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This entry is our analysis of a document considered particularly relevant to improving outcomes from drug or alcohol interventions in the UK. The original document was not published by Findings; click Title to order a copy. The summary conveys the findings and views expressed in the document. Below is a commentary from Drug and Alcohol Findings.
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Scottish Government
Scottish Government, 2018
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Taking a public health and human rights-based approach, the 2018 strategy from Scotland strives to improve citizens’ lives by preventing and reducing the harms of drinking and drug use.
Summary The featured strategy promotes the Scottish government’s vision for a Scotland where its citizens have the right to live free from the harms of alcohol and drugs, are treated with dignity and respect, and are fully supported to find their own type of recovery.
“Everyone has the right to health and to live free from the harms of alcohol and drugs. Everyone has the right to be treated with respect and dignity and for their individual recovery journey to be fully supported. This strategy is, therefore, about how we best support people across alcohol and drug issues – taking a human rights-based, public health approach to ensure we are delivering the best possible care, treatment and responses for individuals and communities.”
This is underpinned by a public health and human rights-based approach to drugs and alcohol. In practice this means:
• Recognising the impact of problem drinking and drug use on population health and wellbeing.
• Encouraging work across multiple policy areas to reduce the harms of drugs and alcohol, including housing, education and criminal justice.
• Grounding approaches in the legal rights that citizens have under both domestic and international laws.
• Involving people in decisions that affect their rights.
• Preventing and eliminating all forms of discrimination, prioritising people who face the biggest barriers to realising their rights.
Four outcomes are defined in the strategy, along with corresponding commitments to ensure each outcome is achieved. These are summarised below.
commentary
Alongside the featured strategy, the Scottish government published a new alcohol framework, outlining 20 key actions that seek to “reduce consumption and minimise alcohol-related harm arising in the first place”.
Approaches to alcohol policy differ widely across the UK. An appraisal in 2015 found Scottish policy to be most closely aligned with evidence-based recommendations, framing alcohol as a whole population issue in contrast with UK government policy which is influenced to a greater extent by prevailing beliefs about personal responsibility.
Scotland has led the way on minimum unit pricing, implementing plans in 2018 to set a £0.50 minimum price after a five-year battle with the drinks industry. On drug consumption rooms too, Scotland has been nudging the UK position, referring in the featured strategy to the Scottish government’s efforts to “press the UK Government to make the necessary changes in the law, or if they are not willing to do so, to devolve the powers in this area so that the Scottish Parliament has an opportunity to implement this life-saving strategy in full”. Not letting this be a footnote in the strategy, the Minister for Public Health, Sport and Wellbeing Joe FitzPatrick used drug consumption rooms in his opening remarks (see page 3) as an example of “supporting responses which may initially seem controversial or unpopular”:
“Adopting a public health approach also requires us all to think about how best to prevent harm, which takes us beyond just health services. This, requires links into other policy areas including housing, education and justice. It also means supporting responses which may initially seem controversial or unpopular, such as the introduction of supervised drug consumption facilities, but which are driven by a clear evidence base.”
The Effectiveness Bank has previously documented the UK Government’s 2017 drug strategy and now lapsed 2012 alcohol strategy, as well as the 2016 Modern Crime Prevention Strategy which identified alcohol and drugs as two key drivers of crime and disorder.
In early May 2018 the UK government committed to developing a new national strategy on alcohol for England. What this might mean for the UK is discussed by Alcohol Policy UK, an organisation which provides news and analysis for the alcohol harm reduction field.
Last revised 12 December 2018. First uploaded 03 December 2018
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