DDN May 2017 DDN May 2017 | Page 5

read the full stories, and more, online www.drinkanddrugsnews.com TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TO STEP UP ‘WAR ON DRUGS’ smoking as they are no longer seduced by glitzy, brightly coloured packs.’ Tobacco packaging design for reducing tobacco use at www.cochranelibrary.com THE US ADMINISTRATION under President Donald Trump has signalled that it intends to intensify the ‘war on drugs’, with a return to 1980s-style prevention campaigns and the use of marijuana possession as a means to deport immigrants who don’t have proper documentation. The direction is in contrast to that of the Obama administration, which steered prosecutors away from pursuing low-level drugs offenders, while one of President Obama’s final acts in office was to commute the sentences of 330 prisoners. The ‘vast majority’ of these were serving ‘unduly long sentences for drug crimes’, the White House said (DDN, February, page 4). ‘Let me be clear about marijuana,’ said homeland security secretary, John Kelly. ‘It is a potentially dangerous gateway drug that frequently leads to the use of harder drugs.’ The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement department (ICE) would ‘continue to use marijuana possession, distribution and convictions as essential elements as they build their deportation/removal apprehension packages for targeted operations against illegal aliens,’ he stated. While marijuana remains illegal under US federal law, eight states have now legalised the drug for adult use – including five which did so at the time of last year’s presidential elections (DDN, December 2016, page 4) – and almost 30 states have medical marijuana laws. ‘It’s outrageous to think that anyone following medical advice under state law would be subject to deportation,’ said policy manager at the Drug Policy Alliance’s Washington- based office of national affairs, Jerónimo Saldaña. The announcement follows a recent speech by US attorney general Jeff Sessions in which he praised the drug prevention campaigns of the 1980s and ’90s and stressed the need to prevent ‘people from ever taking drugs in the first place’. Treatment often came ‘too late to save people from addiction or death’, he said. ‘Too many lives are at stake to worry about being The Scottish Government should establish a target to reduce overall alcohol consumption by 10 per cent over the next decade, says a report from Alcohol Focus Scotland. The cut in drinking levels could potentially ‘deliver a 20 per cent reduction in deaths and hospital admissions’ after 20 years’, states Changing Scotland’s relationship with alcohol: recommendations for further action. ‘Scotland is awash with alcohol,’ said Alcohol Focus Scotland chief executive Alison Douglas. ‘Widespread availability, low prices and heavy marketing are having a devastating effect, not only on drinkers but on their children and families too.’ Document at www.alcohol-focus- scotland.org.uk PLAIN SPEAKING IT IS ‘LIKELY’ that plain tobacco packaging reduces smoking rates ‘despite limited available research and only one country with the policy fully in place’, according to a Cochrane review of international evidence. Full UK implementation of standardised packaging legislation will be complete later this month, following a 12-month period that allowed retailers to sell their existing stock. ‘Standard packs are a landmark public health policy the tobacco industry fought tooth and nail to prevent,’ said ASH chief executive Deborah Arnott. ‘As evidence grows it is easy to see why. Smokers are already saying they feel differently about their pack of cigarettes and in years to come we expect to see fewer young people www.drinkanddrugsnews.com fashionable,’ he stated. ‘I reject the idea that America will be a better place if marijuana is sold in every corner store. And I am astonished to hear people suggest that we can solve our heroin crisis by legalising marijuana – so people can trade one life-wrecking dependency for another that’s only slightly less awful. Our nation needs to say clearly once again that using drugs will destroy your life.’ President Trump is John Kelly also expected to appoint a hardline drug war advocate, Tom Marino, as the next head of the Office of National Drug Control Policy – the country’s ‘drug czar’. Marino strongly supports a ‘punitive, 1980s approach to drugs’, says the Drug Policy Alliance, which called him a ‘disastrous’ choice. ‘Our nation needs a drug czar that wants to treat drug use as a health issue, not someone who wants to double down on mass incarceration,’ said its director of national affairs, Bill Piper. ‘The American people are moving in one direction and the Trump administration is moving in another. There are few hardcore supporters of the failed war on drugs left, but those that are left seem to all be getting jobs in the administration.’ Jeff Sessions speech at www.justice.gov ‘marijuana is a potentially dangerous gateway drug.’ FOCUSED APPROACH ADMISSIONS UP There were an estimated 339,000 alcohol- related hospital admissions in England in 2015-16, a 3 per cent increase on the previous year but 22 per cent higher than a decade ago, according to the latest figures from ONS and NHS Digital. Using a ‘broad measure’ of admissions related to alcohol consumption, however, the number rises to 1.1m – up 4 per cent on the previous year. In both measures, Blackpool had the highest rate of admissions, says Statistics on alcohol England, 2017, which draws together new and previously released data from ONS, PHE, NHS Digital and other sources. Just over 25m adults reported drinking in the previous week, which equates to 57 per cent of the population – down from 64 per cent the previous year. Report at www.content.digital.nhs.uk SOCIAL CALL THE ALL PARTY PARLIAMENTARY GROUP (APPG) for Dual Diagnosis and Complex Needs has launched a call for evidence around how social action can ‘drive better services’, for example by reducing stigma and improving joint working. The evidence will be presented at a roundtable event for health and social care leaders, followed by a report at the end of the summer. ‘As the APPG has continually found, people with complex needs can remain at the sharp end of the inverse care law – requiring the most support, but receiving the least,’ said APPG co-chair Lord Victor Adebowale. ‘We hope this call for evidence will bring to light ways in which social action – whether that be formal volunteering, peer support, mutual aid or cooperatively managed services – can break down those barriers.’ Anyone with experience of the issues can contact sarah.cameron2@turning- point.co.uk until 20 May. ‘People with complex needs can remain at the sharp end of the inverse care law – requiring the most support, but receiving the least.’ lord VICtor adebowale May 2017 | drinkanddrugsnews | 5