Drug treatment services are improving, according to a new report, with the numbers in treatment almost doubling since 1999 and a sharp fall in waiting times.
But the review of substance misuse services by the Healthcare Commission and National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse found the quality of services varied across the UK, with some failing to provide an adequate level of care.
The review found 5 per cent of England’s 149 drug action teams were “excellent” and 23 per cent “good”, while 71 per cent were rated “fair” and 1 per cent “weak”.
The number of people joining treatment programmes increased from 85,000 in 1998-9 to 160,000 in 2004-5, and waiting times fell from an average of 9.1 weeks in 2001 to 2.4 weeks in September 2005.
However, the review found users needed treatment for longer and said some services were prescribing insufficient doses of methadone.
Evaluation finds better services
September 7, 2006 in Substance misuse
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