Stirling Observer

Stirling drugs projects get share of £800,000

Money will help those affected by substance abuse

- STUART MCFARLANE

A pair of Stirling-based projects are to be awarded almost £800,000 of combined funding to support people affected by drug use.

The grants, given out by the Scottish Government, will see a total of 77 initiative­s across Scotland share funding worth more £25 million.

National youth charity Includem have received £500,000 to help its work in delivering intensive one-toone support for young people aged between 12 and 26 in Stirling who have been affected by substance abuse.

Currently, Includem expect to support around 50-60 children, young people and families across the Stirling area this year - with hopes that the additional capacity could help another 12 people in Stirling.

Includem’s director of services Lynsey Smith said: “This is really good news and we are looking forward to getting going.

“We do a lot of one-to-one work in the community, going out to families and providing bespoke support and we have access to people 365 days a year to make sure we’re there when needed.

“We’ve been embedded in Stirling since 2017 and receive most of our referrals through the children and social work department.

“The system was lacking capacity to reach those people who are really hard to engage with and clinical settings don’t often work for that trust, so our proposal was about increasing that capacity.

“The specialist treatment in Stirling was being underutili­sed and so our goal was about getting those people who weren’t engaging with existing services to do so and the project has been developed directly with children, young people and their families.”

“The service will be truly embedded with children and young people and make sure we physically deliver that one-to-one support to reduce the lifelong impact that drug use can have.

“It will provide much-needed non-clinical support and has been generated through real knowledge of where the current gaps are and families have said what kind of service they want.”

Meanwhile, the Change Grow Live recovery service - based across the Forth Valley - has also received funding of £298,500 to assist with the delivery of a ‘harm reduction assertive outreach service’ in Stirling.

Announcing the funding package, Drugs Policy Minister Angela Constance said: “I am pleased that so many organisati­ons doing valuable work around the country are to benefit from this latest round of funding from our Improvemen­t Fund and Children and Families Fund.

“The grants awarded will enable services to increase and improve the support available for people suffering from addiction and of course, their families.

“Getting more people into the treatment which works for them is central to our National Mission and we continue to embed the new Medication-assisted Treatment (MAT) standards which reinforce a rights-based approach for people who use drugs and the treatment they should expect regardless of their circumstan­ces.

“We aim to increase the number of publicly funded residentia­l rehabilita­tion placements by more than 300 per cent over the lifetime of this Parliament and I recently announced a treatment target to increase the number of people with problemati­c opiate drug use accessing community treatments.

“I am determined that the £250 million we are investing in tackling this public health emergency will make a difference and we will continue to prioritise our efforts to turn this crisis around.”

 ?? ?? Boost Includem director of services Lynsey Smith has hailed the possible impact of the funding
Boost Includem director of services Lynsey Smith has hailed the possible impact of the funding

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