The Scotsman

Addict’s mother in plea to MPS over stigma amid drug death crisis

- By CHRIS MARSHALL Home Affairs Correspond­ent cmarshall@scotsman.com

The mother of a man who died after struggling with drug misuse has said she “refuses to be ashamed” of her son as she appealed for an end to the stigma surroundin­g addiction.

Barbara Bauld, whose son Douglas died in 2017 aged 42, has written to MPS on the Scottish Affairs Committee, which is conducting an inquiry into the country’s drug-death crisis.

According to the most recent figures, there were 934 drugrelate­d deaths registered in Scotland in 2017, the largest number since records began and the highest rate of anywhere in the EU.

Mr Douglas was found dead at his home in Cumbernaul­d, with a post-mortem examinatio­n later establishi­ng that he had traces of illegal and prescripti­on drugs in his body.

Mrs Bauld, a retired teacher, said her son, who suffered from mental health problems, had concealed his addictions due to the stigma attached.

In a submission to MPS, she wrote: “He was so deeply aware of the stigma that he wanted to keep his self-medication secret and that delayed finding any appropriat­e treatment.

“I feel that it is counter-productive to continue to treat drug addiction as a moral failing, but if we do, as a society, those self-medicating (and at times their relatives) will continue to try to conceal the problem. The stigma feeds the secrecy and encourages a feeling of shame which hinders research into the problem.”

She added: “Had my son got the help he needed, he would have been able to contribute significan­tly to society. “He was an accomplish­ed computer engineer, a skill for which he won awards and he was someone who could not walk by on the other side of the street if he saw someone else in need of help...

“At his funeral there was standing room only. He was a man I am proud to be able to call my son and I refuse to be ashamed of him.”

MPS are investigat­ing what makes drug misuse in Scotland different from elsewhere in the UK as well as the links with poverty and deprivatio­n.

They will also look at how the UK and Scottish Government­s can work more effectivel­y together to tackle the problem.

According to the figures published last year, the 934 recorded drug deaths in 2017 was the highest figure since 1996, with opiates or opioids, such as heroin, morphine and methadone, implicated in nearly 90 per cent of cases.

The overall death rate in Scotland was roughly twoand-a-half times that of the UK.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom