Drink and Drugs News DDN 1805 | Page 10

NNEF CoNFErENCE ‘Dcrs don’t have to be posh expensive places – just a roof and a kettle.’ opiates should be given at least one kit.’ ‘Naloxone is only part of the solution, but a vital part of the puzzle,’ she added. ‘There needs to be adequate access to harm reduction advice and information.’ t the end of a full and informative day, it was Dr Judith Yates’ job to spell out ‘how to reduce harm and save money’. The clearest message was that ‘we should be ending the war on people who use drugs,’ she said. Decriminalisation was the only model that made sense, ‘and we should do this first’. Secondly, the harm reduction measures that the conference had considered were highly cost effective: ‘DCRs don’t have to be posh expensive places – just a roof and a kettle,’ she said. The take-home naloxone programme was proving to be extremely effective and was only challenged by stigma and ignorance: ‘There isn’t another drug that can A ‘I wish I could have bought an idiot’s guide to setting up a Dcr.’ Kasey elMore Kasey Elmore visited the conference from Australia to share learning points from developing and building Australia’s second drug consumption room. ‘I wanted to design the best DCR in the world, with no risk. But lesson number one is to accept that this isn’t possible,’ she said. You had to acknowledge that the service that you want to run, and others in the sector want you to run – your clients, the government, the wider community – all look incredibly different. ‘Our model had to be located at our workplace and be medically supervised – an integrated model with nurses, doctors and registered drug and alcohol 10 | drinkanddrugsnews | May 2018 Dr JuDITh yaTes save a life for £15 in a few minutes,’ she said. Her work in recording drug-related deaths reinforced time and again that these deaths were preventable and showed that 78 per cent of people were not in treatment at the time of death. ‘There is huge scope for getting these people in treatment,’ she said, calling for an end to re-commissioning and funding cuts. ‘Stop wasting money on the drug war and stop treating people who use drugs as criminals.’ DDN workers,’ she explained. ‘It’s in a residential area, located on a large public housing estate, and runs a needle and syringe programme giving out 90,000 syringes a month.’ Consulting with the client group was essential, but she felt there wasn’t enough time to do it properly. As they designed the layout of facilities, they came up with a three-stage model with zones for registration, injecting and aftercare, which seemed logical but already posed a problem – that people had to inject to get access to the aftercare services. So it became necessary to discuss a stage four, where people could access mental health services etc, if they didn’t inject. There were also some conditions imposed by their licence that they had to adhere to, such as not allowing pregnant women or under-18s to use the facility. An important part of design was to get the toilets right, with needle disposal, and their location in zones three and four. Would pets be allowed in a health facility, and could a dog get in the way of medical staff? Should there be secure pet parking on site so they were not stolen? Liaising with key stakeholders on the project meant working with people who had never worked with this client group, so ‘pick your battles and build an external consultancy team’