Pubdate: Fri, 28 Jul 2000 Source: Canberra Times (Australia) Copyright: 2000 Canberra Times Contact: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/ Author: Geoff Page, Narrabundah MEDICAL PROBLEM, NOT CRIMINAL LIKE MANY of your readers I too was saddened to read of three more fatal heroin overdoses in Canberra last week (CT, July 22, p.3). The likelihood that higher than usual purity was the cause makes one question yet again why we persist in treating heroin addiction as a criminal problem rather than a medical one. If we saw it purely as a health problem there would already be safe injecting rooms where those who have recently died might well have been treated in time. If heroin were sold on prescription (as it was before 1953) its purity could be effectively controlled and most overdoses avoided. Eventually, I believe, a significant percentage of users would tire of letting their life be dominated by a chemical - and decide to enter a detox or rehab (then stay as long as necessary). Sadly for those who died last week, this is no longer an option. We are more than happy, it seems, to treat the consequences of other risk taking behaviours as medical problems (helicoptering fallen rock climbers, bypassing the clogged arteries of the over indulgent or battling smoking-related cancers) but it seems that heroin users are in a category all by themselves. They, alas, offended against the eternally unsuccessful "war on drugs'' and must suffer accordingly. On top of this, they have to endure the selectively self righteous who assure them in your columns that their problems are self-inflicted and that they deserve to die. I await with interest (and alarm) the application of such dismal charity to all other risk takers in our community. - --- MAP posted-by: John Chase