Drug deaths: Western drug policies are failing

England has a failing national drug policy, shown in a steep rise in drug related deaths since 2012, warn public health experts in The BMJ this week. Oddly, they claim fiscal responsibility and say giving addicts more free housing would solve the problem, which will baffle economists.

Drug related deaths increased by 65.7%, and opioid related deaths by 107%, in England and Wales between 2012 and 2015, according to the Office for National Statistics. Public Health England's (PHE) report suggests a number of contributors, such as rising age, increased physical frailty of drug users, and variations in the street purity and availability of opiates, but John Middleton, president of the Faculty of Public Health, and colleagues, say that the report is "silent" on other factors that may have led to the significant rise in deaths.

Namely the massive changes in national policy, commissioning, and treatment systems since 2010, such as the government's change of focus from harm reduction to abstinence. Strangely, they do adopt harm reduction about cigarettes. This is the opposite of the US, whether we have needle exchanges for drug addicts but tells smokers to quit or die rather than accept vaping for smoking cessation.

At the same time, the Public Health Outcomes Framework introduced the key measure of success as the number of people successfully discharged from drug treatment programs who were abstinent from all substances. This is despite research showing that drug users who receive pharmacological and psychosocial interventions have a 50% lower risk of death compared with those following abstinence regimens.

Furthermore, the Health and Social Care Act 2012 transferred responsibility for public health to local authorities, and drug and alcohol treatment were no longer classed as NHS services. While PHE's report makes "some welcome suggestions," the authors say, "we need to do more.'

They recommend expanding options for people seeking help and ensuring treatment is personalized and effective, as well as substantial take up of naloxone for opiate users. They say that investment for safer injecting advice, access to clean injecting equipment, and immunization programs should be prioritized.

Drug consumption rooms should be developed, and new guidelines on opiate substitution therapies should be followed, they explain. A forensic early warning system informing drug users and services of changes in the quality and type of street drugs must be established.

The NHS and local authorities need to jointly commission and plan services, as well as work together to ensure that hospital specialists are teamed up with primary care and specialized treatment services.

Efforts to provide drug users with access to better housing, jobs, and incomes that support recovery - an important aim of any drugs strategy - are not helped by austerity policies, they add.