About | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline Law Journal Library | HeinOnline

84 Medico-Legal J. 3 (2016)

handle is hein.journals/medlgjr84 and id is 1 raw text is: 

                                                                                 Medico-Legal
Editorial                                                                                Journal


Young People and Drugs: a Better Long

Term Strategy is Needed


Medico-Legal Journal
2016, Vol. 84(l) 3-4
@ The Author(s) 2016
Reprints and permissions:
sagepub.co.uldjournalsPermissions.nav
DOI: 10. 1177/0025817216629329
mlj.sagepub.corn
SAGE


Diana Brahams
Editor


Some ten or fifteen years ago a study of emotional and
behavioural problems in young people in Essex was
carried out. This revealed that almost half of them
had already tried illegal drugs by the age of 16/17. It
seems to me unlikely that the percentage numbers have
dropped since and (though I have no evidence for this
either) likely that by age 18 more than half of young
people in that area will have tried taking drugs. Some
will have developed a habit. Yet drugs cost money and
most of these will not be in paid occupations so how do
they pay for them? By getting into trouble very often,
stealing or falling into the hands of dealers and groo-
mers and dropping out of school?
   What can we do? If an authority figure comes to a
difficult school to speak to troubled kids he/she
may make some headway but there will be many who
will be closed off to them. An ex-offender may do better
and the youngsters themselves may well have interest-
ing ideas and a real understanding of the issues if they
can be brought on board to be part of the solution
rather than be a part of the problem.
   Should we legalise cannabis? Professor David Nutt's
talk in which he sets out his passionate arguments in
favour of legalisation of drugs will be published in a
forthcoming issue. I am not convinced that legalisation
will improve the situation and indeed could make
it worse.
   Many of these issues came up for discussion when I
interviewed Emeritus Professor Harry Zeitlin (child
mental health) for a quite different publication. He
told me that young people who take drugs and canna-
bis, in particular, are statistically 4 to 5 times more
likely to trigger and then suffer from 'schizophrenic'
symptoms than those who don't take drugs and conti-
nuing drug use following diagnosis will exacerbate
symptoms and can cause more long lasting psychosis
which may not stop when drug taking ceases. Some of
these youngsters will go on to develop full blown
mental illness after first displaying signs of mental


instability and/or disturbed behaviour both before pub-
erty and after puberty. So, are the NHS, primary and
secondary schools, universities and social services
equipped to notice and treat/deal with these problem
youngsters successfully? Are there adequate services in
place round the country for mentally troubled younger
children  and  also  older children? According to
Professor Zeitlin the services are too thin and few and
he estimates that NHS child mental health services
(provision for under 18's) are funded to less than one
tenth of those provided for to adults (also under huge
pressure and sometimes referred to as the Cinderella of
the NHS). As they are often the first port of call, Zeitlin
feels GP's would benefit from greater training and sup-
port in this area.
   Our overcrowded prisons have a high proportion of
people, mainly men, who are functionally illiterate and
innumerate and who may also have mental problems
and whom in the past would often have been ware-
housed in county asylums. For example about one
quarter of young male prisoners are said to have
ADHD. These factors are major contributors to their
failure to cope or thrive in society. But how did we get
there? How much cheaper and more humane it would
be to spend some of the money that it will cost to keep
them in prison to keep them out of it and give them
help at a much earlier stage?
   But where is the long term and over-arching strategy
to make this happen?
   Though not directly on this point we may soon see a
small first step in the right direction, see the report at
page 2 of The Times of 8th January 2016. The Times
has been running a campaign for greater funding and
investment to improve the alarming state of children's
mental health services) and now Anne Longfield, the
children's commissioner has said she will draw up a
lightning report to urgently attempt to establish
how young people are being failed by the system
when they need treatment for depression, anxiety,

What Is HeinOnline?

HeinOnline is a subscription-based resource containing thousands of academic and legal journals from inception; complete coverage of government documents such as U.S. Statutes at Large, U.S. Code, Federal Register, Code of Federal Regulations, U.S. Reports, and much more. Documents are image-based, fully searchable PDFs with the authority of print combined with the accessibility of a user-friendly and powerful database. For more information, request a quote or trial for your organization below.



Short-term subscription options include 24 hours, 48 hours, or 1 week to HeinOnline.

Contact us for annual subscription options:

Already a HeinOnline Subscriber?

profiles profiles most