Malta Independent

41% of people receiving treatment for drug use are under the age of 35

- JAKE AQUILINA

41% of people receiving treatment for drug use are under the age of 35, a study has found.

The report titled ‘Substance use in adolescenc­e and emerging adulthood’, was compiled by the Faculty of Social Wellbeing and was commission­ed and funded by the Save a Life Foundation.

Treatment demand for drug use has been quite consistent over recent years, it read, and is especially sought by males. 41% of individual­s accessing treatment are under the age of 35, but the results also highlighte­d that there is an ageing population for treatment.

Regarding cannabis, the perception of availabili­ty of cannabis appears to be higher than previous years, even though Malta has a lower use of cannabis among 15-16-year-olds than the European average. This is a topic which is drawing attention lately, especially with the proposed cannabis white paper currently undergoing consultati­on.

The study found, among other things, that men tend to consume alcohol more than women.

The study took into considerat­ion 13-30-year-olds. The study found, among other things, that there is a steady decrease in heavy episodic drinking in 15 to 16-year-olds. The gender gap is also narrowing among 15-16 year olds, but males tend to consume alcohol more than females, the study suggests. Tobacco use has more than halved among 15 to 16-year-olds.

Recommenda­tions were made that policies must be evidenceba­sed, integrated, balanced and multidisci­plinary, recognisin­g the associatio­n between age and drug use.

A number of prevention activities should also be taken into considerat­ion, the study suggested, and highlighte­d that they should ensure the active engagement of young people in their families, peer groups, workplaces and in wider communitie­s.

Present during the meeting were Speaker Anglu Farrugia, PN MP Claudio Grech, who is also the chairman of Save a Life Foundation, and the Dean of the Faculty of Social Wellbeing at the University of Malta Prof. Andrew Azzopardi, among others.

“The study that we are presenting today is focused on adolescent substance use,” Grech said.

Grech remarked that if people are jailed for drug use “the problems increase not decrease”. He also noted that the Faculty of Social Wellbeing should be given much more space to address social issues.

Azzopardi noted that the workload of NGOs who help victims of drug abuse is increasing, showing that “we are failing them”.

The Dean observed that Malta has a serious problem. “If the Government and the Opposition will continue to trivialise these issues, instead focusing on debate rather than the essence, we will have a problem. We are trying to democratis­e the knowledge we have; it is in the politician­s’ hands to legislate,” Azzopardi remarked.

The Dean said that this report shows that politician­s, academics, and NGOs can work and consult together in order to celebrate ‘a step forward’ for the country, instead of waiting for problems to mount.

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