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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Drug Laws and Bans on Legal Highs 'Do More Harm Than Good'
Title:UK: Drug Laws and Bans on Legal Highs 'Do More Harm Than Good'
Published On:2011-05-15
Source:Observer, The (UK)
Fetched On:2011-05-16 06:01:19
DRUG LAWS AND BANS ON LEGAL HIGHS 'DO MORE HARM THAN GOOD'

UK Drug Policy Commission's report Taking Drugs Seriously says
current laws 'not fit for purpose'

The UK's "outdated" drug laws could be doing more harm than good and
are failing to recognise that banning some "legal highs" may have
negative consequences for public health, according to the leading
independent panel set up to analyse drugs policy.

On the eve of the 40th anniversary of the Misuse of Drugs Act, the UK
Drug Policy Commission warns that the exponential rise in "legal
highs" and the availability of substances over the internet is making
current laws redundant.

A damning report carried out for the commission by thinktank Demos
suggests that drug control legislation is no longer "fit for purpose"
in the 21st century and should be replaced using consumer protection
legislation.

In the longer term, the report suggests, the government should
introduce a harmful substances control act that would change how all
psychoactive substances, including alcohol and tobacco, are controlled.

"Forty years ago, the Misuse of Drugs Act was passed in a world where
new drugs came along every few years, not every few weeks," said
Roger Howard, the chief executive of the commission. "The argument
about whether to be tough or soft about drugs is increasingly
redundant in the era of the internet and global trade; we have to
think differently." The 149-page report, which has been welcomed by
senior police officers, will be seen as a stern corrective to
successive governments' thinking on drug control, which has heavily
favoured prohibition. The coalition government has been reluctant to
contemplate a radical shift in drugs policy, preferring a plan to
subject new substances to temporary bans as and when they come to market.

The report, Taking Drugs Seriously, suggests that the government and
its advisers assess the potential benefits, as well as harmful
effects, associated with some legal highs and recognises that their
use could prevent people experimenting with more dangerous drugs.

It points to research into drug tests on soldiers in the British army
that showed that cocaine use fell by more than half between 2008 and
2009, when mephedrone or "meow meow" a new legal high outlawed in
2010 was becoming increasingly available.

Significantly, official data reveals that between 2008 and the first
six months of 2009, cocaine-related deaths among the population as a
whole fell 28%.

"The Misuse of Drugs Act has passed its sell-by date," said Jonathan
Birdwell, the report's co-author. "So-called 'legal highs' present an
entirely new challenge that needs a more intelligent response. With
the aim of being hardline towards all psychoactive substances, the
government risks making it more, not less, dangerous for young people
who want to experiment."

There are now more than 600 substances controlled under the Misuse of
Drugs Act in the UK and the number looks set to increase. According
to data presented to the Independent Scientific Committee on Drugs,
an unprecedented 40 new substances were produced in the far east and
sold in the UK in 2010.

To combat the trend, the report suggests that the government consider
controlling the supply of new psychoactive drugs through existing
consumer protection legislation, rather than relying on regulations
that appear to have little credibility in the eyes of young people.

Legislation would limit the number of vendors who can supply
controlled substances and compel them to demonstrate that their
products meet certain standards or sell them with information on
dosage levels and side effects. Civil and criminal sanctions could be
brought against those who break the law.

"It might be time to say that those who seek to sell new substances
should have to prove their safety, rather than that the government
should have to prove otherwise," Howard said. "Controlling new
substances through trading standards legislation offers a new vehicle
to achieve this."

The report has been cautiously welcomed by police at a time when
their budget is under strain. "Police forces and health professionals
across England and Wales are only too aware of the problems that a
wave of new drugs can bring," said Tim Hollis, the chief constable of
Humberside police and the national lead on drugs for the Association
of Chief Police Officers. "The idea of trading standards officers
having a stronger role in controlling substances is one that is
worthy of consideration."
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