Mercury (Hobart)

Cost of addiction will only grow under new drug-testing plan

Funds targeting welfare recipients are better spent elsewhere, says Adrian Reynolds

- Associate Professor Adrian Reynolds is a Tasmanian addiction specialist and the president of the Chapter of Addiction Medicine, Royal Australasi­an College of Physicians.

THE Australian Government wants to introduce laws that could see up to 5000 welfare recipients drug tested. As part of the trial, the Government plans to put welfare recipients on income management if they return a positive result for ice, ecstasy or marijuana.

As an addiction medicine specialist, I see the enormous damage caused by drug and alcohol addiction. Every day, patients with major drug and alcohol dependency are presenting to hospital emergency department­s or are in our wards.

These are patients who are battling alcohol and other dependence and who are suffering from other problems, like trauma, domestic violence and mental health issues. The damage caused to these people by their addiction, to their ability to think and to function as productive members in our community, is so evident.

As doctors we value evidence and we don’t accept that this trial will create a meaningful evidence base. History shows that drug testing people is an incredibly unreliable and ineffectiv­e way of identifyin­g those who are suffering from substance abuse issues, particular­ly when used indiscrimi­nately.

In 2013, the New Zealand Government introduced a drug-testing program as a preemploym­ent condition among welfare recipients. Of the 8001 people tested, only 22 returned a positive result for illicit drug use. Similar results were produced in drug-testing programs in the US. In Missouri’s 2014 program, 446 people were tested, with 48 returning positive results. In Utah, 838 people were screened with 29 returning a positive result.

Supporters of the trial in Australia have used these examples of drug testing overseas, with their small number of positive test results, as proof these programs created a behavioura­l change. But there is no evidence to support these claims. All we know is that a lot of money was spent on identifyin­g a very small number of drug users while subjecting a very large number of people to an intrusive and poorly conceived testing requiremen­t.

The program cost the New Zealand Government about $NZ1 million, or $45,000 for each positive result. Was this taxpayer money well spent?

We have heard the trial will be rolled out in Mandurah in Western Australia, Bankstown in NSW and Logan in Queensland. These locations were selected in part on their availabili­ty of services. But with services said to be readily available in these locations (a disputable claim according to medical colleagues), how will the evidence collected from drug testing welfare recipients in these three selected locations inform a broader rollout in areas where support services are less available?

As a clinician in a national leadership role in the speciality of addiction medicine, I can attest that these services don’t exist in many areas of Australia including those that need them most. We know a program of this nature can’t operate more broadly, due to the lack of accessible pathology and treatment services. There aren’t sufficient drug-testing services that can offer the appropriat­e and expensive technologi­es required to ensure valid and reliable results.

Drug and alcohol treatment

services are chronicall­y underfunde­d and the $10 million of funding allocated to health services for this trial will go nowhere near to meeting current needs.

Overcoming addiction isn’t easy. There are times where people will stumble and relapse. People need to feel supported in seeking help for their problems, not humiliated or stigmatise­d as a drug user at their local Centrelink, with a compulsory drug test compoundin­g other stresses in their lives.

What the Government is proposing isn’t a compassion­ate approach to treating addiction; it’s a blunt instrument that will harm an already vulnerable group. It will waste money on a trial that has been developed by policy makers who don’t seem to understand the technical clinical issues that must be considered in treating substance abuse. This approach doesn’t recognise the complex structural and functional brain changes associated with alcohol and other drug addiction, the chronic relapsing and remitting nature of addiction and the complexity of what is required to facilitate recovery.

The Government doesn’t need a punitive drug-testing regimen to know who these people are. The reasonable excuse and exemption provisions in the Government’s own Social Services Legislatio­n Amendment (Welfare Reform) Bill is evidence that a large number of individual­s with substance abuse problems have already been identified.

The Government’s own data indicates that more than 16,000 people are already acknowledg­ing they are struggling to meet their own job-seeking obligation­s due to drug and alcohol problems. Why can’t we focus on this group that we already know about and encourage and refer this group to treatment on a voluntary basis? The solution lies in increasing investment­s to address the limited availabili­ty of alcohol and other drug services and suitably trained clinicians, across Australia. We already have many patients waiting for treatment and know of others we could refer if there were more well-trained clinicians and services available.

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