British heroin addicts could be given free aluminium foil to encourage them to smoke rather than inject the class A drug under plans being considered by government advisers.
Drug treatment experts say that inhaling heroin instead of injecting reduces a user's risk of contracting HIV and Hepatitis C. An addict heats a blob of heroin on the foil in a process known as "chasing the dragon".
The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) is examining whether the law should be changed to allow Britain's 300,000 problem drug users to receive foil as a way of protecting their health. Since last year, the ACMD's 31 members, who advise the Home Office, have been considering whether section 9A of the Misuse of Drugs act, governing "paraphernalia" or equipment used in the consumption of illicit substances, should be amended to allow the UK's network of needle exchanges to supply foil. At present, it prohibits the supply of "articles to be used for the preparation or consumption of illicit drugs".
Critics say the ban endangers users' health because most drug workers are too afraid of being prosecuted to risk giving out something that many see as a sensible harm-reduction measure. An estimated 100 of England's 1,300 needle exchanges already defy the law by providing foil. Some have even had tacit support in the form of "letters of comfort" from their local police force, such as Avon and Somerset, which emphasises that it does not see the pursuit of section 9A as a priority.
No comments:
Post a Comment