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Major Studies of Drugs and Drug Policy | ||||
Canadian Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs | ||||
Volume 2 - Policies and Practices In Canada |
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Chapter 16
Prevention
Prevention is a key component of
public health strategies and is increasingly part of the array of measures used
to fight crime, especially crime related to the abuse of psychoactive
substances. Viewed–in theory, at least–as a public health issue, an illegal
drugs policy should therefore call for a strong prevention strategy. Nothing, however, is more fluid,
vague, even controversial, than prevention. The measures used to enforce the
law are clear: they give power to the police and set down guidelines for the
courts in dealing with people found to be in breach of the law. Correctional
measures are equally clear: they implement the sentences imposed by the courts.
Already, the measures used to treat people with drug problems are vague; there is no consensus on what constitutes
treatment, when treatment begins and, most importantly, when treatment ends.
The literature makes a distinction between primary, secondary and tertiary
prevention; prevention through social development and situational development;
universal, specific and indicated prevention; and prevention of use, at-risk
behaviour and abuse, yet does not agree on the specific content of each field
or the approach that should be taken in public policy. When it comes to illegal drugs, the
legal and political context makes the issue of prevention even harder to
clarify and actions even harder to define. There are policies and initiatives
in place that aim to prevent at-risk behaviour related to alcohol, such as
heavy drinking, driving under the influence and domestic violence. In some
circumstances and used in some forms, alcohol can be a “dangerous” substance;
what we want to do is preclude those circumstances and identify the indicators
of abuse so that we can prevent at-risk behaviour from leading to excessive, even
pathological behaviour. It is possible to make these distinction and not deal
with use per se because alcohol is a
legal substance. But the national legal context surrounding illegal drugs and
the interpretation of international drug policies (see Chapter 19 on the latter
subject) are such that because they are defined a priori as harmful substances, illegal drugs must not be used.
Another way of putting it is that any use is abuse. The glossary published by
the United Nations Office for Drug Control and Crime Prevention states: In
the context of international drug control, drug abuse constitutes the use of any substance under
international control for purposes other than medical and scientific. [1][1] (Our emphasis) If use is abuse, if individuals or
organizations involved in prevention are unable to make distinctions that are
essential in setting objectives and devising preventive measures, what hope is
there of establishing successful prevention programs? The international context on drugs
is decidedly full of surprises. Each year, the International Narcotics Control
Board, whose mandate is to monitor the implementation by Member States of the
various international conventions, publishes an annual report which includes,
in its first section, a commentary on a specific theme. The 1997 report
commented on prevention. Regretting that the social environment was promoting
drug use, the report noted: Preventing
the abuse of drugs is becoming an increasingly difficult endeavour, at least
partly because of the rapid and growing spread of messages in the environment
that promote drug abuse. Many of them can be regarded as public incitement and
inducement to use and abuse drugs. Therefore, present efforts at prevention
need to be strengthened and innovative prevention initiatives need to be
developed and implemented. (…) While
the elimination of all forms of drug experimentation, use and abuse will never be
achieved, it should not be a reason to give up the ultimate aim of all
prevention efforts, namely a drug-free society. [2][2] Among the various factors favourable
to drug use and abuse, the Board cited popular culture (songs, films, etc.),
the media, the Internet, the promotion of hemp products and political
campaigns. The report equates advocating for liberal policy options to the
promotion of drug use and suggests a rather disquieting notion of prevention: Sensationalism,
the desire to be provocative and the need for higher ratings, may also be
behind the fact that several television companies in some countries in western
Europe appear to be broadcasting many more programmes in support of a change in
the drug law, if not the outright legalization of drugs, particularly cannabis,
than programmes examining the consequences of following such a policy and the
harm arising from it. Preventive education campaigns aimed at accurately
informing the public in general of the effects of drugs and drug abuse will
help to promote a more rational approach to drug problems and to avoid
sensationalism. (…) It
is possible to curb the showing by public broadcasting media, such as the
press, radio, film and television, of favourable images of drug abuse. In some
countries, it is possible to do this through legislation; in others it can be
done through voluntary codes of practice; in still others, however, no
restrictions on promoting drug abuse are in place because freedom of
information and freedom of speech are considered to be more important than
limiting the promotion of illicit drugs. The Governments of those countries may
need to reconsider whether unrestricted access to and the propagation of such
information are detrimental to the social and health conditions of their
populations. (…) Election
campaigns have been conducted with candidates standing for parliament on a drug
legalization platform. Some campaigns, such as the successful campaigns for the
"medical" use of cannabis in Arizona and California in the United
States of America, have sought to change the law (…). Such political campaigns
need to be met with rational arguments and unambiguous language pointing out
the manifold problems that might arise from the decriminalization of drugs and
that certainly would arise from the legalization of drugs, in particular the
health and economic consequences of such action. (…) The Board notes with
regret that despite the fact that (…) Governments of States that are parties to
the 1988 Convention are required to make the incitement or inducement to take
drugs a criminal offence, either this has not been done or the law has not been
enforced. [3][3] If criticisms of the current public
policies and demands for alternative approaches are equated with condoning drug
use, if prevention means curbing freedom of speech – whether or not one agrees
with these critiques – then one has to wonder what prevention is about. Of course there are, as this chapter
will show, many prevention programs that are not aimed solely or even
particularly at the prevention of use, but rather the prevention of at-risk
behaviour. Harm reduction, for example, is not only a general strategy for
dealing with psychoactive substances, but is also a preventive approach that
seeks to lower the risks associated with drugs and drug control without
requiring abstinence. However, harm reduction is the subject of much
controversy and criticism because it is based on the premise that use of drugs
is a social reality. Is law enforcement a preventive
measure? Many practitioners, not just police officers, would surely say it is,
and they would be right insofar as visible police presence or community
policing does have some preventive effect. But in the current context, this is
designed to prevent use, not at-risk behaviour, and does so through deterrence,
not education or empowerment. And Chapter 14 showed that its effectiveness is
very limited. Are sentences, including deprivation of liberty, preventive
measures? Of course they are, at least for the time the offender is under
supervision or in custody (although drugs are available in prison). But we saw
in Chapter 15 that criminalization and penalisation do not deter use. And it is
generally admitted that intervention by the justice system is in fact a sign that
preventive measures have failed (or were not taken). Are citizenship education,
health awareness and self-esteem programs preventive measures? They are indeed,
but so, too, are social justice and fairness initiatives, efforts to reduce
inequities and measures aimed at improving relations with Aboriginal peoples.
If everything is prevention, what, then, constitutes the field of prevention? Addressing
the issue of prevention means considering at the same time government policies
on illegal drugs. This is particularly true in the case of cannabis. Preventive messages, as will be seen later,
must be credible. The message that smoking tobacco causes lung cancer and
cardiovascular disease is credible, at least in part because it is based on a
large body of epidemiological studies that have established a strong,
statistical cause-and-effect link. The same is true for impaired driving and
the wearing of seatbelts. However, as Chapters 6, 7 and 8 have demonstrated,
the findings for cannabis are by no means as cut and dried and the weight of
the evidence would tend to indicate that it a much less harmful substance than
most other psychoactive substances. Contrary to what many told us, marijuana is
not illegal because it is dangerous and this is well established in the history
of national drug law and international conventions. The UNDCP glossary also states: Prevention
is defined broadly as an intervention designed to change the social and
environmental determinants of drug and alcohol abuse, including discouraging
the initiation of drug use and preventing the progression to more frequent or
regular use among at-risk populations. [4][4] A careful reading of this definition
is in order. It says that preventive intervention aims to prevent the abuse of
drugs and alcohol. In the case of
drugs only, however, one must aim to
prevent people from becoming users in the first place, since drug use will
progressively increase. Yet, the research on marijuana does not support this
distinction. Alcohol – and before that tobacco – are far more likely than
marijuana to lead to more frequent use, even at-risk use, and to be a gateway
to other illegal drugs. But alcohol, like tobacco, is legal. Marijuana is not. Any discussion of prevention entails
discussion of the limits of government intervention and of how one conceives of
human action. How far should government interventions go in identifying groups
at risk without further stigmatizing groups already at risk? To what extent are
humans rational beings who act in their best interest provided they are given
the right information? Finally, any discussion of
prevention in the Canadian context necessarily has a constitutional dimension:
to the extent that preventive measures are matters of health provinces have the
primary jurisdiction, and to the extent that prevention is education provinces
have exclusive jurisdiction. As we saw in Chapter 12 on the history of federal
legislation on illegal drugs, it was no accident that the Narcotic Control Act was criminal in nature: since Parliament is
authorized to adopt criminal legislation pursuant to the criminal law power
conferred by the constitution. The federal government’s role in the field of
prevention of drug use is limited at best and non-existent at worst proprio motu. This chapter on prevention begins
with a statement that will come as no surprise to health or justice experts:
when it comes to prevention, there is lots of talk, but the resources allocated
are small and the initiatives weak. The second section asks the question: what
prevention? We look at current knowledge of the factors underlying prevention
initiatives and the effectiveness of some preventive measures, with special
emphasis on one of the most important weapons in the war on drugs, the DARE
program. The third section looks at the harm reduction approach to prevention.
As in the other chapters, our conclusions are in the form of observations that
may serve to guide future actions.
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