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Charities urge government to target and tailor alcohol treatment services

Posted: 16 January 2003 | Subscribe Online


Alcohol treatment services need to be both mainstream and tailored according to age, ethnicity and other specialist needs, the government was told this week.

As the consultation period for the national alcohol harm reduction strategy closed, alcohol misuse organisations warned the government in their submissions that existing services were both too sparse and too general.

Substance misuse charity Turning Point said that people who misused alcohol needed the support of both mainstream and specialist services, and that treatment had to take account of a whole range of factors, including culture.
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"We need a person-centred approach to planning that starts with the individual and reflects their needs, rather than the priorities of services, and covers issues such as mainstream funding for housing, education and employment. People should not be expected to simply fit in with existing services".

In its submission, the charity says it is "crucial" for the strategy to focus on meeting the particular needs of people from minority ethnic communities, where drinking patterns tend to be less visible and problems underestimated by existing services.

Turning Point also suggests that older people and young people need age-specific treatment which has been tailored to meet their needs.

Warning that individuals with a dual diagnosis of mental illness and substance misuse often "fall between two stools with neither agency willing to take the lead", the charity also recommends a multi-agency approach to the commissioning and delivery of services.
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The charity is also calling for a number of structural changes, including the expansion of the National Treatment Agency's role to include alcohol, and for alcohol services to come under the remit of drug action teams.

Richard Kramer, Turning Point's head of policy, insisted that the final alcohol strategy, expected this summer, needed to be all-encompassing, and not prioritise binge drinking over people who are dependent drinkers in need of longer term treatment.

Meanwhile Alcohol Concern's submission calls for better coordination locally and nationally, and for a cabinet level minister to be responsible for policy on alcohol misuse. In addition the charity wants information about alcohol to be available outside specialist settings, such as in doctors' surgeries.


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