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Family planning and drug agencies should link to 'control pregnancies'

Posted: 12 June 2003 | Subscribe Online


Drug agencies should link with specialist family planning services to advise on and administer long-acting contraceptive injections and other treatments, a new government report recommends.

The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs' report estimates that 200,000-300,000 children in England and Wales - 2-3 per cent of under-16s - have one or both parents with serious drugs problems. In Scotland the estimated figure soars to between 41,000 and 59,000 - equivalent to 4-6 per cent of under-16s.
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The council warns that children of problem drug users may be exposed to additional hazards, including poverty, physical abuse or neglect and other inappropriate parenting practices, adding that "few will escape entirely unharmed".

Social services agencies which responded to the council's survey reported that drug or alcohol abuse among parents featured in a quarter of cases of those placed on the child protection register in the previous year.

The council recommends that all family doctors who have problem drug users as patients take steps to ensure they have access to appropriate contraceptive and family planning advice and management, including access to emergency contraception and abortion services. Methadone clinics and needle exchanges should offer specialist family planning services to advise on options for long-term contraception.

The council is also calling for closer working between social services, maternity services and drug agencies. It recommends that the four new social care councils in the UK ensure that all social care workers receive pre-qualification and in-service training which addresses the potential harm to children of parental substance abuse and steps to reduce it.
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The Children's Society welcomed the report but emphasised the importance of looking out for children of parents who abuse alcohol as well as those of parents who abuse drugs.

Policy and practice manager Kathy Evans said: "Agencies desperately need dedicated children's services which offer help to deal with the impact of their parent's problems, regardless of the substance their parent uses, whether they live with that parent, and whatever their own behaviour and abilities."

- Go to www.drugs.gov.uk


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