Pubdate: Mon, 27 Mar 2000 Source: Herald Sun (Australia) Copyright: News Limited 2000 Contact: http://www.heraldsun.com.au/ Author: Greg Miskie BLAME PEOPLE, NOT DRUGS I HAVE read with interest several articles over the past months in relation to the "drug problem". Unfortunately, each tends to reinforce moralistic rather than realistic views, resulting in the perpetuation of myths and stereotypes of drug use in our society. No one would argue that any one drug addiction is individually worse than another, it is more a question of social perspective. The reality is that the drugs which cause the most health, social and economic problems are alcohol, tobacco, legal pharmaceuticals and illegal drugs in that order. For example, the cost of alcohol-related disease (non-trauma related) is $100 million a year. Tobacco related, $1 billion. Annually, 18,000 deaths are attributed to tobacco, 3600 to alcohol and 780 to illicit drugs. Hospital admissions reflect the bias with 140,000, 88,000 and 8500 admissions respectively. None of these figures includes the social costs of family breakdown, litigation, compensation, anti-social behavior, policing, the judiciary, absenteeism, industrial accidents, road crashes, or the cost of rehabilitation and retraining, sickness benefits and the like. In fact, it is not the drugs themselves that cause problems. They have no power. Rather it is factors surrounding their use -- the personal and social determinants along with ignorance of these issues. In short, it is a people problem not a drug problem. That illicit drug use is relatively rare, generally confined to specific groups and is not directly observed by most Australians allows stereotypical reinforcernent via the media and the persistence of erroneous assumptions of drug use in general. It is little wonder the problem won't go away. Greg Miskie, Warragul