Right-to-recovery drug rehabilitation Bill has ‘77% support in consultation’
A SCOTTISH Tory Bill aimed at enshrining the right to access certain drug rehabilitation services has received support from 77% of respondents to a consultation.
The Right to Recovery (Scotland) Bill would see the right enshrined in Scots law, seek to prevent people from being refused treatment, establish a new funding mechanism for frontline services and introduce new national standards and guidance to increase accessibility.
A consultation run by Tory leader Douglas Ross, who initially proposed the Bill, closed in January, finding that 150 of the 195 responses were either fully or partially supportive of the Bill.
In their response, homeless charity Cyrenians said: “We find it very surprising that there is not already an established legal right to addiction recovery – similar to the legal rights to housing.
“Options for addiction treatments can vary geographically, so the act should ensure that all recovery options are available to all citizens.”
Scottish Tory health spokesman Dr Sandesh Gulhane said the drug deaths crisis – which claimed the lives of 1339 Scots in 2020 – should “shame the nation”.
“We believe Right to Recovery is a crucial part of the solution and I’m delighted to see the extremely positive response to it from stakeholders, who recognise it’s a common-sense Bill drawn up in consultation with experts in the addiction field,” he added.
“At the moment, too many people with addiction problems are unable to access the help they need, but this legislation would enshrine in law their right to receive potentially life-saving treatment, including residential rehab.
“I urge the government to finally get on board with this legislation so we can start fixing Scotland’s broken treatment system.”
Annemarie Ward, the chief executive officer of Faces and Voices of Recovery (Favor) UK, helped draft the Bill and said it would bring “much-needed further investment” for drug services.
Turning Point Scotland, a leading charity that supports people struggling with addiction, said in a submission to the consultation they did not believe the Bill presented the “only, nor the best way” to save lives.
Faye Keogh, policy and business development officer at the charity, said: “Establishing a legal right would help draw attention to a neglected issue, but we already have the attention.
“Even if this act was passed and we established the legal right to treatment, work would then still need to be done to make that right a reality.
“We believe work is already under way, and that our time and effort would be more productively spent on ensuring that work included all that it needs to.”