From [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject Drugnet Issue 79
Date December 7, 2021 1:52 PM
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Welcome
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Results from the fifth general population survey on illicit drug use in Ireland
by Seán Millar
The first survey on drug use in the general population was carried out in Ireland in 2002/03. The
survey was repeated in 2006/07, 2010/11, and 2014/15.1 In 2018, the Health Research Board (HRB) in
Ireland commissioned IPSOS MRBI to conduct the fifth Irish National Drug and Alcohol Survey (NDAS).2

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In brief
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In brief
The emergence of the phenomenon of new psychoactive substances (NPS) since the mid-2000s marks a new
phase in our millennia-long relationship with mood or mind-altering substances.

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Policy
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Facilitating young people’s participation in decision-making
by Lucy Dillion
In April 2021, the Participation framework: national framework for children and young people’s
participation in decision-making was launched by the Department of Children, Equality, Disability,
Integration and Youth (DCEDIY).1 The framework aims to support departments, agencies, and
organisations to improve their practice in listening to children and young people and giving them a
voice in decision-making.

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Youth Justice Strategy 2021–2027
by Ciara H Guiney
On 15 April 2021, Minister of State for Law Reform James Browne TD and Minister for Justice Helen
McEntee TD launched a new Youth Justice Strategy 2021–2027.1,2 It is centred on a developmental
framework that aims to target ongoing and emerging challenges in youth justice.2

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A long-brewing crisis: the historical antecedents of major alcohol policy in Ireland
The Public Health (Alcohol) Act 2018 in Ireland has been praised as a world-leading package of
alcohol policy reforms. The path to alcohol policy change in Ireland was long and winding as well as
politically perilous.

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Waiting for the wave: political leadership, policy windows, and alcohol policy change in Ireland
by Anne Doyle
Alcohol consumption has long been a source of major health and social problems in Ireland. A
combination of factors undermined previous attempts to address alcohol as a public health issue,
including the considerable political and economic power wielded by the alcohol industry and the
failure of the Government to develop a fully integrated approach across its departments and
agencies.

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Prevalence
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Drug treatment in Ireland, 2014–2020
by Cathy Kelleher
Published in July 2021, the latest National Drug Treatment Reporting System (NDTRS) report presents
trends in treated problem drug use (excluding alcohol) for the seven-year period from 2014 to
2020.1,2

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Recent research
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Trends in drug poisoning deaths, by sex, in Ireland: a repeated cross-sectional study, 2004–2017
by Ena Lynn
Drug poisoning (overdose) deaths are a leading cause of avoidable death with rates increasing
globally. According to the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA), the
mortality rate due to drug poisoning in the European Union in 2019 is estimated at 14.8 deaths per
million population aged 15–64 years, with over three-quarters (77%) of these deaths among men.

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Relationships between cannabis and recent use of stimulant drugs
by Seán Millar
Individuals who use cannabis are more likely to use other illicit substances, with several
epidemiological studies showing that the use of cannabis is significantly related to the use of
‘harder’ illegal drugs, including stimulants such as cocaine and ecstasy.

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Age at first substance use, persistence of cannabis use, and cannabis use disorder in Ireland
by Seán Millar
There is ongoing debate regarding the relationships between early onset substance use and later use
of other drugs. The common liability model states that a combination of risk factors places some
people at increased risk of both early initiation and of subsequent progression to more serious and
sustained drug abuse.

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Patterns of new psychoactive substance use among patients attending for opioid substitution
treatment in Ireland
by Seán Millar
Until 2010, new psychoactive substances (NPS) could be bought legally in headshops in Ireland.
However, recent finding from the Irish National Drug and Alcohol Survey 2019–201 show that the
prevalence of recent NPS use remains very low.

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Systematic review of media coverage on NPS in Ireland, 2000–2010
by Lucy Dillion
In 2010, new psychoactive substances (NPS) were the subject of two pieces of legislation in
Ireland.1,2 The first (enacted in May 2010) expanded the list of substances controlled under the
Misuse of Drugs Acts 1977−1984 to include over 100 NPS.1 The second, the Criminal Justice
(Psychoactive Substances) Act 2010 (enacted in August 2010), covered the sale of substances by
virtue of their psychoactive properties. It was aimed at vendors of NPS and effectively made it an
offence to sell a psychoactive substance.

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Alcohol treatment in Ireland, 2014–2020
by Derek O’Neill
Published in July 2021, the latest National Drug Treatment Reporting System (NDTRS) report presents
trends in treated problem alcohol use for the seven-year period from 2014 to 2020.1

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Health Behaviour in School-aged Children Study, 2018
by Seán Millar
The first Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study was conducted in Ireland in 1998 and
has been repeated every four years ever since. In 2018, Ireland participated for the sixth time in
the HBSC study.

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Seventh ESPAD survey report published
by Seán Millar
The European Schools Project on Alcohol and Other Drugs (ESPAD) has conducted surveys of
school-going children every four years since 1995 using a standardised method and a common
questionnaire. The seventh survey was undertaken in 35 European countries during 2019 and collected
information on alcohol, tobacco, and other substance use among 15–16-year-old students.

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Self-harm in Irish prisons, 2019
by Seán Millar
The Self-Harm Assessment and Data Analysis (SADA) Project was set up in Ireland in 2016 to provide
robust information relating to the incidence and profile of self-harm within prison settings as well
as individual-specific and context-specific risk factors relating to self-harm. In addition, it
examines patterns of repeat self-harm (both non-fatal and fatal). The Health Service Executive’s
National Office for Suicide Prevention and the National Suicide Research Foundation assist the Irish
Prison Service with data management, data analysis, and reporting. This article highlights findings
from a report presenting data in the analysis of all episodes of self-harm across the Irish prison
estate during the year 2019.

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Drug-related infectious diseases in Ireland, 2020
by Seán Millar
The Health Protection Surveillance Centre (HPSC) is Ireland’s specialist agency for the surveillance
of communicable diseases. Part of the Health Service Executive (HSE), and originally known as the
National Disease Surveillance Centre, the HPSC endeavours to protect and improve the health of the
Irish population by collating, interpreting, and disseminating data to provide the best possible
information on infectious diseases. The HPSC has recorded new cases among injecting drug users of
HIV since 1982, HBV (hepatitis B virus) since 2004, and HCV (hepatitis C virus) since 2006. The
figures and tables presented in this summary are based on data extracted from the Computerised
Infectious Disease Reporting (CIDR) System in July 2021.

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Responses
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Alcohol treatment services: a snapshot survey, 2021
by Anne Doyle
Alcohol Action Ireland (AAI), the national independent advocate for reducing alcohol harm, surveyed
a number of alcohol treatment service providers to explore issues around the provision of treatment
services for harmful and dependent drinkers in Ireland. Its report,1 published in 2021, forms part
of AAI’s programme of work on its strategic goal to advocate for services for those affected by
alcohol harm, as outlined in Leading change: a society free from alcohol harm. Strategic Plan
2020–2024.2

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Evaluation of Targeted Response with Youth
by Lucy Dillion
Targeted Response with Youth (TRY) is a peer-mentoring project based in Dublin's south inner city,
which targets young people involved in or at risk of becoming involved in the drug economy and
antisocial behaviour (ASB). An evaluation of the programme was published in November 2020, entitled
Relentless caring: trying something new.1

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Recent publications
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Recent publications
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