve got Nick Clegg and his “failure in drug policy on an industrial scale” stuff, and while that’s the default position – while the left think we’ve got a failed war on drugs that will be solved by decriminalisation or legalisation, and the right think we’ve got a wrong-headed harm reduction-led policy when we ought to have abstinence – the only thing they can agree on is that we’re going to hell in a handcart. Which is the opposite of the reality.

I gave a lecture to a group of criminology students recently and the only thing they were interested in were the numbers I started off with, about the improvements in the system, the decline in use and the crime reduction. They were gobsmacked, they had no idea. They were saying, “What are your references for this?” and I said, “It’s the ONS – this is what the official figures say.” People just don’t know. It’s so locked into the media assumptions that it’s failed, and in a sense it becomes a sort of proxy space for left and right to have an argument. I think it’s even the case that because it’s working, because we’re not at the state of crisis we were at in the ’80s with HIV or the ’90s with escalating crime, to an extent that enables people to go back to their ideological corners and throw hand grenades at each other. If there was a real problem they’d roll their sleeves up and get it sorted.’ 

Do you think all that polarisation is starting to ease off at all? 

‘I think the polarisation in the sector – the harm reduction/abstinence wars – has calmed down. There’s still an appetite in bits of government to re-ask the question about time-limited methadone, for example, which in my time they asked four times and always got the same answer. They keep hoping they’ll finally find someone to tell them what they want to hear, but the evidence remains the evidence. 

What hasn’t calmed down is the ideological stuff about the legal status. But what I think will change things dramatically is what’s happening in Colorado, funnily enough. I think that will actually harden opinion against changing the law, because now we’re starting to ask detailed questions about how does a market work and how regulated can a market be. So rather than being theoretical these issues become real. I think people are very dubious about where Colorado’s going to lead.’

With the involvement of big business and so on?

‘Absolutely. I don’t think there’s a space in between prohibition and marketisation – that’s my gut instinct. You might be able to get there in Uruguay, when you’ve got government control of supply – a political impossibility here – but not in a European-wide free market. What is the space that enables you to have something that’s marketed but exerts real pressure on the producers not to maximise their market? We try to do it with tobacco, with alcohol but, particularly now with social media, I don’t know how you’d prevent viral marketing and so on. How do you stop bigger and bigger entities operating in the market and trying to get the number of people using their product up, when at the moment it’s falling? 

To come back to Clegg and his “failure on an industrial scale”, you only need to adopt a radical policy like decriminalisation if you think the thing’s not working. If you think it is working then you need to look at the harms that come from prohibition and address them directly, rather than running the risk of doing more dramatic things.

We lock up only small numbers of people for cannabis possession – 500 a year, according to official figures – and they only go for two or three weeks, but it does seem crazy that we’re locking people up at all for simple possession. But if the consequence of getting rid of that is cannabis being marketed, then when use goes up, harmful use goes up, as night follows day. The debate is really about what are the negative consequences of prohibition, and how we can minimise them. You can keep things illegal and not lock people up. You can keep things illegal and stop the police using it as an excuse to give a hard time to young black men. You can stop a conviction for cannabis blighting someone’s employment opportunities by changing the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act. You can actually address the harms that flow from prohibition without legalising. 

But as you soon as you begin to legalise I think you’re running a real risk of slipping away from something that’s a very inefficient market – that doesn’t maximise its clientele – towards a market that’s seeking fresh users all the time. And it won’t be the Richard Bransons and the Russell Brands who’ll be using, it will be people who are in and out of our prisons and our psychiatric hospitals, it will the most vulnerable people who are most likely to succumb. I also fear the market may escalate very quickly, like we’re seeing with gambling.’ 

As it’s the tenth anniversary issue of DDN, what do you think have been the most significant changes in the sector over the last ten years?

‘In 2004 the treatment system’s expansion was well in train, but I think the biggest thing has been the re-focus away from expansion and getting people in, to trying to improve the offer for people when they are in, and trying to strike that delicate balance between holding on to people for as long as you need to and working with them in order to maximise their opportunities to recover. Improving practice to do that is a really big ask. 

Eventually we were successful in getting the clinicians to recognise that they weren’t being ambitious enough on behalf of many of their patients. That’s now accepted, and the stuff that John Strang led on was very helpful in that – finding a clinically appropriate space where we can actually protect people and give them a platform for them to recover. The big question for me, and this is something the ACMD have been looking at, is that we need some benchmark for what good looks like. How many people can you actually expect to recover? There are no really solid international comparators. 

If you talk to the Americans, for example, they say, “well, no one’s really got to the stage you’re at in England” – a system where the vast majority of people who need to be in treatment are in treatment, a system that can get people in quickly and hold on to them – so nobody else knows. Without some sense of what good looks like, we’ll always be vulnerable to being told that it’s not working.

As a slight corrective to that, what I’m not sure of is the extent to which we focus too much on the drug and not enough on the person. There’s a group of people in society who’ve been dealt a not very good hand – they’ve been born into families with difficulties, born into cities and regions with very poor employment prospects, they’ve been let down by the education system, they’ve got mental health problems. If they’re the majority – which the evidence suggests they are – of the population addicted to heroin and crack, then maybe the issue we should be looking at isn’t how many people we can cure, as such, but how do we actually manage a population that will continue to struggle with life, only one of whose problems is actually focused on their drug and alcohol use? 

So it might actually be that the number of people you can expect to recover isn’t a product of the drug they’re using, but of the society they’re living in and the economic and social disadvantages that they suffer within that society.’ 

Which is a much bigger issue to try to tackle.

‘And for the current government, particularly, a much more challenging prospect than to say drug use is a cause of poverty. If you think drug use is a cause of poverty then you don’t have to think in terms of redistributing wealth, and for a party of the right that’s a nice comfortable place to be. But if you believe that poverty causes drug use, then that does suggest that you need to do something about redistributing wealth and maintaining investment in public services.’  

So finally, what do you think the sector might look like ten years from now?  

‘This might sound peculiar, but I think the optimistic scenario would be that the sector is still dominated by a diminishing cohort of heroin users who haven’t yet recovered, and they haven’t been topped up by new cohorts either of heroin users or users of some substance as yet unknown that’s arriving from some lab in India or China that wreaks new havoc. If we’ve got a diminishing number of heroin users left over from the epidemic of the ’80s and ’90s and a system that’s flexible enough to continue to provide services to that cohort and respond to the probably smaller numbers of people succumbing to dependency on other drugs as they emerge, and that frees up money to provide better services for alcohol users, that would be the golden scenario. 

I see not reason at all, structurally, why we shouldn’t be able to do that. But the big proviso, of course, is money. If there’s not enough money retained in the system to do that then we come back to competing priorities in the NHS and local government. Which, at the risk of sounding like a stuck record, is why you need the broader perspective. If you’re not thinking crime, worklessness, child protection – if you’re just thinking narrow health – then you’re not going to want to make the investment. 

But I was very disappointed and shocked to see the recent big increase in drug-related deaths, and we need to watch that like a hawk. It might be a blip, it might be something about the recording, it might be a consequence of the end of the heroin drought, but we need to be looking at that. And if that’s followed by an increase in use, when those numbers come out, then I think all bets are off.’ DDN

 

My, how you’ve changed!

What has the past decade meant to you and your role? What have been the most significant changes to the sector? And what will happen next? You gave it to us straight. 

shapiro‘We’ve been riding a chemical carousel’

It’s only when you step back from the day-to-day hubbub that you realise what a chemical carousel we’ve been riding for the past decade in this world of drugs.

In 2004, cannabis was regraded from class B to C after three years of wrangling from the first announcement. In 2005 the then Tory leader Michael Howard vowed that if his party won the next election, they would put it back to B and accused Labour of being soft on drugs. They didn’t win, but Labour in turn asked the ACMD to reconsider the classification once again. The ACMD resisted the political and media clamour for another change, but couldn’t in 2007 when Gordon Brown, the in-coming PM, declared his intention to reclassify whatever the evidence. At the same time, the police were uncovering previously unsuspected numbers of cannabis farms across the country; from a position in 2002 where the imported/home grown ratio was about 75:25, by the late noughties the situation was reversed. Yet all the evidence showed that cannabis use was falling. Who was/is consuming all this cannabis? We still don’t really know.

Other drugs were showing a similar trend; we began to experience an ageing heroin population, and the use of other drugs such as MDMA, amphetamine and cocaine were not at the levels of the 1990s. Other drugs were apparently tailing off in popularity, but were causing real problems for those who carried on using – ketamine being the prime example.

But overall the stats were going in the right direction. It was the quiet before the storm. In 2009, say hello to mephedrone, synthetic cannabinoids and the whole dust storm caused by the advent of new psy­choactive drugs, which still swirls on. The internet has been the game changer in this dynamic flux. And not just for buying drugs whose actions mimic club and other recreational drugs. We now have an array of per­form­ance and prescription drugs available at the click of a mouse – all driven by a well-embedded world­wide connected industry of retailers, wholesalers and chemists.

Down at the sharp end, the drug treatment field has undergone some seismic shifts – moving from a political focus on harm reduction and crime prevention to recovery, accompanied by a removal of ring-fenced funding, ferocious contract-culture and a cliff drop in public spending. The UK drug treatment system has been hailed as world class in its comprehensive coverage, its adherence to the evidence base and its basic humanity and pragmatism. No doubt new drugs will come and go and the arguments for and against law reform will rage on. But our real concerns must be for the future of services caring for our most vulnerable citizens. One can only hope that in ten years time we are not looking back and mourning what we have lost.

Harry Shapiro, director of communications and information, DrugScope

  

dudley‘Lack of funding will have a massive impact’ 

People’s needs are becoming much more complex, with increased mental health issues, general health concerns, and higher levels of medication. We’ve seen the use of new drugs such as legal highs, an increase in ketamine use, and in the last ten years an explosion of alcohol problems. There’s also a time-bomb with gambling and gaming.

With many rehabs closing, there is a move towards recovery, but it involves a less skilled workforce as community providers especially look to volunteers and support workers. There’s been more domination by big national community providers as contracts tendered are for the whole service and not the separate parts. We’re going the way of the few big supermarkets. By 2024 we’re likely to have one or two dominant market players and just a handful of specialist providers. 

The lack of funding coming will have a massive impact and set the whole field back decades, with rises in crime and deaths due to addiction. I’m sorry to paint a bit of a bleak picture, but this, unfortunately, is how I see it.

Brian Dudley, chief executive, Broadway Lodge

 

gervase‘Patterns of use are changing’

Addaction has grown as a result of market changes in the last ten years. We’ve quadrupled staff numbers since 2004 and expanded our remit into more clinical work. Our staff now includes pharmacists, 100 former NHS nurses and 20 doctors as a result of the contracts we’ve won. 

The staff profile has also changed. The numbers of former service users volunteering as recovery champions have grown and service users influence the entire organisation, including senior leadership.

During this time the sector has moved from an exclusively harm reduction model to a greater emphasis on recovery. The approach in 2004 was about getting people into treatment, whereas now it’s about getting people into recovery. There is more regulation in the sector now, most notably the Care Quality Commission, which we welcome. There’s also been a move from NHS to local authority commissioning.  

The landscape of substance use is changing. We have a legacy of opiate users stuck in treatment, although opiate use itself is reducing. There is an ageing population of people used to using a variety of substances but for the young, the pattern of substance use is changing with the prevalence of stronger cannabis, and new psychoactive substances creating new challenges for treatment providers. 

However it isn’t just drug use among the young that is changing. More people drink at home and the context is no longer social; it has more to do with isolation and loneliness. So the way we live our lives is also having an impact on the way we use substances and the damage they can cause.

There is also a growing acceptance of substance misuse – three or four generations of people have grown up in a world that uses drugs, and so the decriminalisation/ legalisation debate will rumble on. In addition to illegal drugs, we will probably be facing up to the legacy of inappropriate prescribing in primary care.

Services will integrate professional staff with recovery services staffed by volunteers. The commissioning landscape is changing, with increased emphasis on social value and community-led recovery. Following the pattern of our broadening remit, I predict we will increasingly be engaging with other services like housing and mental health.

Gervase McGrath, director of UK operations, Addaction

  

liddell‘We’ve changed focus in Scotland’

Over the past ten years, SDF has seen changes in its focus. There has been a great concentration on improving the quality of service response; reducing the numbers of drug deaths, including pushing for the national naloxone programme and supporting implementation; ensuring an effective user voice; and innovating means of helping people with a history of drug or alcohol problems into employment.

Recovery as a key concept and discourse has been an important change during this time. Initially in Scotland there was an over-emphasis on abstinence, taking us back to an era when the focus was on people who were ‘motivated to change’; a narrow focus on the individual and not wider societal inequalities and poverty. Thankfully, we’ve returned to a balanced approach – recovery and harm reduction are dovetailed and not separate. Competing approaches, eg naloxone, are recognised as a step towards recovery.

In England there seems to be a more fractious relationship between the evidence base and what government would like. Sticking to evidenced-based approaches and not ones driven by moralistic views is a challenge – such as UK government requests to explore time-limiting methadone. 

Going forward, we’ll see challenges dealing with an ageing group of users, with services working closely with wider care services designed for older people.

In terms of trends of drug use, how will problems manifest themselves? We see significant problems with new psychoactive substances, but this covers a range of compounds with differing effects and issues. We know that if the needs of vulnerable young people aren’t adequately addressed today they will become, sadly, the service users of tomorrow.

David Liddell, director, Scottish Drugs Forum (SDF)

 

finney‘I hope that quality will win the day’

I have been privileged to be involved in the regulation of the treatment sector over the past ten years. It all began in Weston Super Mare where, as head of inspection, I had to make sense of the concentration of treatment services in the area. 

I was constantly bombarded by services who told me in no uncertain terms that they were not ‘care homes’, but something entirely different. The legislation in the Health and Social Care Act 2008 created a new regulation, which described services as ‘accommodation for persons who require treatment for substance misuse’. Unfortunately CQC chose not employ someone to coordinate the implementation of this regulation and, as this had become my passion, I took early retirement and sought to assist services as an independent consultant. Sadly, in my view, CQC implemented this inconsistently for the first five years. However they have now decided that a policy manager for substance misuse is needed and a separate nationally recognised inspection methodology is being developed.

The last decade has seen the passing of some long-standing residential rehabs to be replaced by newer ones. Regulation has also been extended to many community-based services, many of which are doing an excellent job. My passion is that services are run respectfully and with a central focus on the needs of people using the services, with recovery as chief aim. My hope for the future is that quality will win the day and the new rating system introduced by CQC will highlight where there is good, and even outstanding, practice among treatment providers. 

David Finney, independent social care consultant

 

blakebrough‘Wales now has the best route out of addiction’ 

Kaleidoscope began its own rehabilitation by establishing itself in Wales ten years ago. What we saw when coming to Newport were huge waiting lists for treatment and a lack of support for people with drug and alcohol use in many parts of the country.

Today we see Welsh-based organisations forgetting past rivalries and coming together and sharing best practice. This has best been shown by the establishment of Drug and Alcohol Charities Wales (DACW), which ensures there are Welsh solutions to the problems of substance use. Innovation has flourished, be it through Peer Mentoring (an ESF Funded Scheme) which saw hundreds of people with drug and alcohol issues obtain work; Change Step, which is a unique project supporting veterans; the development of computerised dispensing systems in our major cities; and the establishment of social enterprises for service users. Wales is fast becoming the best country in the UK to be in when looking for a route out of addiction, when it used to be the worst.

I am worried that the uniqueness of treatment in Wales will be replaced by the huge English or international companies in ten years’ time, peddling average drug services at cut-price costs. In Wales, service users have grown in confidence. In Gwent, The Voice service users group works closely with the local providers and is actively involved in how treatment works. Its voice is heard because management is close enough to hear, and is near enough to meet with. As DACW has shown, with drug services in a small country, networks with trust can be formed which simply would not happen with large faceless organisations.

Positively, I do see a change in legislation and the re-emergence of harm reduction. The Welsh Government policy of a drug and alcohol strategy is an example where all mind-altering substances are looked at rationally and not, as in the case with the UK government, on ill-informed legislation governed more by the Daily Mail than by the experts on the subject. 

Martin Blakebrough, chief executive, Kaleidoscope Project

 

ashton‘Mistaken paradigm still dominates research’

A striking aspect of treatment research from the past ten years is the realisation forced on Project MATCH researchers: that after the most sophisticated research of the most highly technically specified therapies ever seen in alcohol treatment, their therapists were in essence doing nothing different from the faith healers and witch doctors of ‘primitive’ societies – providing a culturally accepted route to recovery which gave clients permission to activate their pre-existing resolve and resources. What was critical was cultural fit, and the status it gave to the intervention and to the therapist. It was an example of the creation of new understandings from the rubble of a massively expensive and unexpected failure – in this case, to match different psychosocial therapies to different kinds of patients.1

Underlying most research is a very different preferred message – that we have found treatments that work because they embody the right psychological technology to treat a techno-medical disorder of the body and mind. The car is not working; as long as the technician uses the right spanner on the right nut and turns it in the direction and by the amount specified in the manual, then it will be restored. Despite what (in The No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency novels) Mma Ramotswe’s mechanic husband likes to believe, it matters not at all how the technician talks to the car, whether he loves or loathes it, shows respect or disdain, and the car itself plays no part in the process.

For substance use, this profoundly mistaken paradigm should have been shattered by the ‘failure’ of Project MATCH, but it still dominates research. In psychotherapy generally, things have decisively moved on with the American Psychological Association’s recognition that evidence-based relationships must take their place alongside evidence-based treatments:2 ‘It reflects an inexorable, evidence-based recognition that the relationship is a common denominator that brings diverse clinicians together.’

Mike Ashton, editor, Drug and Alcohol Findings

  

oconnor‘A landscape with conflicting priorities’

The National Treatment Agency had strong political support during the past decade for its very clear mission to improve the quality and quantity of drug treatment. We actively supported local areas, set targets, asked challenging questions and introduced a recovery ambition.

As Public Health England, we have a much broader interest in alcohol and drugs, in prevention, treatment and recovery and in health inequalities. Local government is now in the lead; we support them through reflecting their performance back to them, promoting the evidence and providing bespoke support to them and providers to deliver safe and cost-effective services. Some things remain constant, but the landscape is now more complex, with conflicting priorities and an un-ring-fenced treatment funding pot.

Substantial investment expanded the sector massively; many more people started treatment quickly and stayed long enough to see real health benefits. The introduction of ambitious evidenced-based prison treatment helped close the gap between prison and community drug treatment.

The centrality of links between effective treatment and crime reduction was a key driver and the emphasis on recovery introduced greater ambition, ensuring a positive shift towards more active and personalised treatment, often harnessing and enhancing mutual aid and peer-led initiatives. During this time we developed a world class data system and accumulated evidence of what works, so our guidance and support is now well developed and highly regarded, with the system delivering much improved outcomes. 

Of late, the most significant development has been the transfer of commissioning to local authorities, with the loss of partnership commissioning and protected funding. 

Who knows what the sector might look like by 2024, but hopefully it will be responsive to new populations of users, valued by local authorities, health and criminal justice partners and the public. It should certainly be more aligned with broader services – training and employment, housing, families, mental and sexual health – better integrated with local initiatives, and most importantly, seen to be delivering first class outcomes for the whole community.

Rosanna O’Connor, director of alcohol and drugs, Public Health England (PHE)

 

andrews‘Ten years ago it was about getting everyone on a script’

I have worked in the drug and alcohol field for the past ten years and have seen a dramatic change in not only our way of working but also in the types of drugs used. When I started, it was a case of getting everyone on a script and keeping them there. It felt as though the government believed that if drug users were on a script then crime would disappear (of course it never did). The only therapy was one-to-one key working, which on its own proved not to work for many.

The emergence of recovery started a few years ago and appears to have blossomed. Sadly not enough staff were trained in it and still few are – it’s always been a case of just running with it. Group work and peer support have gone from strength to strength. The ever-changing legal highs are now a real problem and I believe that we will need to change our way of working with clients who use them.

The one thing I hope not to see widespread in the drug and alcohol field is payment by results, which I was unfortunate enough to work with for a short period of time. This was appalling and put price tags on people’s lives.

Sue Andrews, drug worker

 

adebowale‘Integration with public health will be the norm’ 

Turning Point has been delivering services for 50 years this year. In 1964, founder Barry Richards launched a small non-profit organisation called Helping Hands – the UK’s first attempt to help those with alcohol problems, by using a community based, residential programme. 

Barry Richards was breaking new ground and that’s what we are still trying to do. It’s enabled us to grow from what was effectively a small single-issue charity to a leading social enterprise now employing more than 3,000 people and operating over 200 services in the areas of substance misuse, learning disability, mental health, primary care, employment, criminal justice and community commissioning. 

Over the past ten years we have kept growing and developing, increasing our expertise around complex needs and dual diagnosis. A very welcome change over the past decade has been the move to more integrated services, which bring together drugs, alcohol, criminal justice, and young people’s support. 

The recent move of substance misuse back into local authorities, as part of public health, is also positive, although it presents challenges for providers to ensure we’re demonstrating clearly the community benefits of investment in us. The benefit of this move is starting to come to fruition through the broadening of traditional substance misuse services to include public health priorities, such as the launch of smoking cessation pilots in six of our substance misuse services.

Integration will be the norm by 2024, so we’ll no longer be talking about drink and drugs and mental health but more readily talking about ‘public health’, with commissioning reflecting comorbidities. Health and social care are intrinsic elements of an equal society and in order to fix them we need to foster collaborative thought and practice.

The bulk of investment should be in prevention and the importance of education and early inter­vention in the substance misuse sector should not be underestimated. I hope that by 2024 we’re investing in services that reach at-risk individuals earlier so that intergenerational problems cease to exist.

Additionally I’d hope that the stigma associated with alcohol and drug dependency and dual diagnosis, which often prevents people from seeking help, would be vastly reduced, so that more people know and accept that sustained recovery is possible for anyone.

Lord Victor Adebowale, chief executive, Turning Point

 

viv‘Family support services are forced to compete’

Ten years ago Adfam was an organisation which focused its work on direct support for families affected by substance misuse in the criminal justice system – we had services in several prisons in London and we also had a national helpline.

With funding changes, taking account of new political and economic structures and constraints, we became an umbrella organisation in 2008 and now provide indirect support to families and the prac­ti­tion­ers who work with them, via our website, regional support team and policy and campaigning activities.

The word ‘family’ appeared twice in the 2002 government drugs strategy; it was included in the title of the 2008 strategy. The need for family support will probably never go away, but the current economic climate means that support services are increasingly being squeezed and forced to compete with large providers for funding.

By 2024 the drug sector may be comprised of a few, large treatment providers with family support included or just tagged on. This ignores the need for support for families whose loved ones are not in treatment. There will be a much larger recognition of the needs of families, achieved through a community led movement, not dissimilar in character and influence to the user recovery movement.

Vivienne Evans, chief executive, Adfam

  

yasmin‘Things can only get better!’

Like many organisations in this field, WDP has grown significantly over the past ten years. We now provide more services to a larger number of users over a wider geographical area. Quality remains a key component of our service, reflecting our staff team who are always prepared to go that extra mile.

There have been a number of significant changes in our sector over the past ten years. The nature and type of drug use is changing, with legal highs becoming increasingly common and a reduction in individuals using heroin and cocaine. There are greater numbers of ageing users presenting with more complex health problems than perhaps ever before. 

On the positive side, the public perception of illicit drug misuse is starting to shift. It is slowly being seen as a healthcare issue, rather than as a criminal one. The politics of alcohol has also come into play, with government ministers willing to talk, albeit cautiously, about the links between the price of alcohol and its abuse.

There will be important changes ahead that will impact on the planning, commissioning and delivery of services resulting in a very different landscape of service provision. The reality is that it is likely there will be fewer specialist treatment services available – ‘choice’ of service by the user, which has been systematically eroded, will become even more so.

The resident government, regardless of political persuasion, is likely to be amenable to discussion on UK drugs policy – not because it wants to, but because it has to in order to keep up with current thinking. This may lead to the state regulation of illicit drugs becoming a possibility.  

The substances misused will continue to change and the dynamics of treatment versus prevention will be played out in the public arena. The short-term future appears somewhat bleak, but strangely this gives cause for optimism: things can only get better!

Yasmin Batliwala, chair, WDP 

 

weeding‘We’ll build on successes’

This year DISC is celebrating 30 years of being at the forefront of service delivery to those facing the most challenging circumstances.

We’ve expanded from a charity focused on training to the development of our current organisation – one of the north’s most successful charities, with over 400 staff, 100 volunteers and peer mentors, and an annual turnover of £16m.  We’re committed to supporting people and communities to achieve their goals and helping people reach their potential.

Our anniversary has caused us to reflect on what we’ve achieved. We can look back on some amazing successes; contracts won, jobs created and partnerships improved. But what we really care passionately about is the number of people, year on year, whose lives we’ve helped to improve. Through initiatives developed by DISC, we have supported more than 100,000 people in the last ten years alone.

We’re an innovative organisation and we are constantly developing diverse ways to meet the needs of current and future service users. By investing in new programmes, developing new partnerships and leading with innovation, we will continue to support healthy communities to bring about change and provide inventive services to help those with problems of alcohol and drug addiction overcome challenges in their lives.

Mark Weeding, CEO, DISC

 

annette‘We’re in a social inequality war’

The past ten years have seen remarkable changes: the years of expansion in drug treatment, the stall, then a chill wind of austerity biting in many areas. 

The massive influx of cash driven by the Blair government’s wish to reduce drug-related crime came hand-in-hand with what the Scots call the ‘English disease’ of targets, data collection (forms, damn forms!) and increasing performance management by commissioners. The NTA quango, with its `delivery assurance’ role and armed with `toolkits and guidance’ pushed the sector hard and fast with a mantle of assumed power (all ‘fur coats and no knickers’!). 

The bubble was burst by a groundswell of people in recovery (rightly) wanting more, and a new coalition government wanting something different. The vibrant recovery movement is a fabulous legacy of this decade, but growing stigma against those who cannot reach abstinence is a deeply worrying sign of a society that increasingly disapproves of all state dependence.

By 2024 there will be a lot more old people: one in three over 65 by 2015 and increasing at 4 per cent a year. There will be less money – with a per capita spend on health and welfare less than the USA by 2018. My cynical self thinks this will drive funding to ‘mandated groups’ only (eg the elderly and children) OR those doing the most harm to others – where interventions are cost-effective. Our ‘lifestyle diseases’ may be left to ‘mutual aid’, web-based health intervention, volunteers and  a postcode lottery of services. 

I sincerely hope we don’t have another heroin epidemic or a new methamphetamine epidemic. I hope synthetic drugs become even less moreish and cannabis CBD levels rise. Who knows, maybe we will follow the USA on cannabis, as we have in obesity.  

In 2024, I aim to still be around, championing the cause. We are not in a drugs war, we are in a social inequality war – and we need more troops. 

Annette Dale-Perera, strategic director:addictions and offender care, CNWL

 

moncrieff‘Steep challenges for the gay drug-using community’

Ten years is a long time in drug treatment. In Antidote – London Friend’s specialist service for lesbian, gay, bisexual & transgender people (LGBT) – some changes have been quite astonishing. 

Our data from a decade ago shows most clients experienced problems using alcohol and cocaine, with a handful having partied too hard on ecstasy. Generally though, most people managed their party drugs reasonably safely. 

We had already heard rumblings from other major cities that crystal meth was a-coming. The mainstream media sprang into a panic predicting the next pandemic, but for the most part it never came. Quietly though, away from view in private houses, crystal was making itself known among a small group of gay and bisexual men.

Fast forward a decade and it’s become one of three main problems we deal with – the others, GHB/GBL and mephedrone, having similarly appeared as if from nowhere. A typical user tells us how they ‘slam’ (the colloquialism for injecting, perhaps coined to avoid associations with IV drug use) and attend weekend-long sex parties with several other men.

Of course, gay men, sex and drugs are hardly strange bedfellows, but a decade ago you partied and maybe then fell into bed if you’d got lucky on the dancefloor; now the norm is to get app-y on smartphones where ‘chemsex’ is readily found on ‘dating’ sites without even needing to leave the house. 

The fallout is harsh: we’re seeing significant mental health concerns, psychosis, and a group of previously stable men whose lives, relationships, jobs and housing are falling apart around them. Men whose self-esteem has plummeted. Men who are contracting HIV as heterosexual infections are falling.

It’s been a challenge for us to adapt to new drugs and trends, such as slamming, that were never common within our communities. As these patterns make their way into mainstream services it’s important for them to consider how to meet this challenge too. Our recent report Out of your mind has some resources to support this. 

Monty Moncrieff, chief executive, London Friend

 

flemen‘Hang on to user-led initiatives’

Ten years ago, KFx was in its terrible twos. Using the waybackmachine I can see how, in some respects, things haven’t changed. Cannabis had been reclassified and the ACPO guidance was the source of much discussion. As housing providers were still concerned about the fall-out from the Wintercomfort Trial, I was busy with housing and drugs policy work, which still remains an issue today. The legal issues still haven’t been addressed.

GHB had earlier been made a controlled drug, but since then GBL emerged as a successor and ten years on we’re dealing with a slew of newer psychoactive compounds.

Ten years ago, the paraphernalia laws were slowly being amended, allowing distribution of acids and other paraphernalia. It’s taken a further decade for the law on foil to be amended. The farcical nature of the paraphernalia laws forms part of my safer injecting training. Sadly over the past couple of years, there has been a sharp decline in requests for this course. I hope that in ten years time we aren’t paying a huge price in injuries and infections from not ensuring staff delivering injecting interventions are adequately trained.

More than 1,000 workshops and 16,000 participants later, I think my passion for and interest in the subject hasn’t dimmed. Sadly, not all the organisations that I worked with ten years ago still exist, and have perished in the new world of competitive tenders. A huge change therefore has been a reduction in the number of small, local service providers and a growth in larger national ones. In sharp contrast to the increasingly corporate nature of provision, the grass-roots emergence of user-led initiatives has been amazing and inspirational to behold. Ensuring that this does not in turn become incorporated, co-opted and neutered will be one of the key challenges in the next ten years.

Kevin Flemen, KFx

  

barton‘Society doesn’t take addiction seriously’ 

Good things happen, progress is made, people do get good help and lives are transformed. Whatever the turn of the political and funding wheels and the system they drive have taken, over the last ten years that has undoubtedly been the case. Whether the good has happened because of the system or in spite of it, I am not so sure. 

The bad also happens both because of systemic flaws and in spite of them. Progress is thwarted and undermined as too often we take two steps forward and then a couple or more back. Just as we seem to be getting somewhere the operating environment changes, the seeds of progress are ploughed up and obstacles strewn in our path.  That’s when we’re not getting in our own way and tripping ourselves up for one reason or another. 

I could explore changes to funding and political structures, degrees of workforce competence, the adequacy of investment in research and whether sufficient priority is given to families. I could discuss recovery and treatment modalities and the tensions between them and examine the commissioning and providing relationship and more.

But I think the fundamental problem is that unlike other life-threatening conditions we simply do not yet as a society really take addiction seriously in its own right. We only address it because of its costly nuisance effect. Empathy for addicted people remains in pretty short supply.

It’s not treated like every other major life-threatening ailment; cancer, diabetes, heart disease, for instance. Why? The answer is stigma. Society looks at our client group through the lens of the consequences of addiction and projects conveniently onto it. It loses sight of the people; the human beings.

Until, as a society, we adjust our way of looking at addiction and thereby remove the stigma, we will never properly understand it or be able to respond in a fully rational way that moves beyond the kind of uncoordinated tinkering that characterises much of what we do now.

Once we have done that we can begin to look bravely at the question as to why addiction flourishes in our society in the first place. Maybe in another ten years we will have got there. 

Nick Barton, chief executive, Action on Addiction

  

collingham‘The heart of the matter’

With the help of supportive commissioners, Nottingham’s service users have made sure they’re now at the heart of decision-making.

May’s meeting of Nottingham’s Recovery Forum celebrated ten years of meaningful service user involvement. Over the years the forum has had numerous names, but the function has always been the same – not only for service users to feed into the commissioning process, but also development of services, as well as being a catalyst for many members to go on to paid employment, and not just in substance misuse and mental health.  

As was recognised quite early on, clients in recovery, be it on medication, in aftercare or not even engaging, have many complex needs and it was decided other groups would be set up with active user involvement at their heart. 

Through the Recovery Forum (and its various names) other forums have become established, such as the Dual Diagnosis Forum (DDF), Alcohol Service Users’ Forum (ASUF) and Substance Campaigns User Friendly – formerly Shared Care User Forum – (SCUF). These forums were set up not only to give shape and input into needs assessments, service provision and delivery, but also to give participants a time to check in with their peers for things such as self help and support, as well harm reduction and awareness education and access to training.

The forum and its members have always been integral to anything that has happened within substance misuse in Nottingham City and several members sit on various steering group and strategy meetings and working groups.

One thing that has been key to the Recovery Forum’s success is its desire to do partnership work with all the agencies and support services within the city to ensure not only cost effective, but also successful, services that are fit for purpose. 

Members of the group have been involved with various agencies producing DVDs around needlestick injuries, safe returns and overdose response, and have produced consistent award-winning work around stigma.

Members of the forum were involved when it came to relocating and rebuilding our current detox unit to become a state-of-the-art unit called The Woodlands, whose statistics speak for themselves. The building and fittings are still as new three years on as when it was built – all down to service users and staff respecting the environment.

The Recovery Forum continues to be at the forefront of what is done in Nottingham’s treatment system, and in November last year two organisations came together for ‘Recovery Rocks’ (DDN, January, page 10) where more than £400 was raised to provide food parcels at the homeless drop-in.

Although it took four years and many meetings  – as is often the case with strategic stuff – it was because of the service user relationship and power that naloxone is now being distributed, with 64 kits being issued since it was launched in December last year.

Among many many other things besides The Woodlands and the provision of naloxone, service users are where they should be – at the heart of what’s happening, thanks to a forward-thinking commissioning team, a dedicated involvement worker and a committed group of service users refusing to be pushed aside and ignored.

Lee Collingham, service user activist, Nottingham

Letters

We welcome your letters…

Please email them to the editor, claire@cjwellings.com or post them to 57 High Street, Ashford, Kent, TN23 3NH.

Letters may be edited for space or clarity – please limit submissions to 350 words.

Time to misbehave 

Listening to Thought for the Day this morning suddenly helped me to digest an extraordinary week. Vicky Beeching spoke about how honesty and truth must come first and niceness and love are not always synonymous, so sometimes love requires unsettling the status quo. Laurel Thatcher Ulrich famously wrote: ‘Well-behaved women (and men) rarely make history.’ Many others and I have been doing some misbehaving over the past week, and we all need to do more!

Firstly there was the first European Conference on Hepatitis C and Injecting Drug Use, which was packed full of people with passion and commitment fighting to improve access to HCV and OST. People put themselves at risk to demand better services. Knowing a little about the oppression in some European countries, I was truly humbled by the user and harm reduction groups working in those countries. Misbehaving and fighting for their rights can easily lead to them ending up in prison.

Then came the Action Summit on Naloxone – again a full room of committed people who want to unsettle the status quo of poor to no naloxone provision in England. How can PHE and DH point us towards localism as a reason for not sending out a clear national message, as hundreds of people die because of the lack of a safe, evidence-based, effective medication, whereas in Wales – where they have it – drug-related deaths have reduced by 53 per cent? Hopefully the newly set-up NAG (Naloxone Action Group) will continue to misbehave and get change.

But sadly there are many too fearful of losing jobs or funding and keeping their heads down. How can DrugScope repeat their State of the sector survey with no mention of harm reduction at all (just one brief mention of ‘harm minimisation’ – harm reduction for wimps). The single mention of naloxone only reinforces the October 2015 date – what about now? It is a licensed medication and at a minimum should (and legally can) be prescribed to everyone who uses opioids, leaves detox or rehab and starts OST. That is the message that needs to be carried. In the survey, there is nothing re access to OST, maintenance, pressure to exit treatment etc and nothing explicit on NSPs, although many of us in the harm reduction group had asked for many of these things to be added after the last survey. If you are doing a state of the sector survey you have to ask the right questions.

From endless emails, posts on SMMGP and other forums, Twitter and phone calls, it is clear that people are being forced into options they are not choosing for themselves. Services are being cut, re-tendering is causing chaos, commissioners are ignoring the enormous evidence base and commissioning services for detox only, and most importantly people are dying. I was first saddened and then angered to get a phone call from a drug worker just after I had listened to Thought for the Day to say she was being forced to reduce the methadone by 5mls a day on a very vulnerable patient of hers after he had failed an appointment. She completely understood that this was the most risky thing to do and instead wanted to visit him. I hope she misbehaved and potentially saved his life.

We all know the system isn’t working and it is time to stand up and be counted and misbehave – there’s lots we can do. We have been lied to, told there’s no alternative, no choice, and that you don’t deserve any better. To give the last word to Mahatma Gandhi, ‘Be the change you want to see’.

Dr Chris Ford, clinical director of IDHDP, by email

 

Walk this way? 

As someone who has attended the last three recovery walks I was really looking forward to Manchester this year.  The walk has always been a massively inspiring event, bringing people together from all across the country to celebrate recovery.

However, I have to say what a disappointment Manchester was to me and my family.  Firstly, it was clear that the numbers attending were massively down from Brighton and Birmingham, perhaps even half as many as last year. If it’s going to be in Durham next year it’s a fair bet that many from the south like me won’t be able to attend, so are there going to be even less next time?

I was also really disappointed that this year there didn’t seem to be anything to entertain families. I’d travelled up with two young children and had hoped that like previous years there would be something to keep them entertained, but alas there was very little.

Finally, I had travelled up by coach and had spent a fair bit on transport etc which when you’re on benefits isn’t easy.  I had at the very least expected there to be free water as there had been on previous years. Not only were there no free water bottles but I was expected to pay £1.50 for a can of pop! Also last year at Birmingham we had got free t-shirts but this year we were expected to pay a fiver for the privilege.  

All this makes me feel the walk has lost its original ethos. It now appears to just be a money-making and promotional tool for the organisers. Perhaps it is time for local activists to reclaim the walk. Maybe we could have locally organised regional walks that involved local people and promoted local groups?

Yours in disappointment,

Charlie Gillespie, by email

 

Time to reflect  

I am a person in long-term recovery since 1999 and have seen some really good models of delivery in drug services over the years, but also some not so good practice. I believe that service users are experts by experience and are absolutely the best people to work in the field. However, what has bothered me throughout my career is the welfare of service users when they move into long-term recovery and are then employed by a service. 

I have seen people be employed when they are clearly not ready and I’ve seen them relapse and get dismissed or leave. To my knowledge there has never been a national policy on this and agencies just have their own policies – for some it’s six months, others say two years.

Some people can be off work with a serious illness for 13 months or more, but services employ people in recovery after six months? We often forget that a lot of addicts have not had formative years and so need to make up for this and relearn how to live a ‘normal’ life, for want of a better word. Some people may not agree with me and say they are ready, and I appreciate that this is a subjective matter. However, I think that after treatment and recovery there should be a ‘time to reflect’ period. It would put ex-service users in a much better position to become a practitioner if they spent two years doing this, in my opinion.

Agencies have a moral and professional duty to protect people they employ and should have rigorous systems and policies for this. Sadly this is quite often not the case and service users are put on a pedestal as a promotion for the wonderful work the service has done, or for stats on how many ex-service users they proudly employ. 

We should be looking to embed guidelines nationally so commissioners and strategic influences are on board and it becomes part of the tendering process at the very least. You could argue that just because it’s an ex- service user they have the right to be treated the same as any other employee and I would agree, but I think the process for ‘time left’ services needs to be looked at properly.

I am not naïve enough to think that this has not been discussed a thous­and times before, but with the current climate of the recovery movement across the UK and with organisations such as the UKRF, as well as localised movements and SU involvement, surely it is time to put this on the agenda again in a bigger, better way.

Steve Loxley, by email

  

Gambling support 

I have recently come across your excellent online magazine and I am particularly interested in recent coverage of disordered gambling.

Betknowmore UK was launched as a social enterprise earlier this year, and our mission is to develop and deliver support, education and information services to address problem gambling and addiction. We recently launched our first Gambling Support (GaMS) hub in Islington, which will be a base to deliver our services initially across north London. We have had a lot of interest in our services from a wide range of organisations as diverse as HMPs and premiership football clubs. This includes a number of drug/alcohol agencies and we are currently planning to develop and deliver our services to DASL in east London and Cranstoun in north London. We have also had interest from Addaction and WDP. This is an area we are very much planning to further develop and work in partnership with current service providers. 

More details can be found on our website: www.betknowmoreuk.org  

Frankie Graham, director/project manager, Bet Know More

 

Misleading figures 

The headline on page 4 of your October edition (‘England and Wales see sharp rise in drug deaths’) is misleading. England saw a rise of 21 per cent in deaths from drug misuse, from 1,492 in 2012 to 1,812 in 2013. In Wales, by contrast, there was no change in the number of drug misuse deaths in 2013 compared with the previous year, with 135 deaths recorded in both years. Discussion on the reasons for the diverging patterns of drug misuse deaths over the past few years, in your magazine and the wider community of those involved in substance misuse policy and practice, would be of great value.

Chris Emmerson, information analyst specialist, health protection, Public Health Wales, Cardiff

 

Correction: Our headline was misleading, as there was no change to the number of drug misuse deaths in Wales, but the ONS report does state: ‘However, mortality rates from drug misuse were still significantly higher in Wales than in England.’ DDN

 

Community chest

This year’s RiTC conference asked what a recovery community could and should mean. DDN listened to the debate 

Screen shot 2014-11-03 at 13.35.05

‘Whether through peer-led and mutual aid recovery initiatives or treatment services, it is agreed that the role of community in addiction recovery is vital. But there seems to be differing visions of what community means… Does there need to be a provider of a recovery community or should we be leaving it to the community itself?’

These were the key questions put to the audience of the Recovery in the Community (RiTC) conference, held by Sheffield Alcohol Support Service (SASS) last month, and to get the debate started, Rowdy Yates, senior research fellow at the University of Stirling, explored the history of recovery groups and their common themes.

Acknowledging that the therapeutic community structure ‘teaches impulse control in a safe setting’ and ‘encourages positive citizenship’, he had a message for the ‘two main players’ – mutual aid fellowships and methadone prescribers: ‘Stop calling it a disease. It’s a disorder you can recover from.’

‘Experts say it’s an incurable disease – let’s just stop it,’ he said, adding: ‘We need to be more visible with our recovery. We need to remove employment barriers… we need to remove this stigma.’

A key to this was in encouraging ‘recovered addicts’ to participate in treatment, and to make activities such as recovery marches more visible. ‘We need to see addicts as an asset to the community.’ Without such initiatives we were doomed to create a situation where addiction was transmitted down the generations, whereas creating better parents would reduce the chance of repeating the cycle.

SASS’s chief executive Josie Soutar then introduced a lively panel discussion called ‘hands off our community’ to look at ownership, funding and identity of the recovery community, including plenty of comment from the floor.

‘Is this the best of times or the worst of times,’ she asked.

‘In terms of commissioning, it’s the worst of times,’ said Clive Hallam, drugs commissioning manager at Barnsley DAAT. ‘But in terms of people coming through, it’s the best of times.’ It was important to sustain ‘strong creative individuals’ and their ideas, he said.

Deb Drinkwater, freelance trainer and co-director of the Dry Umbrella, an alcohol-free bar in Manchester, said it felt like a good time for getting results. ‘I’ve seen a massive change. I’ve felt like a lone sheep but community development is now seen as a viable model,’ she said.

Geoff H, ‘a grateful member of AA’, felt that it was ‘an excellent time for recovery in the community’, thanks to the links that were being developed. ‘It shouldn’t be one size fits all and through links with PHE we’ve created links throughout the country,’ he said.  

David Badcock, head of recovery engagement at Addaction, also felt that it was ‘a really good time for people to engage with the wider recovery community’, which gave ‘much better outcomes’. He mentioned the in2recovery website (supported by Addaction and run by Michaela Jones), Addaction’s recovery conference and the charity’s mutual aid programme to demonstrate that ‘the sector has changed and we at Addaction have definitely changed’, with a greater emphasis on helping people reintegrate into mainstream life.

Mark Gilman, strategic recovery lead for PHE, also believed it was the best of times, moving beyond fear-driven treatment to successful treatment in the community, ‘where recovery lives’.

Just as the panel agreed on the positives, each panellist was keen that engagement – through such channels as mutual aid – was voluntary and not mandated.

‘I believe people should be given choice in recovery,’ said Geoff H from AA. ‘We’re caught in a corner and driven by the industry – it’s a real shame.’

‘When people are sent, it really bothers me,’ added Hallam, who said mutual aid should be used for the right reasons. Badcock added that the lack of choice was his ‘lease favourite scenario’, Drinkwater said people had to want to change and Gilman compared the mandated aid scenario to that in the US.

The best way forward was for ‘the community to take over’, according to the panel. Drinkwater’s alcohol-free space was powered by hard work and social media, developing organically, with commissioning teams noticing what worked well on the ground.

Badcock also added his vote to initiatives that demonstrated that ‘recovery in the community is happening’ and showed ‘where community knows best’.

Best foot forward

Alistair sinclair WEB. jpgThe volume of activity and appetite for change during September’s ‘recovery month’ speaks volumes about the momentum of the recovery community, says Alistair Sinclair

Three hundred and fifty people from around the UK gathered in Leicester on 26 September at the sixth national UKRF event Creating narratives for the recovery movement: the good, the true and the beautiful. I’ve written in DDN about Phil Hanlon and his call for a ‘fifth wave of public health’ (www.afternow.co.uk) and the UKRF event was our first attempt to explore what the ‘good, true and beautiful’ might actually look like in communities and services. 

Fifty presenters in the main room and in ten ‘wellbeing zones’ (themed around the ‘five ways to wellbeing’), shared their thoughts around key action and learning that support the good (values and ethics), the true (learning) and the beautiful. 

Material generated by presenters and participants will inform the development of a recovery manifesto for the UKRF – which is grand, but the important thing for us is that the day brought people from services and communities together to share and to connect, generating energy for change. It was a hopeful day and it was, among some other things, our contribution to the 2014 recovery month. 

There were 102 events in September’s recovery month. It kicked off, a little early at the end of August, with a Fallen Angels Dance Theatre workshop in Salford and a sunset candlelit vigil in Stroud in Gloucestershire. On 1 September, at an event hosted by the Scottish Recovery Consortium, people gathered in Glasgow to ‘remember loved ones lost to addiction’. Kaleidoscope in Wales supported activities throughout September under the banner ‘My month – my recovery’ (something Barry Eveleigh wrote about in last month’s DDN) and Recovery Cymru held a number of events in Cardiff and Barry. 

People in Ireland walked in Dublin on 20 September, while Scotland held its first recovery walk in Edinburgh on the 27th, with North Wales walking the following day from Colwyn Bay to Llandudno. Thousands gathered in Manchester for the sixth UK recovery walk on 13 September and smaller, but no less important, walks took place throughout September in Snowdon, Lancashire, Lewisham, Derbyshire, Loughborough, Leicester, Rotherham, Bournemouth, Bexley and Gloucestershire.

During September The Anonymous People film was shown in Worksop, Cheltenham, West Bromwich, Stroud, Gloucester and London, while the Recovery Street Festival toured the country showing in London, Cardiff, Birmingham, Liverpool and Glasgow. A number of lucky people experienced the ‘Dear Albert’ film (a documentary filmed over three years around a drugs service in Leicester) at the Leicester UKRF event, which marked the end of a Leicestershire, Leicester and Rutland recovery week which encompassed art exhibitions, flashmobs, a harm reduction café, drama, walks, open days and a picnic. 

The Umbrella Café, a dry bar, launched in Manchester on 5 September and they’ve been putting on really impressive events on Friday and Saturday nights ever since. A focus on fun, creativity and celebration in recovery month led to festivals and parties in Doncaster, Bradford, Burnley, Brighton, Halifax, Hackney, Manchester, Preston, Liverpool, Bournemouth, Cardiff, Henley, Scunthorpe, Norwich and Lanarkshire. 

For those who fancied something a bit more sporty there were football competitions, fitness sessions, sponsored cycle rides (from Wolverhampton to Manchester), rambles, mountain climbs, funlympics and some hardy folk even walked over seven days (185.4 miles) from Weston-Super-Mare to Manchester to join the UK recovery walk in Manchester.

But what does all this activity involving thousands of people all over the UK mean? Clearly it means different things to different people, but I think there are a number of core themes that link all these diverse activities and people together. At the heart of all of it is hope; the belief that we can change, we can make things better. When we make recovery visible we’re making hope visible and we’re locating this hope firmly in the ‘core economy’; families, neighbourhoods and communities. At our event In Leicester I think that for a little while people put their ‘hats’ down and came together as community members. That’s what I see at the recovery events I go to. 

On a hillside in North Wales on 28 September I listened to ‘service users’ share their feelings and hopes, and I listened to a commissioner share his. For a brief moment we were a community, a bunch of human beings on a hill. The UKRF will continue to promote a recovery month that celebrates the good, truth and beauty in everyone and the huge strength and potential that exists within communities. 

A few days ago in a Westminster meeting about the stigma faced by people with ‘substance use disorders’ I heard someone say that the ‘time wasn’t right for a public-facing campaign’. I felt the need to point out that this campaign has already begun. Recovery Month is here. Thousands are already on the move and there are many people, even in these austere dark times, who still have hope. 

I think this is where recovery starts. Where we’ll end up is down to us; making the path as we walk it.

Alistair Sinclair is a director of the UK Recovery Federation (UKRF), www.ukrf.org.uk

Staying alive

Could the recovery agenda be killing people? Alex Boyt makes the case from his own experience.

Alex Boyt

In the mid ’80s, when I found a prescribing doctor who would take me on, I got offered the short or long script, reducing over two or six weeks. After a detox that largely consisted of hugging the radiator in my cell, I got out of jail in 2004 and found myself begging methadone off people because I was told the waiting time for medication was the best part of a year. A few months later, I was kicked out of my next rehab and got caught up in user involvement. I was so impressed to find the treatment system had woken up, people got the medication they needed, pretty much when they needed, and often at the right dose.

Imagine all those people who no longer had to stand withdrawing on street corners in the winter, hoping the dealer would take £9.40 instead of tenner, because that’s what they had left after selling their coat and making the phone call. Imagine all those people who wouldn’t have to inject all the wrong crushed up pills and dried blood clots from old works just to get a brief respite from endless withdrawals gnawing at their spirit.

So this was all ticking along nicely. Perhaps some people were getting stuck on methadone and other options were not being explored. But when the push for recovery began to take hold, a number of the people I knew on substitute prescribing started getting nervous. They no longer felt safe: ‘Every time I see my drug worker, we have a conversation about reducing my script. Seeing him used to feel like support – now it just feels like pressure.’ 

Sure I was in recovery now, however you happened to measure it, and so were a few people I knew and liked. But my personal sense of duty was still fighting for those who didn’t have the strength, the desire or ability to face the years of neglect, abuse, trauma or the harsh distress of unmedicated reality; those who just needed to be held without judgement by a system of care.

Screen shot 2014-11-03 at 13.16.34

I know from my own experience that pressure to embrace recovery can work for some, but I also know that there are many for whom recovery, especially in its abstinent form, is just too painful, difficult or unattractive. For this lot, often those most at risk from death and disease, the recovery agenda makes services less relevant and safe. People who used to be held by the treatment system are now confronted by goals for integrating into society the moment they make it through the door. I am close to people who won’t even consider engaging under these conditions – they’d rather take their chances on the street, and I fear for their wellbeing. All too often they walk into a service, already traumatised and deeply tired, only to be allocated a complex ritual of recovery activities, usually with an implied or overt requirement that prescribing is dependent on engaging.

When successful completions (often code for getting off your script) became the focus, one of our local service managers said ‘we have to get them in and out before we get to know them’. I regularly complained to anyone who would listen that ‘only when crime and drug-related deaths go up will policy-makers care that some of the most at risk are being failed by the push for recovery.’ But somewhere inside I had retained a vestige of trust for the treatment system and hoped that my concerns were misplaced.

However, when the drug-related death figures came out in September my heart sank. I felt so angry, sad and disappointed: in one year a 32 per cent increase in drug-related deaths and 20 per cent of that down to opiates. The government says the cause was likely to be the increased strength of street heroin, but the same stuff hits Wales where there was no increase in drug-related deaths and recovery there is not the driving force it has become in England. With the most at-risk engaging less, and those with their tolerance lowered and facing their demons full on pushed too fast through the treatment system, I worry for their wellbeing. I don’t claim to have proof, nor the ability or will to interview the dead or the disengaged, but many I know share my belief that aspects of the push for abstinence are dangerous.

The treatment system is of course largely a numbers game, and the need to deliver targets is essential to keep the money flowing for any kind of care to be delivered. I was at a presentation not long ago where the figures for those completing treatment successfully were shown to vary in partnership areas from about 4 per cent annually to 35 per cent. The figures indicate how unhelpful some of the pressures for commissioners and service providers are. 

What chance is there that the ideology from central government softens to let people receive the care they need? You only have to note that the ACMD were recently tasked by the Home Office to look at time-limited prescribing to think the chances are slim. Is the recovery agenda killing people? You have to think in places it probably is. My limited hope sits with the good people out there still trying to deliver care in an increasingly harsh environment.

Alex Boyt works in central London as a service user coordinator.

Value for money?

As DDN went to press, a major Commons debate on the UK drug laws was taking place, the first for 40 years. The debate was secured with cross-party backing by Caroline Lucas MP (DDN, August 2013, page 16), following a 130,000-strong petition calling for MPs to support an impact assessment and cost benefit analysis of the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act. ‘This debate is not about being for or against drugs reform,’ said Lucas. ‘It’s about making sure we have the best possible laws based on the best possible evidence.’ The same day saw the long-delayed publication of a Home Office report concluding that punitive drug laws failed to curb levels of use. Full report in next month’s DDN.

‘Millions’ of children exposed to World Cup alcohol marketing

Viewers of the key World Cup broadcasts this summer saw one example of alcohol marketing for every minute of playing time, according to a report from Alcohol Concern. The charity is asking the government to ‘consider whether the harms outweigh the financial benefits’, as the audience included ‘millions of children and young people’. 

Researchers studied six matches – two shown on the BBC and four on ITV – including all of the England games, the semi-finals and the final, with the broadcasts recorded and coded according to the number of visual references to alcohol, including logos. They found an average of just under 100 alcohol references per programme, plus ten alcohol commercials when the games were shown on ITV. Around 80 per cent of the references were from electronic pitch-side sponsor boards, with more than two-thirds for official World Cup beer sponsors Budweiser, while the 39 alcohol adverts shown during the four commercially broadcast games totalled more than 12 minutes. 

‘It is estimated half the games analysed were viewed by more than one million under-18s,’ says the document, a figure within the existing rules on whether alcohol advertising is appropriate. ‘Alcohol marketing in sport has become so ubiquitous that it often goes unnoticed,’ it adds, and calls for the government to legislate for the phased removal of alcohol marketing from sporting events starting with football.  

‘Alcohol marketing is linked to consumption, particularly in under-18s,’ said Alcohol Concern programme policy manager Tom Smith. ‘The volume of alcohol marketing in sport, especially in football which is popular with children and younger people, is enormous. If a million children can be exposed to alcohol marketing on TV and no rules be broken, we should also look at whether the existing rules that are meant to protect our kids are really working.’

The charity has also announced that Professor Sir Ian Gilmore – chair of the UK Alcohol Health Alliance and a former president of the Royal College of Physicians – has been appointed its new president. ‘He will bring an invaluable wealth of knowledge and experience,’ said chief executive Jackie Ballard. 

Meanwhile, Public Health England (PHE) has launched its ‘liver disease profiles’ tool which demonstrates stark regional variations, with male death rates up to four times higher in some local authority areas than others. 

Liver disease is the only major cause of death that continues to rise in England while falling in other European countries, with 90 per cent of cases caused by either alcohol, obesity or hepatitis B and C. One in ten people in England who die in their 40s now die of liver disease, while Alcohol Concern’s updated ‘map of alcohol harm’ shows that the total number of alcohol-related NHS admissions in England – when inpatient, outpatient and A&E visits are all included – stood at just below the 10m mark in 2012-13.

‘Liver disease is a public health priority because young lives are being needlessly lost,’ said PHE’s liver disease lead Professor Julia Verne. ‘We must do more to raise awareness, nationally and locally, and this is why it is so important for the public and health professionals to understand their local picture.’ 

New PHE figures on alcohol treatment, however, showed a 5 per cent increase in the number of people in treatment in the last year, with more than 90 per cent waiting less than three weeks. The numbers were encouraging, said director of drugs and alcohol Rosanna O’Connor, but there was ‘much more to do’. 

Alcohol Marketing at the FIFA World Cup 2014: 

a frequency analysis, and alcohol harm map at www.alcoholconcern.org.uk

 

NICE pill for heavy drinkers

A drug that helps to reduce the craving for alcohol in heavy drinkers has been recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). 

Nalmefene has a UK marketing authorisation for the ‘reduction of alcohol consumption in adult patients with alcohol dependence’, but who do not have physical withdrawal symptoms or require immediate detoxification. The drug – also known by its trade name Selincro – is licensed for use alongside psychosocial support to help people reduce their alcohol intake and ‘give them the encouragement they need to continue with their treatment’. 

In a new draft guidance document, NICE says that the drug should be available ‘as an option’ to regular heavy drinkers, with almost 600,000 people eligible for the treatment. It should only be used with patients who still have a high drinking risk level two weeks after initial assessment, says NICE. Final guidance is expected towards the end of the year. 

‘Those who could be prescribed nalmefene have already taken the first big steps by visiting their doctor, engaging with support services and taking part in therapy programmes,’ said health technology evaluation centre director at NICE, Professor Carole Longson. ‘We are pleased to be able to recommend the use of nalmefene to support people further in their efforts to fight alcohol dependence. When used alongside psychosocial support nalmefene is clinically and cost effective for the NHS compared with psychosocial support alone.’

The Faculty of Public Health, however, said that while medication was ‘one route’, there were also ‘relatively simple alternatives’ such as tougher alcohol advertising restrictions and minimum unit pricing. ‘While it is up to each of us to look after our health, government has a responsibility to take action on everyone’s behalf when lives can be saved,’ said the faculty’s alcohol lead, Professor Mark Bellis. ‘That’s why public health professionals have long been calling for a minimum unit price for alcohol.

‘We need to think very carefully about how we use limited NHS resources,’ he continued. ‘Prescribing nalmefene will increase pressure on the NHS when there are alternatives that would reduce pressure on health services by cutting alcohol consumption. There are always side effects from medication and we don’t know yet what the long-term impact will be. That’s why we need a clear commitment from government to minimum unit pricing.’

Alcohol dependence – nalmefene, draft guidance document at www.nice.org.uk

 

Sharp rise in Scottish drug-related hospital admissions

The rate of drug-related hospital stays in Scotland has increased from 41 per 100,000 population to 124 per 100,000 since 1996/97, according to new figures issued by ISD Scotland. In 2013/14, almost 70 per cent of drug-related stays were associated with opioids and more than 90 per cent were emergency admissions.

The rate of hospital stays increased among older age groups – from 20 to 213 per 100,000 for those aged 40-44 – while decreasing among younger people. Scottish Drug Forum director David Liddell recently stressed the importance of engaging with the country’s cohort of older, entrenched drug users (DDN, October, page 8).

‘The steadily increasing rate of hospital stays related to drug misuse shows that we are fighting a losing battle,’ said Scottish Liberal Democrat health spokesperson Jim Hume MSP. ‘It is worrying that those from Scotland’s poorest communities continue to suffer most from the blight of illegal drug misuse,’ he added, stressing that the figures highlighted the need for a ‘radical’ change in approach to drug policy.

Figures showing a two-thirds increase in the number of take-home naloxone kits issued were welcomed by the Scottish government, however. ‘Our world-leading programme for take-home naloxone, alongside life-saving training, sends a clear message that lives matter, and will help those who may not have engaged with drugs services before,’ said community safety minister Roseanna Cunningham. ‘While problem drug use among the general adult population and young people has decreased, there is still an older group of people who now also face a range of other health problems placing them at increased risk of overdose and death. We are determined to tackle this and support these vulnerable people. The naloxone programme is a key part of this.’

Drug-related hospital statistics Scotland 2014 and National naloxone programme Scotland – naloxone kits issued in 2013/14 and trends in opioid-related deaths at www.isdscotland.org

News in brief

UNDERCOVER SCANDAL

An undercover ‘mystery shopper’ investigation carried out by Crisis revealed that homeless people seeking help from local authorities are being turned away to sleep on the streets. People received no help in nearly 60 per cent of cases, including victims of domestic violence. ‘This is nothing short of a scandal,’ said Crisis chief executive Jon Sparkes. ‘On top of the human cost, it is incredibly expensive for society, which has to pick up the pieces.’ Turned away: the treatment of single homeless people by local authority homelessness services in England at www.crisis.org.uk

 

NEW DIRECTION

The Liberal Democrats voted to pass a new party policy on drugs ‘based on the latest evidence’ at their conference in Glasgow last month, including ‘immediately’ ending the use of imprisonment for possession as well as tightening the laws on stop and search. ‘When it comes to tackling crime it is easy to talk tough,’ said the party’s home affairs spokesperson Julian Huppert. ‘But talking tough doesn’t deliver results.’ 

 

POPPY PROBLEM

Despite a decade-long reconstruction programme and more than $7bn spent on counter-narcotics activity, Afghanistan’s poppy cultivation is at an ‘all-time high’, according to a report from the Office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR). ‘I strongly suggest that your departments consider the trends in opium cultivation and the effectiveness of past counter-narcotics efforts when planning future initiatives,’ special inspector general John F. Sopko wrote to secretary of state John Kerry and other senior US government figures. 

 

PUBLIC SECTOR PRIZE

WDP chair Yasmin Batliwala has been named winner of the Women in the City, Woman of Achievement public sector category award 2014.‘There are so many fantastic women working in the public sector, which makes me extremely proud to have won this award,’ she said. ‘I am dedicated to supporting women’s progress in the public sector and ensuring gender equality and diversity, particularly through helping the most vulnerable in society.’

 

NALOXONE ACTION PLAN

An ‘action summit on naloxone’ has taken place in London to create an immediate action plan for England ‘to cut the red tape which is causing unnecessary deaths’. Dr Chris Ford hosted the meeting, which included CEOs of treatment providers, researchers, doctors, user groups, experts by experience and officials from government departments, and considered ideas and practice from Scotland and Wales. ‘It always comes down to people, not policies,’ she said, challenging the government’s refusal to amend regulations on distributing naloxone until October 2015. Full report in December’s DDN.

 

NO SMOKE 

Turning Point has launched smoking cessation pilots in six of its substance misuse services across the country, backed by Public Health England (PHE). Staff will be supported to address smoking with service users and deliver very brief advice (VBA) on giving up. ‘If someone has sought help for alcohol and drug problems, it makes sense that they are given the opportunity to stop smoking at the same time and further improve their chances of a healthy life.’ said PHE’s director of alcohol, drugs and tobacco, Rosanna O’Connor. 

 

BRINK BOOST

Alcohol-free Liverpool venue The Brink (DDN, December 2013, page 20) has won in the ‘social change and intervention’ category at this year’s Merseyside Independent Business Awards. ‘It’s our intention to make The Brink a truly self-sustaining business and that means reducing our reliance on grants and donations,’ said Action on Addiction Merseyside’s head of service Karen Hemmings. ‘This win shows that we are a serious business.’

 

E-ADS

Advertisers will be able to show e-cigarettes in their TV commercials from later this month, under a new ruling from the Committee of Advertising Practice (CAP). Although TV adverts for e-cigarettes are already allowed, the devices are not permitted to be shown on screen. The new ruling specifies that adverts must not target non-smokers or under-18s and ‘avoid containing anything that promotes the use of a tobacco product or shows the use of a tobacco product in a positive light’. 

 

MULTIPLE IMPACT 

Welfare reforms are having an ‘overwhelmingly negative’ impact on people with multiple needs, according to a Making Every Adult Matter (MEAM) Voices from the frontline report. Among the disturbing findings in Evidence from the frontline: how policy changes are affecting people experiencing multiple needs are reports of vulnerable women turning to sex work, subsistence theft or being forced to depend on violent partners after losing their benefits. Document at meam.org.uk

 

Smart in liquidation 

Trustees of Smart Recovery UK (SRUK) have announced that the charity will cease trading and go into liquidation after a dispute with its US-based licensor (ADASHN) could not be resolved. Their statement said that ‘overall SRUK has been a great success’ and expressed their ‘best wishes and  hopes for all those seeking recovery within the UK.’

 

No apparent link between ‘toughness’ of drug laws and use, says Home Office report

There is ‘no apparent correlation’ between the toughness of a country’s approach to drugs and levels of use, according to a Home Office study of international drugs policies.  

Drugs: international comparators reviewed different approaches ‘in policymaking and on the ground’ based on a series of fact-finding missions between May 2013 and March this year. Ministers and Home Office officials visited Canada, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Japan, New Zealand, Portugal, South Korea, Sweden, Switzerland, the US and Uruguay, looking at a range of issues including decriminalisation of possession for personal use, consumption rooms, heroin-assisted treatment, drug courts and supply-side regulation of cannabis. 

‘Without exception, every country we considered sees drug use as undesirable,’ says the document, and while all were ‘taking steps to disrupt, reduce, or regulate supply’ there was a ‘variety of responses to the individual user’. In terms of the effectiveness of drug laws, researchers studied Portugal, which removed criminal sanctions for personal use in 2001 and the Czech Republic, where possession of small quantities is treated as an administrative offence punishable with a fine. They also looked at Japan, which operates a ‘zero tolerance’ policy with possession of even small amounts of drugs attracting lengthy prison sentences and Sweden, whose approach to possession ‘has grown stricter over several decades’. 

‘While levels of drug use in Portugal appear to be relatively low, reported levels of cannabis use in the Czech Republic are among the highest in Europe,’ says the report. ‘Indicators of levels of drug use in Sweden, which has one of the toughest approaches we saw, point to relatively low levels of use, but not markedly lower than countries with different approaches.’ 

The report discusses evidence of ‘improved health prospects’ for drug users in Portugal, with the caveat that these ‘cannot be attributed to decriminalisation alone’ and adds that it is unclear whether decriminalisation ‘reduces the burden on the police’, with Portugal’s resourcing at similar levels after decriminalisation as before. The country has, however, reduced the proportion of drug-related offenders in its prison population, says the report. 

The document acknowledges that ‘what works in one country may not be appropriate in another’, and states that ‘the legislative and enforcement approach to drug possession is only one strand of any country’s response to drug misuse’, which is also informed by wider social and cultural factors. It also stresses that there is ‘robust evidence that drug use among adults has been on a downward trend in England and Wales since the mid-2000s’ and that the UK’s ‘balanced approach enables targeted demand-reduction activity, and good availability and quality of treatment. Indeed, while in Portugal, we were encouraged to hear that drug treatment in the UK is well-regarded internationally.’

In terms of supply-side regulation of cannabis the document states that the policies in Uruguay and the US are ‘highly experimental’, with no evidence so far to ‘indicate whether or not they will be successful in reducing the criminality associated with the drug trade’. 

‘The differences between the approach other countries have taken illustrate the complexity of the challenge, and demonstrate why we cannot simply adopt another country’s approach wholesale,’ said crime prevention minister Norman Baker, who had accused Conservative colleagues of ‘suppressing’ the document, which had been ready for publication for a number of months. ‘The UK’s approach on drugs remains clear: we must prevent drug use in our communities, help dependent individuals through treatment and wider recovery support, while ensuring law enforcement protects society by stopping the supply and tackling the organised crime that is associated with the drugs trade.’

The Home Office has also published the findings of its expert panel study of new psychoactive substances (NPS), and the government’s response, which includes plans for a blanket ban similar to that introduced in Ireland in 2010, improved training for NHS staff and new PHE guidance for local authorities on integrating NPS into treatment, education and prevention work. 

Drugs: international comparators; New psychoactive substances in England: a review of the evidence, and Government response to new psychoactive substances review expert panel report at www.gov.uk

Media savvy

Who’s been saying what..? DDN’s round-up of what’s being said in the national papers 

The economic commoditisation of human pain is dangerously close to victim-blaming. Such an approach can send the destructive message: see how much money you cost everyone, you broken person? Its dark heart is that the state’s only interest in its citizens is as economic units, occasionally broken and in need of quick and efficient repair, in order to slot back into the corporate design.

Alex Andreou, Guardian, 10 September

Stephen Fry, BBC favourite and darling of the new Establishment, noisily confesses in a rather sad and attention-seeking new book to possession and use of cocaine in Buckingham Palace. The official penalty for this offence is seven years in jail and an unlimited fine. Could there be better proof that the elite know perfectly well that the laws against drug possession haven’t been enforced for years, and exist only on paper?

Peter Hitchens, Mail on Sunday, 28 September

Fry’s world is not the dark estate alley, his confreres are not the ten-year-old runners, the swaggering gang boys who will cry in prison cells for their wrecked futures, or the girls they trade and rape as part of an urban social ecology intimately entwined with the drug trade.

Libby Purves, Telegraph, 27 September

I’m pretty sure it’s a political confection, the visceral hatred of criminals this government exhibits. It doesn’t indicate any serious reflection on who is actually in prison, what happens to them during their sentence, or what it will take for society to reabsorb them when they’re released… The problem is a government that can write off some of its citizens as beneath its care. It’s a dangerous cruelty with implications far beyond the prison walls.

Zoe Williams, Guardian, 15 September

Prison is not meant to be comfortable. It’s not meant to be somewhere anyone would ever want to go back to. But the language being used by some pressure groups and commentators to talk about prisons bears little relation to reality.

Chris Grayling, Guardian, 18 September 

It is too easy for GPs to write a script for a benzodiazepine when confronted by a patient who is in distress, or suffering with anxiety or insomnia. But the pills barely provide a sticking plaster for the real problem and can do far more harm than good in the long run.

Max Pemberton, Telegraph, 15 September

Like a mutating parasite, tobacco companies respond to public health efforts by exploiting weaknesses and compromising the global response… If tobacco corporations stopped resisting public health efforts, we could end tobacco use in a generation with a range of well-known, widely endorsed and effective measures.

William Savedoff, Guardian, 1 September 

No matter that e-cigarettes are used by people to help them give up smoking; the WHO likes to imagine that they will lead paradoxically to more people doing it. Although, as the organisation admits, there is no evidence of children being tempted to take up cigarettes after trying electronic ones, it fears that this may not always be the case… You would think that the WHO had enough real health problems to deal with without needing to protect the world against imaginary dangers that may not even exist.

Alexander Chancellor, Spectator, 6 September

 

 

 

 

 

Letters

LettersThe DDN letters page, where you can have your say.

The next issue of DDN will be out on 3 November — make sure you send letters and comments to claire@cjwellings.com by Wednesday 22 October to be included. Letters may be edited for space or clarity – please limit submissions to 350 words.

 

Unfair odds

I was encouraged and pleased to read the article ‘Loaded dice’ in your September edition. It echoed my thoughts in terms of there not being enough help for the thousands of people in the UK suffering from gambling addiction/issues. My biggest gripe is that the government need to do more in terms of providing support and funding for the NHS, so that we can have more referral outlets that are able to offer the services greatly needed to tackle this ever-increasing social problem.

Be sure that this is a national problem that affects everybody and anybody. Not only does gambling addiction bring on other mental health issues such as depression, but it has a massive affect on those individuals’ families and friends, breaking down relationships and friendships with the very people who are close to us.

I’m one of the lucky ones who came out the other side, but believe me there are many who are not so fortunate. I lost over £500,000, and it took me a long time to come to terms with the fact I had a problem. If you feel that you may have a gambling issue, please get professional help before it’s too late. Denial is a major factor in a gambler’s DNA so I can fully understand why we keep silent and not let our family and friends in, but, believe me, in the long run you will be relieved you found the courage and strength to break that silence. It could save your life.

I have just set up my own company, and we aim to provide a service for the thousands of sufferers out there, and not just on the therapy side but just as importantly the prevention side, which we will do through our presentations throughout the UK.

It’s imperative we all work together to raise awareness and support those who are in real need of help, as it’s a crying shame that as a country we are not doing enough to stop thousands from a life of debt, illness and misery. That has to change and change quickly.

Tony Kelly, by email

Author of Red Card, www.kellysredcardconsultancy.co.uk

 

Cup of cheer

I wish to share with your readers the growing benefits of the social enterprise café run by our addiction recovery charity, the Spitalfields Crypt Trust (SCT).

Two years ago we launched a coffee-bookshop, Paper & Cup. It provides an open door to the local community in order to de-stigmatise addiction. It gives people in recovery a place to learn barista skills and gain work experience, while building social skills and self efficacy.

Paper & Cup has been a huge success and has enabled us to work in a new way with our service users, while creating relationships with local people and businesses.

There are no notices on the walls about addiction. Many customers come and go without realising that they have been served by someone who was homeless and in the grip of a serious substance addiction. Others pick up on our aims by chatting or by picking up our small leaflet. They all encounter recovery in an environment that is non-threatening and attractive.

In the past month a new chapter of the Paper & Cup story has begun. With funding from Comic Relief, we are opening as a ‘recovery café’. At 7pm each Wednesday, Paper & Cup turns into Choices Café – a coffee shop run by service users with greatly reduced prices, board games, fellowship literature and more focus on our recovery community aims.

These evenings provide a social space for people in recovery to meet, share ideas, form friendships and have fun.

Our recovery steering committee are keen to make Choices Café open to anyone and local people come in, keen to pick up a bargain coffee. We are delighted to see this ‘de-ghettoisation’ happening, giving people the chance to take that brave step Bill W. [William White] called ‘a bridge to normal living’.

Brent Clark, addictions therapist and community development manager, Spitalfields Crypt Trust, www.sct.org.uk

 

From the DDN website

On our September cover story ‘Loaded dice?

I had a fruit machine addiction since my school days up into my late 30s. It was a real battle to stop throwing my money away – for me the real thrill was the losing, which happened on the rare occasion I won the jackpot. I could not wait to get those pound coins in quick enough.

With the right help and good people in support I overcame this. I want to say that this is a very real, addictive problem. We need to ban these machines that the government have allowed in every social situation. Kids get hooked young as I did, spending my dinner money then, as a man, my wages. It can and should be banned.

Patrick

 

On ‘The whole detox’

Homeopathy has never shown any effect on any medical condition under any circumstances. What is most concerning here is that we have an apparently non-medically qualified person using a method she apparently just ‘made-up’ – which hasn’t undergone any scientific studies. She is then using this on people with genuine addictions who should be receiving professional treatment, rather than something that has never been shown to work for anything.

A very, very concerning situation.

Simon (@flatsquid)

Letters

LettersThe DDN letters page, where you can have your say.

The next issue of DDN will be out on 3 November — make sure you send letters and comments to claire@cjwellings.com by Wednesday 22 October to be included. Letters may be edited for space or clarity – please limit submissions to 350 words.

Unfair odds

I was encouraged and pleased to read the article ‘Loaded dice’ in your September edition. It echoed my thoughts in terms of there not being enough help for the thousands of people in the UK suffering from gambling addiction/issues. My biggest gripe is that the government need to do more in terms of providing support and funding for the NHS, so that we can have more referral outlets that are able to offer the services greatly needed to tackle this ever-increasing social problem.

Be sure that this is a national problem that affects everybody and anybody. Not only does gambling addiction bring on other mental health issues such as depression, but it has a massive affect on those individuals’ families and friends, breaking down relationships and friendships with the very people who are close to us.

I’m one of the lucky ones who came out the other side, but believe me there are many who are not so fortunate. I lost over £500,000, and it took me a long time to come to terms with the fact I had a problem. If you feel that you may have a gambling issue, please get professional help before it’s too late. Denial is a major factor in a gambler’s DNA so I can fully understand why we keep silent and not let our family and friends in, but, believe me, in the long run you will be relieved you found the courage and strength to break that silence. It could save your life.

I have just set up my own company, and we aim to provide a service for the thousands of sufferers out there, and not just on the therapy side but just as importantly the prevention side, which we will do through our presentations throughout the UK.

It’s imperative we all work together to raise awareness and support those who are in real need of help, as it’s a crying shame that as a country we are not doing enough to stop thousands from a life of debt, illness and misery. That has to change and change quickly.

Tony Kelly, by email

Author of Red Card, www.kellysredcardconsultancy.co.uk

 

Cup of cheer

I wish to share with your readers the growing benefits of the social enterprise café run by our addiction recovery charity, the Spitalfields Crypt Trust (SCT).

Two years ago we launched a coffee-bookshop, Paper & Cup. It provides an open door to the local community in order to de-stigmatise addiction. It gives people in recovery a place to learn barista skills and gain work experience, while building social skills and self efficacy.

Paper & Cup has been a huge success and has enabled us to work in a new way with our service users, while creating relationships with local people and businesses.

There are no notices on the walls about addiction. Many customers come and go without realising that they have been served by someone who was homeless and in the grip of a serious substance addiction. Others pick up on our aims by chatting or by picking up our small leaflet. They all encounter recovery in an environment that is non-threatening and attractive.

In the past month a new chapter of the Paper & Cup story has begun. With funding from Comic Relief, we are opening as a ‘recovery café’. At 7pm each Wednesday, Paper & Cup turns into Choices Café – a coffee shop run by service users with greatly reduced prices, board games, fellowship literature and more focus on our recovery community aims.

These evenings provide a social space for people in recovery to meet, share ideas, form friendships and have fun.

Our recovery steering committee are keen to make Choices Café open to anyone and local people come in, keen to pick up a bargain coffee. We are delighted to see this ‘de-ghettoisation’ happening, giving people the chance to take that brave step Bill W. [William White] called ‘a bridge to normal living’.

Brent Clark, addictions therapist and community development manager, Spitalfields Crypt Trust, www.sct.org.uk

 

From the DDN website

On our September cover story ‘Loaded dice?

I had a fruit machine addiction since my school days up into my late 30s. It was a real battle to stop throwing my money away – for me the real thrill was the losing, which happened on the rare occasion I won the jackpot. I could not wait to get those pound coins in quick enough.

With the right help and good people in support I overcame this. I want to say that this is a very real, addictive problem. We need to ban these machines that the government have allowed in every social situation. Kids get hooked young as I did, spending my dinner money then, as a man, my wages. It can and should be banned.

Patrick

 

On ‘The whole detox’

Homeopathy has never shown any effect on any medical condition under any circumstances. What is most concerning here is that we have an apparently non-medically qualified person using a method she apparently just ‘made-up’ – which hasn’t undergone any scientific studies. She is then using this on people with genuine addictions who should be receiving professional treatment, rather than something that has never been shown to work for anything.

A very, very concerning situation.

Simon (@flatsquid)

Scratching the surface

image

There’s much to be done to bring together substance misuse and mental health services so we can offer effective care for dual diagnosis, says Taf Kunorubwe

‘Before we can offer you a psychiatric assessment, you need to be abstinent for a minimum of two months.’

How often do service users receive such responses? My experience of working in mental health care, IAPT (the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies programme), substance treatment services and as a mindfulness teacher has shown me that this happens all too often. The most simplistic explanation of dual diagnosis is experiencing one of a range of mental health problems in conjunction with substance misuse. However I would caution against relying on a literal interpretation as multiple, complex and interdependent needs are often involved.

Unfortunately dual diagnosis has been a diagnosis of exclusion, with service users omitted from mental health services for substance misuse and substance treatment services unable to offer the level of support needed. This is despite widespread recognition that this client group has multiple needs, worse social outcomes and the need for holistic approaches. This is recognised by many studies and documents, including the Department of Health’s Dual diagnosis good practice guide; making every adult matter (a coalition of four national charities – DrugScope, Mind, Clinks and Homeless Link); the Dual Diagnosis Toolkit produced by Rethink and Turning Point; and IAPT’s Positive practice guide.

In the space of an article I could not adequately explore the various definitions, historical context, prevalence, service user experiences, or therapeutic interventions relating to dual diagnosis. Rather, I am aiming to share some helpful practice and to contribute to the discussion around how to support such service users.

Firstly, I cannot advocate training strongly enough; even basic awareness or assessment skills will benefit service users and boost workers’ competencies and confidence, and basic training should be available as part of everyone’s induction process. If this isn’t currently provided, you may wish to consider self-directed study or free e-learning packages such as the Dual diagnosis, making progress e-learning resource http://www.celecoventry.co.uk/projects/dualdiagnosis/.

For those regularly involved I would recommend further development via advanced practitioner training, which you may be able to access as part of your professional development plan, through bursaries or self-funding. 

Not only would training help workers to better support service users, it can also be a catalyst for culture change in services, shifting from attitudes such as ‘don’t ask don’t tell’, exclusion and non-compliance, towards non-judgemental positions, empathy and support. This will hopefully allow service users to be open and honest about their experiences and help engagement, allowing services to come to a shared understanding with them about recovery. Also, at a professional level, this more integrated culture should help to move us closer to a feeling of cohesion instead of ‘us and them’.

With non-judgemental, empathetic and supportive attitudes, we can embark on engaging more with service users. By this, I do not mean simply allowing access to services, but removing additional barriers and encouraging active engagement. Experience of this at the pre-assessment stage has been through outreach work, health promotion or working in conjunction with services that are first points of contact, such as food banks. During assessment we can actively engage by using therapeutic skills and entering into a conversation about how their substance use and mental health interrelate, psychoeducation and therapeutic treatment options – all of which will help to reach a joint decision and enable any subsequent work to be towards a joint view of recovery.

Once in treatment, I have often found a crossover of interventions, which aids engagement as we are addressing underlying processes. An example of this is in CBT sessions: we explore the impact that negative automatic thoughts have on depressed moods and how to challenge these. By the end of therapy, these coping strategies can effectively challenge negative automatic thoughts in relation to substance misuse. 

In instances where we possibly require further expertise, joint work can be helpful, and it doesn’t require superhuman effort to collaborate with mental health services. In my experience this can be as simple as attending team meetings, joint care planning, outreach, risk management and supervision. Not only does this aid active engagement with all the services involved, but it also means we have a shared culture of recovery, avoid repetition for clients, help to achieve integrated interventions and contribute to staff being supported. An example of this was through joint outreach with mental health services. We re-engaged with a high-risk service user and helped him to stabilise; whereas before when he disengaged, he deteriorated until he was detained under the Mental Health Act.

Not only does joint work benefit clients and aid engagement, but it is also helpful in developing an awareness of services, the treatment approaches available, referral routes, screening measures and the support they offer. I found this helpful when considering additional support for service users and enabling them to make an informed decision. For example what’s the difference between IAPT, psychotherapy, and psychosocial interventions? Does the IAPT employment retention service accept external referrals? Such information can be shared by open lines of communication developed through joint working.

Another useful practice is to consider the impact that both the mental health and substance misuse may have on a service user’s level of risk, so we can create a more holistic and comprehensive risk assessment and management plan. When assessing risk I often consider the following: risk to self, risk to others, risk from others, neglect, safeguarding, escalating substance use, deteriorating mental health and social functioning. For those interested in more information, there are good practice guides such as the Clinical risk management: a clinical tool and practitioner manual (2000) or Best practice in managing risk (2007).

Equally important is how relapse prevention is a crucial ingredient in recovery from either substance misuse or mental health problems, with a lack of integration meaning that one lapse often leads to another. As such, a holistic relapse prevention plan involving the service user and mental health services can be helpful. This plan can incorporate early warning signs, effective steps and smart goals, and should be followed by effective support from aftercare services.

This undercurrent of integrated care can effectively match the needs and goals of service users, avoiding the prescriptive approach that can overwhelm dual diagnosis service users and hamper engagement. By joint working, we can offer a range of support matching the care plan driven by the service user, regardless of service restrictions such as limits on the length of treatment.

Unfortunately, some services tend to be driven more by their own needs (and limitations) than the needs of service users. One recent example I came across was of a service user (who had significantly reduced her alcohol use) who had been encouraged into residential treatment for her drinking, after losing her accommodation because of noise complaints when she responded to voices. Soon after her admission we received concerns about her mental state and reports that other residents were frightened, and she was discharged as the rehab was ‘not equipped for dual diagnosis’.

Unfortunately, such experiences are all too common and illustrate some of the challenges that professionals face, which can contribute to compassion fatigue and burnout. As such, the provision of adequate levels of supervision and support is of utmost importance. Regrettably, my experience is that substance misuse services only provide limited supervision, which often focuses more on management issues such as targets and repercussions. Commissioners and managers need to be proactive in facilitating supervision, and professionals should feel comfortable requesting it. I often found it helpful to receive supervision or support through link work with other services, peer support or even using a buddy system. I cannot express enough gratitude to current and previous colleagues for providing these excellent, never-ending reserves of support, as I wouldn’t have coped without them.


My final suggestion relates to coping with the challenges professionals face, by practising self-care. I have personally found it useful to use the same interventions that I suggest to service users, such as cognitive restructuring, worry time, behavioural activation, transition from work to home, assertiveness, and practising mindfulness. For those interested in mindfulness, I recommend the three-minute breathing space. This can be summarised as – step one: becoming aware; step two: gathering and focusing attention; and step three: expanding attention. There are some useful free online resources that you can use for this.

In this article I have only been able to scratch the surface of the many helpful practices that can be introduced to support dual diagnosis service users and the professionals who work with them. My hope is to raise much-needed awareness, and share some helpful insights, alongside my passion for good practice. If nothing else, it is a call to arms to raise the profile of this challenging work and I look forward to hearing other perspectives. Some final words to managers and commissioners: please offer more support and strive to improve standards of care.  DDN

Taf Kunorubwe is a mindfulness teacher and a locum working at a CBT service within the NHS.

 

Championing recovery

Throughout September, more than 100 vibrant activities took place across the country for Recovery Month

hook a duckElly Sanchez recaptures the fun and inclusivity of RDaSH’s Recovery Carnival 

Inspired by the success of last year’s recovery games, the Rotherham Doncaster and South Humber NHS Foundation Trust (RDaSH) drug and alcohol services team in Doncaster held a recovery carnival in Doncaster.

Visitors braved the dreary September drizzle to join in the fun and games at the all-day event at Sandall Park, which celebrated mutual aid and recovery, while helping to reduce stigma.

The day increased knowledge about access to treatment, and helped sustain addiction-free recovery and what works beyond medical treatment. Organisers reached out to those who are still suffering with addiction who may fear accessing treatment, by demonstrating it is possible to recover and contribute to society.

Designed to be family friendly and fun, the event included activities and attractions like human table football, a space hopper relay and a ‘lob a welly’ competition, as well as street entertainment (magic and fire eating), music from local bands and a recovery walk.

‘The event brought together local communities, families, carers and friends to raise awareness of mutual aid and peer-led support networks,’ said service manager, Stuart Green.

‘No one sets out to have a drug or alcohol problem. Recovery is beyond prescription; this is as much a healing of the community as the individual, and we demonstrated that not only is there is a life after drugs, but also that recovery is infectious and motivating.’ 

Elly Sanchez is medical secretary at RDaSH. Anyone seeking help or advice can contact www.drughub.co.uk

 

IMG_5937The Recovery Street Film Festival showed ten shortlisted films at events up and down the county

WIth ‘Deserving a future’ as its the theme, the Recovery Street Film Festival’s aim was to highlight the challenges that those living in recovery – and their family and friends – face when trying to find their place back in society. A joint project between the major treatment agencies, it was open to anyone, regardless of their film-making ability, who could show the determination and courage of individuals overcoming addiction.

Mitch Winehouse opened the festival at the official launch in Borough Market, London, on 10 September before the festival toured to other major cities including Birmingham and Glasgow.

‘This film festival is another great example of Britain’s recovery community giving something back to society and reaching out to share their stories, and hopefully in turn save lives. In doing so they humbly shine a light on themselves and expose the incredible people they are today,’ he said.

The judges will select one lucky winner from the ten shortlisted films, also to be announced by Mitch Winehouse, to receive £1,000 worth of film-related prizes.

To find out more and view the films, visit www.recoverystreetfilmfestival.co.uk

 

 

 

 

October 2014

October

In this month’s issue of DDN…

‘The stories we’ve heard along the way have sometimes been heartbreaking while others have made us laugh out loud. But they are all undeniably inspiring and touching.’

In this month’s magazine, Rachael Evans explains The other faces of addiction, a photo exhibition launched by Adfam to commemorate 30 years of supporting family members. Click on the links below to read more, and don’t forget to join the discussion by commenting, tweeting and liking our Facebook page

PDF Version / Mobile Version

 

Time to stop criminalising drug users, says global commission

A new report from the Global Commission on Drug Policy has called for an end to the criminalisation of drug use and possession. Among the recommenda­tions in Taking control: pathways to drug policies that work are that health and community safety be prioritised by ‘a fundamental reorientation’ of policy and resources away from punitive approaches, and to ‘allow and encourage diverse experiments’ in legally regulating markets for drugs – ‘beginning with, but not limited to, cannabis, coca leaf and certain novel psychoactive substances’.

The commission, members of which include the former presidents of Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Poland, Portugal and Switzerland, is ‘the most distinguished group of high-level leaders to ever call for such far-reaching changes’, it says. The report also wants to see ‘equitable access’ to opiate-based pain medication, an end to the imposition of compulsory treatment and alternatives to prison for ‘non-violent, low-level’ partici­pants in illegal drug markets, such as farmers or couriers.

‘It is time to change course,’ said former UN secretary general and convenor of the West Africa Commission on Drugs, Kofi Annan. ‘We need drug policies informed by evidence of what actually works, rather than policies that criminalise drug use while failing to provide access to effective prevention or treatment. This has led not only to overcrowded jails but also to severe health and social problems.’

Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats are to discuss ending the use of imprisonment for possession of drugs for personal use at the their annual conference in Glasgow this month, along with moving the ‘drugs and alcohol policy lead from the Home Office to the Department of Health’.

The proposals are contained in the party’s ‘pre-manifesto’ document, which also states that they would establish a commission to look at the effectiveness of UK drug laws and alternative approaches, including ‘further work on diverting users into treatment or into civil penalties that do not attract a criminal record which can seriously affect their chances of employment’.

Taking control: pathways to drug policies that work at www.globalcommissionondrugs.org

Pre-manifesto 2014 at www.libdems.org.uk

CQC pledges to focus on ‘the issues that matter’

The Care Quality Commission (CQC) has set out its new approach to inspecting drug and alcohol services, which will ‘reflect national priorities’ and ‘put people’s recovery at the heart’. Also central to the inspection regime will be a ‘commitment to tailor inspections to the issues that matter to people using substance misuse services’, it says.

The CQC’s aim is to ensure that people are able to ‘quickly access high-quality services that assess the whole individual’, it states. The commission will ‘seek to ensure that services are safe, caring, effective, responsive to people’s needs and well-led’.

CQC will be responsible for regulating hospital inpatient-based services that provide assessment, stabilisation, and assisted withdrawal, as well as community-based services and residential rehab. Alongside therapists, doctors, psychologists and pharmacists, the commission’s ‘specially trained inspection teams’ will include ‘experts by experience’, it says, and will also use information from service users, their families and carers. ‘Key relationships’ for corroborating its decisions, meanwhile, will include Public Health England (PHE), NICE, local authorities and other relevant bodies.

‘It is vital when looking at substance misuse services that the views, opinions and experiences of people who use them are listened to and that any judgement that we make about those services reflects what we have heard,’ said CQC’s chief inspector of hospitals, Professor Sir Mike Richards, who will lead the inspection programme. ‘I am determined that this experience of care and treatment form a central part of the future inspection of services.

‘I will be giving ratings to substance misuse service providers so people can be clear about the quality of services and to help drive improvement,’ he continued. ‘Where we can, we will align our inspections of substance misuse services with other sectors we regulate, such as community mental health or learning disability services, community services, primary care services and acute hospitals.’

CQC is also consulting on its guidelines for health and social care services ‘to set the bar below which care should not fall’, including what providers should do when things go wrong and how to ensure staff are fit for their roles.

Consultation at www.cqc.org.uk/content/consultation-our-guidance-help-services-meet-new-regulations, until 17 October.

A fresh start for the regulation and inspection of substance misuse services at www.cqc.org.uk

See David Finney’s article, All change.

England and Wales see sharp rise in drug deaths

Nearly, 2,000 drug misuse deaths were registered in England and Wales in 2013, according to figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

Male drug misuse deaths involving illegal drugs rose by 23 per cent, from 1,177 in 2012 to 1,444, while female deaths were up by 12 per cent to 513. The upward trend is in contrast to Scotland, which saw deaths fall by 9 per cent over the same period (DDN, September, page 4).

Heroin/morphine remained the substances most commonly involved, up 32 per cent to 765 deaths, while 220 deaths involving the synthetic opiate tramadol were also recorded. Overall, nearly 3,000 drug poisoning deaths – including those involving legal drugs – were registered in England and Wales in 2013, more than 2,000 of them among males. In England, the North East was the region with the highest mortality rate from drug misuse, while London had the lowest.

The number of deaths involving new psychoactive substances was up by 15 per cent – from 52 to 60 – although the increase ‘was not as steep as that observed between 2011 and 2012’, says the document.

DrugScope expressed ‘serious concerns’ over the figures, which marked a ‘reversal of the recent downward trend and appear to show the sharpest increase since the early 1990s’, said chief executive Marcus Roberts. ‘Of course, this is about more than just numbers; each death represents a tragedy for the individual concerned, their family and friends.’

The charity also urged the government to review the timetable for its proposed roll-out of naloxone provision – currently scheduled for October next year at the earliest – so that ‘this life-saving medication can be used as soon as possible, to prevent more people from dying’. Commenting on the release of the Scottish figures last month, community safety minister Roseanna Cunningham pointed out that nearly 4,000 naloxone kits had been issued in Scotland in 2012-13, ‘potentially saving more than 350 lives’.

Deaths related to drug poisoning in England and Wales, 2013 at www.ons.gov.uk

See news focus.

News in brief

Ageist agenda

Better knowledge is needed of what works in the identification, treatment and prevention of drug problems in older people, according to a report from the Big Lottery Fund, along with improved collection and reporting of data. Drug use among older people is being ‘systematically ignored’, says The forgotten people: drug problems in later life. ‘Tackling ageist attitudes’ and improving the knowledge and skills of professionals were also necessary, said report author Sarah Wadd, as well as ‘making sure that drug treatment services are accessible and meet the needs of older people’. Report at www.biglotteryfund.org.uk. See news focus, page 6

Challenging times

The scale of the new psychoactive substances problem may be ‘even greater than estimated’, with services ill equipped to cope, according to a report from the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RPsych). Users may be reluctant to access help, while staff may not ask about the drugs during routine drug assessments ‘or have the skills to deal with problems when they arise’, says One new drug a week: why novel psychoactive substances and club drugs need a different response from UK treatment providers. The challenge was to ‘keep pace with this growing problem, while continuing to meet the demands of more established substance misuse problems associated with alcohol, heroin and crack cocaine’, said Owen Boden-Jones of CNWL’s club drug clinic. Report at www.rcpsych.ac.uk

Hep feedback

A global patient survey to reveal how hepatitis C is treated around the world has been developed by the World Hepatitis Alliance. HCV Quest is ‘your platform to share your thoughts about your care, the impact of HCV on things like your work and lifestyle and the sources you trust for credible advice about your health’, says the alliance, with the results used to inform policy-makers, doctors and pharmaceutical companies. www.worldhepatitisalliance.org/en/hcv-quest.html

Stark stats

Greater Manchester sees an average of just over 19 emergency hospital admissions for alcohol-related liver disease every week, according to figures from the Health and Social Care Information Centre (HSCIC). Areas of the North West and North East of England have the highest admission rates in the country, says the centre, with hospitals nationally admitting more than 10,000 cases of alcohol-related liver disease in 2013/14 – more than 200 a week. Alongside Greater Manchester, Merseyside and Lancashire were the areas with the highest rates of emergency admissions, with around eight and nine per week on average respectively. Statistics at www.hscic.gov.uk. See this month’s Exchange.

Meth migration

Methamphetamine manufacture, traditionally concentrated close to major markets in North America and East and South East Asia, has now spread to other countries, according to a report from UNODC. Iran, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa and Guatemala are among the countries where manufacture is taking place, says Global SMART update 2014, while it is also spreading across Europe, ‘though at low levels’. Report at www.unodc.org

Premium plans

Public Health England (PHE) is consulting on aspects of the Health Premium Incentive Scheme (HPIS) – which rewards local authorities for public health improvements in line with indicators from the public health outcomes framework – and public health funding allocations for 2015-16. Consultation at www.gov.uk/government/consultations/health-premium-incentive-scheme-and-public-health-allocations until 23 October

Acute issues

A study of specialist alcohol health workers in hospitals has found that ‘the work is often precarious and underfunded’, with more investment and better research needed. ‘The government’s alcohol strategy identified hospital-based specialists as key,’ said James Nicholls, director of research and policy development at Alcohol Research UK, which funded the study. ‘It is vitally important that this role is adequately supported.’ Report at alcoholresearchuk.org

Family feuds

A £120,000 funding package to support families affected by drug and alcohol problems in rural areas has been announced by the Scottish Government. The money will go towards a small grants scheme administered through the Lloyds Partnership Drug Initiative, which promotes voluntary sector work with vulnerable young people. ‘It is vital that everyone has access to these services no matter where they live,’ said community safety minister Roseanna Cunningham.

Blue sky thinking

Prison drug charity RAPt is to merge with Blue Sky Development, a social enterprise providing employment to offenders. Blue Sky’s jobs will be targeted at RAPt graduates, ‘giving them a step on a career path to support their continued recoveries.’ 

Benefit blunders

Welfare sanctions can have unintended consequences including distancing people from support, negative impacts on third parties – particularly children – and ‘displacing rather than resolving issues such as street homelessness and anti-social behaviour’, according to a report from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF). Sanctions also disproportionately affect those under 25, as well as homeless people and other vulnerable groups, it says. Welfare sanctions and conditionality in the UK at www.jrf.org.uk

Hidden faces

Rachael (author)To commemorate 30 years of supporting family members affected by loved ones’ drug and alcohol use, Adfam has launched a photo exhibition that celebrates ‘the tough love that gets up to fight another day’. Rachael Evans explains

Adfam is a charity founded in 1984 by the mother of a drug user who could not find the support she needed to cope with her son’s addiction. From humble beginnings as a grassroots organisation, bringing together worried mums and dads, we have come a long way. Today we inform policy development, campaign nationally and locally for improved family support services and carry out regional development work with services and practitioners throughout the country. We have grown in size and influence to become the national umbrella organisation working to improve support for families affected by a loved one’s addiction. We work closely with local support services, partner organisations, professionals, government and, of course, families themselves to ensure that no family in need of support goes without it.

We at Adfam are always looking for ways to reduce the isolation of the families we support; so to mark our 30th birthday this year we are running a campaign to raise awareness of the stigma that these families so often suffer. Through this we will encourage people to speak out about their experiences and problems in an attempt to combat the stigma surrounding addiction, felt by both users themselves and their families.

Stigma comes from an assumption about an individual or a group and results in people being treated differently or seen as a stereotype. The person is dehumanised and is perceived not only as behaving differently from ‘us’, but actually being different to ‘us’. Families as well as users are stigmatised, sometimes seen as being responsible for their relative’s addiction or assumed to be ‘bad families’.

Michael HallWe believe that families are often the unseen victims of drug and alcohol use, facing not only the impacts of their loved one’s addiction, but also grappling with the stigma and shame they feel from friends, family, neighbours, their communities and wider society. However, rather than being to blame for their loved one’s addiction, families are often an essential source of support and ambition for substance users, and play a crucial role in their recovery. Stigma discourages families from coming forward to seek the support they so desperately need, negatively impacts on their health and wellbeing, leads to isolation and renders them less able to support their loved one. What is required is an understanding of the difficult predicaments these families face and the potential for recovery.

To this end, the highlight of our campaign will be our 30th birthday portrait exhibition, The other faces of addiction, where we will showcase 30 portraits – 30 portraits for 30 years – of families who have experienced, or who are still experiencing, the rippling effects of addiction. We have worked with an excellent photographer, David Collingwood, to capture their strength and humanity and to reach out to those who are feeling alone and helpless, encouraging them to come forward for support.

‘I came to this project aware that no two families are affected by addiction in the same way,’ says David. ‘I expected sad stories – and there were plenty – but the people I met were funny, fierce, angry, proud, elated, frustrated and hopeful. What impressed me most was the positive energy of the mothers, fathers, grandparents and siblings: the tough love that gets up to fight another day, and another.’

The stories we’ve heard along the way have sometimes been heartbreaking while others have made us laugh out loud. But they are all undeniably inspiring and touching. Adfam would like to thank all of those who have shared their experiences with us and bravely spoken out on this crucial issue.

Kate 2We came to better understand the true impact that stigma has on families, as one of our participants, Nicola, explained: ‘I had to keep my son’s drug use from the rest of the family, have heard the derogatory way people talk about drug users, and I’ve seen the look in people’s eyes when they find out about my son’s addiction. Luckily, I have friends who see the person he is, rather than the drug user.’

Another of our exhibition participants, Amanda, expressed her eagerness to be involved in a campaign such as this: ‘We want to show that these issues happen to all kinds of families. It’s good to know there is work going on out there to support carers, friends and families with the emotional as well as the practical impacts that substance misuse can have on a family.’ One lady who came forward to be a part of our portrait exhibition, while feeling very passionately that she wanted to be involved in the campaign, nonetheless felt unable to give her real name or even reveal her face in the portrait because of, she said, ‘the shame and stigma that still surrounds drug use today.’

Speaking to these families and hearing their stories has shown that the issue of stigma is a real one – and is in need of addressing. We wanted our campaign to bring everyone together in support of this cause, so we have encouraged local family support organisations to hold their own awareness and fundraising events and provided them with campaign packs containing advice and ideas. We received an excellent response from local organisations wanting to be a part of our celebrations by promoting awareness of Adfam and their own local services, and there will be exciting events taking place throughout the country over the coming months, from drop-in advice sessions in Peterborough to games nights and cake sales in Scunthorpe!

Delighted with the level of enthusiasm for our campaign and portrait exhibition, we decided to spread the message by offering organisations around the country the opportunity to replicate our The other faces of addiction exhibition locally – and services were quick to snap this up. ‘This is a fantastic idea! The replica exhibition would be a fantastic opportunity to involve other agencies and organisations in supporting families,’ said one of our supporters, who works for a small family support service.

JamesAgain, we were thrilled with the overwhelming response from our supporters, and our exhibition will now reach a much wider audience, as it’s being showcased at the Feminism in London 2014 conference, various regional events and beyond. These exhibitions will run from October until the end of the year – and possibly into 2015 – with the portraits displayed in libraries, county halls, reception waiting rooms and at local fundraising events all over the country. We even hope to get them displayed in the House of Commons, taking our message of hope to the heart of Westminster. Many of you should therefore have an opportunity to drop into one of the exhibitions and see the impressive results for yourself. 

You can read more about Adfam, the campaign and the local activities taking place over the coming month at www.adfam.org.uk.

Rachael Evans is research and policy coordinator at Adfam

Countries apart?

News focusAre the rates of drug-related deaths north and south of the border really going in different directions? 

All eyes were on Scotland last month in the run-up to the vote on independence, and, although the country eventually opted to stay part of the UK, there are signs that its drug-related death rate may be starting to head in a different direction.

Deaths were down by 9 per cent last year, to 526 (DDN, September, page 4), following a 2011 peak of 584 (DDN, September 2012, page 4) and just three fewer the following year. In England and Wales, however, the news was more grim. Male deaths involving illegal drugs were up by 23 per cent – to 1,444 – with female deaths up 12 per cent to 513 (see news story). There were 765 deaths involving heroin/morphine in England and Wales, while 220 involved the synthetic opiate painkiller tramadol – an all-time high.

As the Scottish Drug Forum (SDF) pointed out, however, the Scottish figures are no cause for complacency. Still the fifth highest ever recorded, the total was 66 per cent higher than a decade ago. Heroin and/or morphine were implicated in, or potentially contributed to, 221 deaths while methadone was implicated in 216.

When the Scottish figures were released community safety minister Roseanna Cunningham was quick to point out that – while the country still faced ‘a tough challenge’ – fewer young people were taking drugs and there were signs that the government’s approach was working. One of the key aspects of that approach is a national programme of naloxone provision, with nearly 4,000 kits issued in 2012/13. So how much of a role did that play?

‘Certainly we have evidence of a significant amount of naloxone use, and obviously a proportion of those kits issued will have been lives saved,’ SDF director David Liddell tells DDN. ‘I think it’s very hard to be definitive about naloxone, but we’re very encouraged by the roll-out and what’s happened, and the government providing funding to drive that as a national programme.’

However, the deaths data tend to suggest a ‘levelling off’ rather than an actual decline just yet, he points out. ‘Alongside that is a caveat that – just like in England – there’s an increasing number of older problem drug users and certainly, from some of the work we’ve done, what we’re seeing is a number who are quite isolated and living alone. So obviously naloxone is not going to impact on those individuals.’

Clearly, problems of failing physical and mental health, alongside social issues, will continue to be a factor for this group, he adds. ‘That’s where the cautious optimism comes from. We’ve turned little bit of a corner here, but we can hardly be complacent with that number of deaths.’

What’s the best approach when it comes to that older population – renewed determination on the part of services to engage them and keep them engaged? ‘We’ve had all those issues of “parked on methadone” and so on – and certainly our sense is that that represents quite a small proportion of the overall population who’ve been long-term on methadone – but I do think there is an issue for people who’ve been in services a long time,’ he states. ‘That they’ve almost become like the wallpaper, and if they’re not causing any major hassle and are relatively stable then they’re maybe not given the level of support that they could usefully get.’

SDF research in this area has raised some interesting issues, he adds. ‘Some of our interviews did highlight things such as how an older user might benefit from having an older worker, for example. There were some suggestions that the older users found it hard to relate to very young workers, who they perhaps thought were a bit wet behind the ears. So it’s just about services just looking more specifically at the needs of this population.’

That population is far from homogenous, he stresses. ‘In our European study we talked about over-35s, which some people would think was actually very young, but you might be talking about someone who’s been using for 20 years. So I think there are those kinds of issues for services, and also for local planning structures and governments. There were quite interesting examples of services for older users in countries like Germany, such as dedicated residential services. Also, something that’s starting to happen is better links between addiction services and services for older people, so that there’s a better understanding across the sectors of what the issues are now but also projecting five, ten, 15 years ahead.’

Figures for deaths relating to new psychoactive substances (NPS) now make headline news, but the picture can be slightly more complicated than the media make out, he points out. Of the 60 Scottish deaths in which NPS were implicated, or potentially contributed to, in 39 cases ‘the only NPSs present were benzodiazepines (usually phenazepam)’, says the document, compared to 19 cases in which NPS like AMT, BZP or PMA were present (and two in which both types were present).

So if in around 67 per cent of the NPS cases, the only NPS used was a benzodiazepine – and usually in combination with other drugs including alcohol – could there be a popular misconception about this new trend?

‘Yes, I was quite frustrated with some aspects of the Scottish coverage of our figures,’ he says. ‘It’s not to say that new psychoactive substances isn’t a major issue – of course it is – but it’s the representation of the deaths almost as if there’s a new problem emerging while the old one has sort of gone away. Which of course is not the case.’

Drug-related deaths in Scotland 2013 at www.gro-scotland.gov.uk

Deaths related to drug poisoning in England and Wales, 2013 at www.ons.gov.uk

New research on non-fatal overdoses

Katy HollowayA group of academics from the University of South Wales has published research on the prevalence of non-fatal overdoses among drug users in Wales

Professor Katy Holloway, Professor Trevor Bennett and Jason Edwards, from the Centre for Criminology, carried out a unique national survey exploring how many opiate users experience a non-fatal overdose each year, the causes of non-fatal overdoses and how they can be prevented.

The academics were commissioned by the Welsh Government to carry out a study of non-fatal opiate overdose comprising two parts – a question­naire of injecting opiate users to find out the prevalence of non-fatal overdose, and interviews with some of the respondents to find out the nature and circumstances of overdose events.

The key findings of this research were that almost half (47 per cent) of all opiate users said that they had overdosed at least once in their lives, and 15 per cent said that they had done so in the past 12 months. There was little difference in the prevalence of non-fatal overdose among male and female respondents, and no difference in the likelihood of non-fatal overdose among younger and older users.

There were wide variations in the prevalence of overdose across locations, ranging from 0 per cent in one scheme area to 75 per cent of respondents recruited from a city centre hostel. On average, respondents who reported overdosing in the last 12 months stated that they had overdosed twice in that time. Naloxone was administered by one or more persons in 38 per cent of all cases of a non-fatal overdose.

These findings are unique because there is no equivalent information available on this topic in Wales. The existing data which is available on drug-related deaths, hospital admissions and patient episode only show the numbers of those users who have come to the attention of the recording agencies. The USW research project has sought to identify the dark figure of non-fatal overdose that might not otherwise have been officially discovered.

‘We believe on the basis of this research that there are several actions that could be taken that might reduce non fatal overdose,’ said Professor Katy Holloway.

‘First, opiate users should receive more information on how to recognise early signs of an overdose in themselves as well as others, through improved training. Second, attention should be paid to the less common drugs implicated in overdose, such as mephedrone, amphetamines, benzodiazepines and anti-depressants, and third, attention should also be paid to the effects of drug mixing, and appropriate advice should be given through advertising campaigns or naloxone training programmes.

‘Fourth, the role of alcohol in drug misuse should be investigated more closely and appropriate advice offered on safe levels of use. And finally, some attempt should be made to identify the purity of current street heroin and to devise an early warning system that could inform users when purity levels are unusually high.’

Walk this way

Walk this way How does it feel to take part in the UK Recovery Walk? Four participants tell us about their experiences in Greater Manchester last month

20140913_140503‘Could we live up to expectations?’

Waking up on Saturday morning with a view of an empty Castlefield Arena, my thoughts ran back over the five previous recovery walks and I thought to myself, ‘could 2014 live up to the massive expectations?’

What was different for me about this year’s walk was being a member of the Greater Manchester Recovery Federation (GMRF) the body who, 18 months pre-walk, set out on a dream of helping Greater Manchester to host the sixth UK Recovery Walk.

Any worries that nobody would attend were alleviated as the trucks delivering the stage arrived. Like soldiers, our members and volunteers set about putting together a mini-festival. Soon the many recoverists from around the UK descended, and our day sprang into action.

It was a great honour when Annemarie Ward, CEO of UK Recovery Walk, introduced me and the rest of the GMRF core group and invited us to welcome our guests from all over the country. There were so many people I knew personally from all corners of the UK during my six years in recovery.

Another great moment was leading the walk and carrying the GMRF banner with Kath, Julie and my twin brother Dominic. I will remember looking back down Deansgate at all the amazing banners that people had made.

The walk was amazing but we had an afternoon of highs still to come. The acts still to perform included our band, It’s All About Me, which I’m part of with my brother Dominic, Jason and Lewis. After our act, I stood on the stage and officially closed the 6th UK Recovery Walk 2014, and my thoughts went back to the early morning when I had wondered if we would live up to past walks and be a good representation of our recovery movement here in the UK. I may be biased, but I think we did. It was an amazing day that will live long in my heart and mind as I’m sure it will for many people of Greater Manchester and beyond.

Special thanks to the UK Recovery Walk charity and all their members and we wish Dot, Mark and all at Durham the very best for 2015. And to my amazing friends at the GMRF, be very proud. We did it – let the legacy of the walk be that recovery in Greater Manchester will continue to thrive.

One love, we do recover. David Dakan

20140913_135140 - Copy‘I felt pride I had never felt before’ 

As the morning of 13 September came I could not believe that all the organising, planning, meetings and conversation cafés would be no more and the sixth annual UK Recovery Walk was upon us in our very own city. This walk was the first that I had ever attended and it was made extra special to know that my family and my daughter of two years, whom I had when in recovery, would be there to attend and be part of an amazing day. As both an employee of the UKRW charity and a member of Greater Manchester Recovery Federation, many months of my life had been focusing on this incredible day.

On arrival at 8.30am I was able to see the transformation at Castlefield take place as the stage was built, marquees erected and people started to arrive. For the rest of my life I will remember looking out from the stage at thousands of faces, approximately 8,000 happy joyous people, free from substances, high on life, celebrating recovery. All the hard work that was put in was worth it. I felt a sense of pride I have never felt before and I felt part of this huge family that stood united, overcoming what I can only describe as one of my hardest personal battles. I could stand tall and say I had a part in that walk, however small, as did many other people – and for that I thank them.

The message, simply, is we can recover and we do recover. The legacy from this year’s walk fills me with hope and excitement about the future of our recovery community and GMRF. What made my day extra special was I got to share it with the most important person in my life. As I stood on stage, Ava held by my mum had the biggest smile on her face, waving, shouting mummy and blowing kisses. That is priceless and a memory I will always remember, ever reminding me should I ever forget – my recovery is so worth it!  Danielle Woolley

10665076_603021273143572_2458842595166126943_n‘I was part of something amazing’

When we heard the news that we had won the opportunity to host the UKRW, a spark of enthusiasm was ignited. This grew and grew, and with the introduction of a conversation café at the planning meetings we had participation from hundreds of individuals who offered help, ideas or support. These fantastic people came from all of the boroughs of Greater Manchester. The GMRF had always wanted to find a way of uniting the ten boroughs and this was definitely working, proving that this was going to be the biggest UKRW and hopefully the best yet.

With each year that passes the UKRW has grown in popularity and the number of attendees has increased. They say there were 8,000 people at this year’s UKRW, and everyone who I have spoken to says they have a new refreshed way of looking at recovery and what it means to them, their families and their communities. The language we use to describe ourselves and the positive statements have gone a long way in challenging stigma – not just what we see in the media and how we are referred to by Joe Public, but also in our internal voices and how we see ourselves ‘fitting in’. The planning group gave everyone a chance to have a voice. Many of these people went on to volunteer on the day of the walk and we are so grateful to them all.

As part of the GMRF I was privileged to be at the very front of the walk, and there was a group of very talented drummers right behind us, providing us with music and a beat. This set the pace and the mood of the walk for me. At one point we were held at a waiting point while police and traffic management cleared the last of the traffic away. At this point I turned to face the crowd behind me and felt I was part of something truly amazing.

We spontaneously began clapping to show our appreciation, the police joined in and so did others and soon, with the drums, the clapping, the shouting and the whistling, the noise of a big city on a crowded Saturday afternoon was drowned out. I had goosebumps, and at that point I knew that no matter how hard we had all worked, I would do it all again in a heartbeat. Julie Lloyd-Holt

20140913_133533‘Hard work… but what a buzz’

It’s all about today – 13 September. All the hard work done? Hehehe, not bloody likely! It’s going to be great, in my element. Putting on a party for over 8,000 ‘recoverists’ – amazing! Inspiring. I’m there. Right, as a core member of the GMRF I have a responsibility. What’s that? Fill that big screen with walkers walking the walks? Right. No camera! No Wi-Fi! Oh dear. Time to shine, Oli – use what you know, think on ya feet.

‘Excuse me bud, can I borrow you to do some filming? I need to fill that screen!’

‘Sure bud, no problem. Waddya need?’

Great stuff! It’s amazing what you can get if you ask. Ok then, let’s join the throng!

We go to the front. People are gathering. People are smiling. People all in recovery, or friends and supporters of them, are together, joined as one, in unity, as a celebration. It’s ok. It’s good. Life is good. I may have bad days but it’s not a bad life. And all these people show me this. I can see it in their faces. They are living it.

Three, two, one… and we’re off. Get the shots? Run about? Jeez this is hard work! But so worth it. Get some great footage, easy as Rochdale go past, London, Brighton, Yorkshire, fellowship people, SMART. All representing the area where they live a life in recovery. It’s important. Just being there and advocating in numbers. Members of the public look quizzical. Walkers inform and advocate. What a buzz.

Back to the stage. Edit the pictures, stick a graphic on the end, bung the MPEG on a stick. Can’t wait to see the reaction.

Henry Maybury takes to the stage, second song in and ‘voila!’ It’s on the screen and people are watching. They are laughing, pointing. I love it. This for me is what it’s about. People in unison, walking that walk, loving recovery. Brilliant!  Oliver Rice

Henry Maybury is raising money for addiction and recovery charities with his single Lost Days, www.henrymaybury.com

Street wise

Alex Feis BryceAn award-winning scheme has been protecting vulnerable drug-dependent street sex workers from attack. Its director of services, Alex Feis-Bryce, talks to David Gilliver

The links between problem drug use and street sex work are well known, with street sex workers particularly vulnerable to violence and assault, most of which has tended to go unreported. Run by the UK Network of Sex Work Projects (UKNSWP), the National Ugly Mugs (NUM) scheme was launched in 2012 with the aim of warning sex workers about dangerous individuals and helping the police gather intelligence on serial offenders. This year the scheme was not only winner of the Paolo Pertica Award – which recognises innovation and contributions to public health in a criminal justice context – but also won in the ‘small charity, big achiever’ category of the Third Sector awards.

‘We were quite surprised as that was a really glitzy award ceremony, and we’re not used to getting that kind of mainstream attention,’ says NUM’s director of services, Alex Feis-Bryce.

Around 20,000 sex workers are now engaged with the scheme, with more than 1,000 incidents reported so far, and while all but a few victims are happy to share information anonymously with the police only 25 per cent are prepared to make a formal statement. ‘That means the police are getting vital intelligence they’d otherwise be unaware of,’ he says.

The ‘ugly mugs’ concept originated in Australia in the mid-1980s, when sex workers in Victoria began circulating descriptions of violent men. While the first UK schemes – in Birmingham and Edinburgh – began at the end of that decade, NUM is still the only nationwide, integrated scheme of its kind.

‘The UK Network of Sex Work Projects, ever since they were formed in 2002, have been advocating for a National Ugly Mugs scheme,’ says Feis-Bryce. ‘The Home Office funded a development project, which was basically a big consultation, and then they provided funding for a one-year pilot – it was three months to set up and operational for nine months after that.’ The pilot ended in March 2013, and the scheme has run independently since then.

‘So it’s the first time there’s ever been government funding involved, and the first time it’s ever been national,’ he says. ‘Obviously we’re completely independent of the police, but we do have formal links in terms of sharing data – if we’ve got consent – and that kind of thing. We’re the first of its kind in the world, really.’

The scheme also gets funding from the police, he says, but on an ad-hoc basis. ‘There’s quite a lot of devolved power to every police force, which means we have to go to each individual force, and there are 43 in England and Wales.’ The scheme does have a good working partnership with the police, however, although the partnership is stronger in some areas than others. ‘Some force areas value the scheme more than others, I suppose, but a lot of it is just getting in there and raising awareness.’

Was it easy to establish those relationships – were the police onside from the beginning? ‘We had top-level senior police officers supporting the scheme from the start,’ he says. ‘Part of the consultation process was with the police and the National Crime Agency’s serious crimes analysis section, so that helped us, and ACPO [Association of Chief Police Officers] were also very supportive. But it’s still a slightly different relationship with every force. That’s one of the challenges – knowing exactly who to go to, and how it’s going to be dealt with.’


A number of high-profile cases over the years have highlighted poor police attitudes when it comes to investigating violence against sex workers. Are those views on the way out now? ‘We still encounter it every now and then, I have to say,’ he states. ‘We probably hear more positive than negative stories now, but we still do hear things that are absolutely shocking.’ While officers investigating serious sexual offences are specially trained, there can still be issues with ‘first responders’ to incidents, he explains. ‘But most of the officers who are experienced in investigating sexual offences have no interest in whether the victim’s a sex worker – they just want to solve the crime.’

The stigma around problematic drug use can take its toll, and that’s something that can be massively compounded when sex work is involved. ‘Absolutely,’ he says. ‘Most of the research shows that it’s about 90-95 per cent of female street sex workers who are dependent on drugs and/or alcohol – it tends to be the major driving force of why they’re on the streets working, along with issues of homelessness. Because some of them will already have had run-ins with the police, the levels of trust are really low, and you do get officers who aren’t very respectful. With the other sector of sex workers – escorts and things like that – rates of problematic drug use are incredibly low, but it’s the sex workers working on the streets who are most targeted by the type of perpetrators we deal with.’

And the least likely to report it? ‘Yes, and that’s not just about trust. We’ve had incidents where they want to report it but the court process – particularly with something like sexual assault – is just not set up to deal with people who have chaotic lifestyles. They might be keen to make a statement but often the courts and police aren’t very flexible about how the statement is taken, so there are lots of barriers. I’ve been involved in a serious sex offence trial as a witness, and even for someone who’s able to get the train and make all the meetings it’s an absolute nightmare. So that is a real challenge.’


The project has forged excellent links with treatment agencies, he explains, with around 320 national members including specialist sex work projects. ‘Most projects working with street sex workers will either have strong partnerships with drug treatment agencies or they themselves will provide services like needle exchange and so on,’ he says. ‘We work really closely with them.’

In areas without a specialist sex work project there will be drug services that regularly encounter sex workers, which means raising awareness of the scheme is vital, he stresses. ‘It might only be small numbers of sex workers engaging with them, but what we do is a resource that’s always available.’

A former political advisor, he was faced with a decision about whether to stay in politics when the MP he was working for suddenly died. ‘I’d been volunteering with the Albert Kennedy Trust, which works with young LGBT homeless people, and a lot of the young people they supported did turn to sex work to survive, so I was aware that sex workers were a particularly stigmatised group. I realised that I didn’t want to stay within politics for that much longer, but I had skills from doing that work that I was able to take to something that had a more direct impact on people’s lives. With politics it can be a bit abstract, but this was an opportunity to do something more hands on. The challenge, but also the impact, of working with a particularly stigmatised group had always appealed to me.’

The scheme has already led to 16 convictions that NUM is aware of, and the actual figure may well be much higher, he points out. ‘Once someone makes a formal report to the police they aren’t very good at keeping us informed of the progress, because we have so many that go through to them.’

One conviction earlier this year, however, saw a man sentenced to ten years for a knife-point rape, with the way the case was handled recognised as a model of good practice. ‘She was a Romanian escort who was adamant that she didn’t want to report it to the police, or even tell anyone, but she went for a routine health check with a nurse who was aware of the scheme, and it was part of the process to say, “has anything happened to you that we should report?” A couple of weeks later the police came to us and said, “we think we may have identified the perpetrator – can you go back and ask these questions, and she can still maintain her anonymity?” It was a credit to the police how flexible they were, so she started to believe that they were taking it seriously, weren’t interested in the fact that she was a sex worker, and didn’t disrespect her.’

Eventually she made a full report and, supported by specialist advisers and a translator, went to court. ‘The police use it as an example of why the scheme is important, because they just wouldn’t have known about it otherwise,’ he says. 

Despite positive outcomes like this, however, and having just two full-time and two part-time staff, plus a volunteer, funding has been a constant headache. ‘It’s the bane of our existence,’ he says. ‘The Home Office provided funding for the pilot but said “we won’t ever be able to fund you after that”. They can fund projects to seed but if they funded us beyond the pilot it would be seen as sort of double-funding the police, which is against Treasury rules.’

Another problem is that NUM tends not to qualify for a lot of big grants, he explains. ‘We’re more about sharing intelligence and best practice and information, and that’s just not popular to fund. At the end of every financial year we don’t know if we’re still going to be running in a few weeks’ time, and it’s going to be like that again if we don’t find some kind of sustainable solution.’

And if funding does dry up, the consequences could be grave. ‘An evaluation of the pilot found that 16 per cent of the 20,000 sex workers engaged with the scheme said that they’d avoided an individual directly as a result of one of our warnings, which is almost more powerful than the criminal justice outcomes,’ he says. ‘That’s a large number of crimes potentially prevented.’

uknswp.org/um

Recovering hope

Alistair sinclair WEB. jpgRecovery should be about empowerment and instilling optimism – not about treatment effectiveness and ‘number of years abstinent’, says Alistair Sinclair 

It was UK Recovery Month in September. Not a lot of people know that, and those who do probably have very different views on what it means. There have been recovery months in the US for years and until pretty recently they focused primarily on ‘recovery from addiction’ and ‘treatment’.

Early on it was called ‘treatment effective­ness month’ and there remains a US focus on services alongside a relatively recent expan­sion of the month to encompass mental health and ‘behavioural science’. It’s the US approach, perhaps a reflection of the diffi­culties getting access, particularly if you’re poor, to even the most basic of services. I’ve seen echoes of this perspective in the UK, tweets referring to #addictionrecoverymonth, attempts within some social media to follow the US lead and frame UK Recovery Month as a celebration of the abstinent and treatment.

Somehow this doesn’t sit right with me. People end up in ‘addiction’ because of a huge variety of issues. Many issues remain, and indeed perhaps new ones arise, once people stop using particular substances and become abstinent. Does a primary focus on addiction (framed around cessation of particular forms of unhealthy consumption) deny major realities in people’s lives? Surely those that ‘reclaim’ their lives have recovered from much more than ‘addiction’? Is ‘recovery’ more than ‘treatment effectiveness’ and a number of years abstinent? If we look at the mental health recovery movement we find that ‘recovery’ is all about ‘assuming control… becoming empowered… challenging stigma… instilling hope and optimism’.

This is my kind of recovery, not some medicalised, treatment-led drug-obsessed distraction from the inequality and poverty, material and spiritual, that’s strangling us. I’m with Professor Phil Hanlon at Glasgow university. We need to recover from ‘economism’, reducing people and communities to economic formulas, commodifying others in ‘payment by results’ matrices. Recover from ‘materialism and consumerism’, reducing ourselves to units of economic ‘worth’, buying, watching, consuming, empty. Recover from ‘individualism’, reducing ourselves to dislocated fragmented lonely shadows, separate, anxious, tapping away at screens. We need to recover from fear and find some hope; some sense that things can change for the better.

I see hope in the UK recovery movement, young as it is, confused as it is. I see it in the recovery walks, big and small, that have mushroomed across the UK since Liverpool in 2009. I see it in the passion and the strengths I encounter in small community groups scrabbling for existence in shabby service annexes and church halls. I see hope in harm reductionists coming together to redefine ‘SU activism’ and hesitantly forming links with the ‘purple-clad recovery brigade’. I see it in service folk and community activists working tirelessly alongside the marginalised and the excluded. I see hope in the UK Recovery Month, 102 events this September, bringing all kinds of different people together, and that’s why I think we need it. We need a month that celebrates hope, a month that celebrates our similarities as human beings and our diversity and the belief that we can, all of us, recover.

You can check out the 102 UK Recovery Month events here: http://www.ukrf.org.uk/index.php/recovery-month/events 

Alistair Sinclair is a director of the UK Recovery Federation (UKRF)