tambourine-man
Bluelight Crew
The clinics form a key part of the Government’s strategy to deal with a growing cocaine problem.
They are in addition to the drop-in centre for recreational cocaine users in Galway which was set up three weeks ago.
“The development of two stimulant cocaine clinics in Dublin and Cork is currently been scoped and costed with a view to commencing the service in 2007,” said a spokeswoman for the Health Service Executive (HSE).
The establishment of such clinics was recommended by key Government advisory agencies last March and backed by Drugs Strategy Minister Noel Ahern.
A report on cocaine published by the National Advisory Committee on Drugs and the National Drugs Strategy Team called for specific cocaine services, greater training for health workers and information campaigns for users.
The report said many cocaine users were put off by existing treatment clinics which were heavily focused, particularly in Dublin, on treating heroin addicts.
The HSE spokeswoman said the drop-in cocaine service in Galway, which operates one day a week, complemented the planned clinics.
“The service will be monitored as to its effectiveness and take-up and will inform the development of the stimulant clinics in Cork and Dublin,” she said.
Fiona Walsh of the HSE Western Drugs Service said: “We’ve noticed an increase in the number of people presenting with cocaine-related problems in the last 12 to 18 months, sufficiently to warrant a special clinic.”
The HSE is also funding a pilot cocaine project in Tallaght and has appointed a project manager specifically to deal with cocaine.
Figures published in the Irish Examiner last month revealed a 900% jump in the number of cocaine addicts treated in the past seven years.
However, national surveys show the majority of cocaine users are not addicts and do not seek treatment.
Ms Walsh said the clinic was targeting this group: “The challenge for us is that often people who take cocaine and consider themselves recreational users if you like, they don’t present early enough for support. They think, ‘I can handle this, it’s not a problem’.
“The difficulty is by the time they do present, they are in a chaotic spiral of anxiety, fatigue, irritability and often violence.
“Our aim in this clinic is to try and get them in the door early.”
Cocaine clinics to open in Dublin and Cork later this year
Irish Examiner
20/06/2007
Source: http://archives.tcm.ie/irishexaminer/2007/06/20/story35439.asp
They are in addition to the drop-in centre for recreational cocaine users in Galway which was set up three weeks ago.
“The development of two stimulant cocaine clinics in Dublin and Cork is currently been scoped and costed with a view to commencing the service in 2007,” said a spokeswoman for the Health Service Executive (HSE).
The establishment of such clinics was recommended by key Government advisory agencies last March and backed by Drugs Strategy Minister Noel Ahern.
A report on cocaine published by the National Advisory Committee on Drugs and the National Drugs Strategy Team called for specific cocaine services, greater training for health workers and information campaigns for users.
The report said many cocaine users were put off by existing treatment clinics which were heavily focused, particularly in Dublin, on treating heroin addicts.
The HSE spokeswoman said the drop-in cocaine service in Galway, which operates one day a week, complemented the planned clinics.
“The service will be monitored as to its effectiveness and take-up and will inform the development of the stimulant clinics in Cork and Dublin,” she said.
Fiona Walsh of the HSE Western Drugs Service said: “We’ve noticed an increase in the number of people presenting with cocaine-related problems in the last 12 to 18 months, sufficiently to warrant a special clinic.”
The HSE is also funding a pilot cocaine project in Tallaght and has appointed a project manager specifically to deal with cocaine.
Figures published in the Irish Examiner last month revealed a 900% jump in the number of cocaine addicts treated in the past seven years.
However, national surveys show the majority of cocaine users are not addicts and do not seek treatment.
Ms Walsh said the clinic was targeting this group: “The challenge for us is that often people who take cocaine and consider themselves recreational users if you like, they don’t present early enough for support. They think, ‘I can handle this, it’s not a problem’.
“The difficulty is by the time they do present, they are in a chaotic spiral of anxiety, fatigue, irritability and often violence.
“Our aim in this clinic is to try and get them in the door early.”
Cocaine clinics to open in Dublin and Cork later this year
Irish Examiner
20/06/2007
Source: http://archives.tcm.ie/irishexaminer/2007/06/20/story35439.asp