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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Something needs to be done about drugs in UK

281 replies

RegretMisery · 26/03/2024 12:56

Drugs are killing healthy young people. How is it that a drug dealer is not tried as a murderer?

It's not limited to class. It could be your own son or daughter.

You know how many people in Singapore die from overdoses? Almost none, because drugs are actually illegal there.

OP posts:
SerendipityJane · 26/03/2024 13:18

RegretMisery · 26/03/2024 13:14

Cars and dogs serve a purpose, to transport and accompany. Drugs (illegal ones) do not.

"illegal" is a madey-uppy thing. Like religion.

If you want to ban things that do harm, I repeat again - start with alcohol and tobacco.

Otherwise you risk looking like you aren't really interested in peoples well being at all. Which I am sure is not the case.

RegretMisery · 26/03/2024 13:18

srailfonaidraug · 26/03/2024 13:17

Fentanyl (synthetic opioid) was largely responsible for fatal overdoses peaking above 112,000 last year, for the first time in U.S. history.

Only a matter of time until it starts wreaking similar havoc over here.

NARCAN is a great tool for preventing this. But so many ODs occur when people use them alone and in conjunction with other drugs. I have not been able to obtain any info for if NARCAN works on reversing opioid OD if there are other drugs present.

OP posts:
DigitalDust · 26/03/2024 13:19

People choose to take drugs knowing it’s illegal.

Drug dealers are scum, but if people didn’t want to buy drugs they wouldn’t exist.

SerendipityJane · 26/03/2024 13:21

PawBroon86 · 26/03/2024 13:16

Decriminalisation is what needs to be done, how long does the failed war on drugs have to go on?

Well politicians and law enforcement would hope forever. And given how they are "waging" it, that seems a fair bet.

If you measured success in terms of reducing addicts, rather than increasing seizures ....

It's hard not to conclude that whoever makes the laws in the UK is paid by drug dealers.

SerendipityJane · 26/03/2024 13:22

People choose to take drugs knowing it’s illegal.

Alcohol and tobacco aren't though. And they do far more harm than all the illegal drugs combined.

srailfonaidraug · 26/03/2024 13:23

RegretMisery · 26/03/2024 13:18

NARCAN is a great tool for preventing this. But so many ODs occur when people use them alone and in conjunction with other drugs. I have not been able to obtain any info for if NARCAN works on reversing opioid OD if there are other drugs present.

Watched a documentary shot in Canada where some guy OD'd in the street and they brought him back with NARCAN.

He was a lucky one though, few minutes later and he'd have been gone.

StrongasSixpence · 26/03/2024 13:23

Prohibition fails. You also can't compare Singapore with the UK as there are so many differences, both legislatively and culturally.

The best solution would be legalisation of the less harmful drugs eg cannabis, speed and ecstacy. Have them sold as controlled substances with appropriate testing and labelling. Taxed and safety checked.

Heroin should be available on prescription to those addicted alongside cessation programmes and support. That would solve most of the issues caused by addicts eg theft, overdose, homelessness etc as addicts with a good supply can often function pretty well.

I'm not sure what the best solution for drugs like cocaine are which are not as addictive as opioid but also more harmful to health.

This would take a huge amount of revenue away from organised crime. Problematic behaviour from addicts would reduce. Police resources could be redirected. Tax takes could be spent on addiction and mental health programmes.

Begaydocrime94 · 26/03/2024 13:23

RegretMisery · 26/03/2024 13:14

Cars and dogs serve a purpose, to transport and accompany. Drugs (illegal ones) do not.

Ask the many many people who do drugs and they may feel very differently. For many it's a coping mechanism for the awful trauma they've gone through as children. Imagine if we tried to understand this, made trauma therapy accessible to people, did something to bring down poverty levels etc - throw money at that rather than increased crackdown?
Tbh you need to differentiate which drugs as well not just legal/illegal as we've arbitrarily drawn that border based on faulty reasoning. Heroin is pretty bad, but psilocybin for example is pretty much harmless. I will always advocate for people's liberty to choose to ingest what they want in their bodies, I've dabbled and it was a very fun and eye opening couple of years. My choice

endofthelinefinally · 26/03/2024 13:24

There is virtually no support or help for addiction here unless you can pay for it. There is a significant genetic component in addiction/addictive personality and early intervention/awareness could do a lot to prevent problems. Abuse, trauma in childhood, neurodiversity, ADHD, mental illness are all significant factors in addiction.
IMO, legalising everything would eliminate the crime and violence associated with the drug trade, but the money made from this would have to go into support services, detox, rehab, counselling.
It needs to be made a health issue, not a criminal issue.
Once the NHS took on board smoking rehab, the results have been positive.

Notmyuser · 26/03/2024 13:25

RegretMisery · 26/03/2024 13:14

Cars and dogs serve a purpose, to transport and accompany. Drugs (illegal ones) do not.

They seem fun though. That is their purpose.

supersonicginandtonic · 26/03/2024 13:26

NARCAN isn't always the way. I work in substance misuse and all opoid and opiate addicts are given naloxone and we still get overdoses. We give harm minimisation advise but then they don't always take it. It's sad but true. Whether it's legal or not we would still have issues.

supersonicginandtonic · 26/03/2024 13:32

@Begaydocrime94 every area has a free to access substance misuse service. The problem is it's underfunded so the case loads per worker are stupidly high.

asidream · 26/03/2024 13:34

supersonicginandtonic · 26/03/2024 13:26

NARCAN isn't always the way. I work in substance misuse and all opoid and opiate addicts are given naloxone and we still get overdoses. We give harm minimisation advise but then they don't always take it. It's sad but true. Whether it's legal or not we would still have issues.

@supersonicginandtonic I don't disagree with you there as someone who has also worked with people who misuse substances, but it certainly reduces deaths, and bystanders can give it too. Now the issue of people getting narky when they have been given it and wake up is another thing!...

No perfect solutions for sure, but wider ones are needed

Rosesanddaisies1 · 26/03/2024 13:34

If you want to stop things that cause death everyday, you should lobby for cars to be banned. Far more daily deaths than drugs. Drugs should be legalised, taxed and regulated.

SerendipityJane · 26/03/2024 13:34

titbumwillypoo · 26/03/2024 13:27

https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/tories-blasted-links-medical-cannabis-12701871
As long as the drug dealers are the RIGHT kind of drug dealers.😁

Sssssh ...

supersonicginandtonic · 26/03/2024 13:36

@asidream oh gosh yes. The amount of abuse I've received for ruining a high.
The general public are very reluctant to administer it, I do however think it should be included in first aid training

NCForQuestions · 26/03/2024 13:36

srailfonaidraug · 26/03/2024 13:17

Fentanyl (synthetic opioid) was largely responsible for fatal overdoses peaking above 112,000 last year, for the first time in U.S. history.

Only a matter of time until it starts wreaking similar havoc over here.

It's already here. We have deaths all over the country from it. The difference is that the NHS does not allow fentanyl to be prescribe willy nilly like in the USA, so it's less popular here.

That said, the nitazine drug class (only made a Class A a few days ago) is a very similar synthetic opiod where we also have deaths all over the country, but it's likely coming in from laboratories in China. This is more likely to be a problem here not least of all because it's cheaper.

GoodnightAdeline · 26/03/2024 13:39

To everyone saying drugs should be legalised, would you be happy to sit on a bus next to a bloke high on crack, with all the unpredictable behaviour that brings? It’s not illegal for the sake of the addict but also because of the effect people high on drugs have on society. They’re dangerous, they commit crimes, they frighten people. They don’t care about anyone but themselves. I don’t want that legalised.

DigitalDust · 26/03/2024 13:39

SerendipityJane · 26/03/2024 13:22

People choose to take drugs knowing it’s illegal.

Alcohol and tobacco aren't though. And they do far more harm than all the illegal drugs combined.

Again, people choose to take them knowing the harm they cause.

neverbeenskiing · 26/03/2024 13:41

It's very difficult to have a nuanced debate about drugs in this country. People jump straight to "drugs are evil, lock all the dealers up and throw away the key" which conveniently ignores the fact that recreational drugs, whatever you think about them, serve a purpose for the user. Not enough people understand the environmental, social and psychological causes of addiction. For example, research has shown that a history of child sexual abuse is extremely common among heroin addicts, in fact some form of childhood abuse/neglect is so prevalent its almost universal in heroin users. That means that almost everyone who uses heroin is trying to escape childhood trauma. It is also a proven fact that many people with severe and enduring Mental Health issues such as psychosis start using illegal drugs in an attempt to self-medicate and manage their symptoms. Investing in social care services, education, early years services and preventative Mental Health services would be much more effective in the long term in reducing reliance on recreational drugs (you'll never eradicate it completely) than tougher criminal sentences which, let's face it, just creates more drug problems within our already failing prison system. But it's easy for politicians to spout soundbites about being "tough on crime" rather than investing in protecting the most vulnerable in society.

It's also hugely simplistic to label all drug dealers as evil murderers and completely fails to acknowledge the extent to which vulnerable and desperate people are often exploited and groomed into offending behaviour. I have worked with 11 year old children who are technically "drug dealers", people with severe Mental Health issues and Learning Disabilities who have been tricked or threatened into dealing, and women whose abusive partners have forced them to deal for them. Throwing those people in prison and villifying them as murderers might satisfy a base desire for revenge or fool us into thinking we're all safer in the short term but it does nothing to address the real problems. Again, we have seen over a decade of the services that are meant to help and support those most at risk of being drawn into addiction and criminality being cut to the bone and the Government don't give a shit about the consequences of this for ordinary people.

Sorry for the rant but this is a massive source of frustration for me due to professional and personal experience (not me, but there's a lot of addiction in my family historically) and I do wish it was possible to have a more reasoned debate around these issues.

Barbadossunset · 26/03/2024 13:41

endofthelinefinally · Today 13:24
There is virtually no support or help for addiction here unless you can pay for it.

Narcotics Anonymous (NA) meetings are free. There’s an option to put some money into the pot at the end of each meeting but it’s not compulsory and most people don’t give more than a £1.

rooftopbird · 26/03/2024 13:44

We live in a world where there is tolerance, decriminalisation and better education and ways of dealing with drug users.

Others places where you'll have your hands cut off for far lesser crimes. I know which I'd prefer. Comparing our laws to Singapore is frankly, silly and unhelpful in this sense.

Drug users need help, mental health support and medical agency to support their bodies to come off it without it being criminalised because prisons are rife with drugs.

If it were decriminalising or legalised it could be taxed, that money could be spent on mental health services which would ultimately make street dealers redundant and all the hell that goes with that.

This will never happen because people are too pig ignorant on the subject.

INeedToClingToSomething · 26/03/2024 13:44

"So those should be banned too"

@RegretMisery

Yes because prohibition in the US worked so well....

Drugs are not all negative. They had really positive affect on my life. And have been used since the dawn of time by humans in one way or another. We love altering our state of consciousness.

They are also finding that hallucinogens are showing very positive results in treating resistant mental illnesses.

Plus people should have personal responsibility. Something we should be encouraging more of, not less. Banning things isn't always the answer (and has repeatedly, over many many years, been shown to be completely ineffective in managing drug use and addiction - the USA's "war on drugs" has done nothing to stop drug use in America).

Personally, I think all drugs should be legalised and addiction should be treated as a medical issue, not a criminal one.

Barbadossunset · 26/03/2024 13:44

Heroin should be available on prescription to those addicted alongside cessation programmes and support. That would solve most of the issues caused by addicts eg theft, overdose, homelessness etc as addicts with a good supply can often function pretty well.

strongassixpence
Would that mean anyone who wanted heroin on prescription could just ask their doctor for it and he/she would have to prescribe it?