Iran Daily

UK hospital admissions for addiction soar as treatment budgets fall

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More than half of the local authoritie­s in England have cut their budgets for alcohol and drug treatment, even though admissions to hospital for problems related to addiction are soaring, said MPS.

Liam Byrne, the chair of the cross-party parliament­ary group for children of alcoholics, and Jonathan Ashworth, the shadow health secretary, have both spoken of the trauma of growing up with an alcoholic father, theguardia­n.com reported.

They are among the MPS campaignin­g against the cuts.

The data comes from a Freedom of Informatio­n (FOI) request by Byrne to local authoritie­s, which are responsibl­e for drug and alcohol treatment in their areas but are struggling with huge demands on their limited public health budgets.

“Every child of an alcoholic comes to learn the brutal hard way that we can’t change things for our parents, but we can change things for our children,” said Byrne.

“But frankly that’s harder if addiction treatment budgets are being cut left, right and center. What this year’s data shows is that it’s simply a false economy. We’re spending money dealing with A&E admissions when we should be trying to tackle the addiction that lands people in hospital in the first place.”

The FOI data shows that alcoholrel­ated hospital admissions are up by 13 percent, with 39,000 more last year than in 2009, while alcohol treatment budgets have been cut by four percent.

The average budget cut for alcohol and drug treatment services last year was £155,000, but some were much higher. The largest absolute cut was by Birmingham city council at £3,846,000, which is 19 percent of its budget.

Islington cut the largest proportion of its budget, at 34 percent, amounting to £2.431 million.

Local authoritie­s plan to cut addiction treatment services by a further two percent next year. That is an average of more than £75,000. Ninetythre­e percent of local authoritie­s say that addiction treatment budgets will stand still or fall next year.

The only positive news from the allparty parliament­ary group is that 67 percent of local authoritie­s now say they have services in place to support the children of alcoholics, up from 50 percent last year and less than 25 percent in 2015.

“As I know from my own personal circumstan­ces”, alcohol use can have a devastatin­g impact on families, especially children, said Ashworth, who told the Guardian in 2016 that the issue would be a priority for Labour.

“We are seeing more admissions to hospital where alcohol is a primary cause, deaths from substance misuse at high levels and yet, rather than expanding specialist treatments services, deep cuts will be imposed on them again. This fails some of the most vulnerable in society. Government ministers must reverse these cuts as a matter of urgency.”

The vice chair of the parliament­ary group, Caroline Flint, said, “Investment in addiction treatment services is about more than helping those patients; it is about preventing the chain of damage that scars the lives of subsequent generation­s.

“Breaking the cycle is essential. This cannot be achieved if the quality of treatment services cannot be relied upon. I hope ministers will listen to the patients and to the children of alcoholics and address this funding crisis immediatel­y.”

A Department of Health and Social Care spokespers­on said, “All children deserve a stable and happy place to call home and it’s heartbreak­ing that hundreds of thousands of children growing up with alcohol-addicted parents in this country are robbed of this. Children whose parents are dependent on alcohol face a poorer outlook in all aspects of their life — from their education to their mental health.

“In December, we committed to fund the National Associatio­n for the Children of Alcoholics’ helpline expansion, so that more children in this difficult position have rapid access to support and advice.

“Robust Government action has led to a fall in alcohol consumptio­n in recent years — but we remain committed to tackling alcohol-related harms and protecting the innocent victims of addiction such as children of alcoholics.”

 ??  ?? DAVID SILLITOE/THE GUARDIAN British Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Jonathan Ashworth
DAVID SILLITOE/THE GUARDIAN British Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Jonathan Ashworth

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