Crackdown
on drug dealing
Jo Grimshaw,
Woking Police: We’re in Mayberry Estate today
in Princess Gardens, which was subject to quite high-level drug
dealing a year ago, and we used operation guardian as a tool to
deal with the antisocial behaviour and the drug dealing.
John
Bradshaw, local resident: Well, the problem was
that the guy who was dealing drugs attracted a constant flow,
day and night, of people coming to buy drugs. You’d find
syringes, ampoules, the occasional drunk. You know, general
threatening loud behaviour, knock on your door: ‘Can I borrow
your phone?’, ‘Have you got any spare change?’. I mean,
all that sort of stuff.
Jo Grimshaw:
The residents and the community had come forward with
intelligence and therefore we were able to actually – as well
as doing the warrant – was to close down the property under
section 1 of the Antisocial Behaviour Act and therefore cut the
supply straight away from this property.
James
Brokenshire, crime reduction minister: What’s
it like now?
Resident:
Oh, great!
James
Brokenshire: Good, good, well, I’m really
pleased to hear that.
James
Brokenshire: Residents were really in fear and
intimidation, because of drugs, drug dealing and some abusive
behaviour that was happening. That’s why I’m really pleased
to hear about how local communities, coming together, in
partnership, being focused on problem-solving can make a real
difference, can really change people’s lives.
Kevin Deanus,
detective chief superintendent, Surry Police: Well,
the Tilley awards is a – sort of – an award that everybody
is aware of. We’re very proud to have been put forward and
actually to be short-listed, so we’re very proud as an
organisation. You know, ‘Guardian’ is about the community,
it’s not about the proactive police work, it’s actually
about what their life is. So for me, for them to be – you know
– short-listed is an absolute honour for them, because
actually it’s made their lives better, so I’m really really
delighted for them.
James
Brokenshire: The Tilley awards is really
important to recognise problem-solving and good community
action, bringing together residents with those partners – the
police, local authorities, other agencies – who can really
make a difference on these sorts of things. So it’s nice to be
able to come out and celebrate success, to really learn from
positive experience and recognise where good work has made an
impact, just simply on statistics. It’s about people’s lives
that we’re talking about here and how today here in Woking
I’ve heard that people’s lives have been changed and
that’s what we need to be focused on.
Date: Fri 02 Jul
2010
From
the Telegraph.co.uk
By
Kate Devlin, Medical Correspondent Published:
6:15AM GMT 17 Dec 2009
Parents
'should not give small amounts of alcohol
to
breed responsible drinking'
Parents
should not give children alcohol in the hope
that it will breed a responsible attitude to
drinking, Sir Liam Donaldson, Chief Medical
Officer, has warned.
.
Exposure
to alcohol at a young age is actually more
likely to make them heavy or binge drinkers, he
said.
Parents
with a "laissez-faire" attitude to
their teenager’s drinking are also putting
their offspring at risk, he warned, as he called
for a culture shift from the image of the
drinker as a hero.
Sir Liam
made his comments as he launched new guidelines
on children’s drinking for parents, in which
he called for youngsters to have an alcohol-free
childhood.
Children
under the age of 15 should not drink any alcohol
at all, the report advises.
Older
teenagers between 15 and 17 should be supervised
by their parents if they are drinking, and
should limit alcohol intake to one day a week.
Parents
can set an good example by drink any alcohol at
home only in a “positive" setting, such
as a family meal, according to the guidelines.
Sir Liam
said that the notion that introducing children
to small amounts of alcohol at a young age would
teach them to drink responsibly had become a
“middle class obsession” in recent years.
“(That)
if you somehow wean children on to alcohol at an
early age they won't have any problems in later
life, (that) they will be sensible – is not
supported by evidence," he said.
"It's
a bit of a middle-class obsession – the idea
of taking out the wine bottle and diluting it.
"There's
not a great problem to that as such but to
extrapolate from that sort of situation that
alcohol in general is a good thing just does not
work.”
He added:
"Alcohol has a ruinous effect on the
foundations of adult life.
“We see
the tyranny of alcohol on our towns and city
centres.
“Too
often childhood is robbed of its clear-eyed
innocence and replaced with the befuddled
futility that comes with the consumption of dirt
cheap alcohol."
Evidence
shows that children who are introduced to
alcohol at a young age are more likely to binge
drink as teenagers and to develop
alcohol-related problems in later life.
Official
figures show that half a million 11 to 15 year
olds in England admit they have been drunk in
the last month.
And every
year around 7,600 11 to 17-year-olds are
admitted to hospital because of alcohol.
Sir Liam
warned that there was evidence that alcohol
harmed children's’ developing brains.
Drinking
can lead to depression, subtle brain damage,
long-term memory problems, difficulty
remembering words and mental health problems, he
said.
Physical
problems include damage to the liver, reduced
levels of growth hormones and a lower bone
density in boys.
In recent
years doctors have warned that a binge-drinking
culture is leading to young women in their
twenties being diagnosed with alcohol-related
conditions such as cirrhosis of the liver,
unheard of a decade ago.
Sir Liam
insisted that his report was merely advice and
that there were no plans to change the law.
At the
moment parents are legally allowed to give
children alcohol in their own home from the age
of five.
Sir Liam
also reiterated his calls for a minimum price
for a unit of alcohol as he said that to there
was no doubt that Britain had a “drink
problem”.
However,
he admitted that there was not one single
measure alone that could turn the tide on
Britain's growing alcohol problem.
In
January, the Department for Children, Schools
and Families (DCFS) will launch a campaign
warning of the dangers of drinking among
children and young people.
Don
Shenker, the chief executive of Alcohol Concern,
said: "Drinking among young people is a
major concern for parents, many of whom have
previously had no clear guidance on how to
approach what can be a sensitive issue.
"The
guidelines will especially help parents who want
to establish clear boundaries with their
children and clarify that drinking above these
guidelines carries increased health risks.
"However,
there are many more factors that influence young
people's drinking than just what their parents
say.
"The
easy availability of alcohol at pocket money
prices is far more important, and the government
should consider getting tough on cheap sales to
help tackle underage drinking".
From
the Telegraph.co.uk
By
Rebecca Smith, Medical Editor Published: 1:27PM
GMT 27 Jan 2010
Children
drinking more than adult safe levels, official
figures show
Children
as young as 11 are drinking two bottles of wine
a week -
more
than the recommended limit for an adult women -
official figures reveal.
.

The
data, based on surveys of over 23,000 children
in England,
showed
boys drank more than girls in almost all regions
Photo:
GETTY IMAGES
Children
in the north of the country drink and smoke more
than those in the south, data from the NHS
Information Centre has found. In
particular, girls aged between 11 and 15 in the
Midlands and the North are drinking more than
the recommended limits for adult women.
They
are consuming around a bottle and a half of wine
a week.
Adult
women are advised not to drink more than two to
three units a day (or up to 14 units a week) and
men not more than three to four (or up to 21
units a week) with two alcohol free days a week.
Sir
Liam Donaldson, Chief Medical Officer, said last
year that parents should not let their children
drink alcohol at all.
More
than one in four girls in the North East had a
drink in the past week and on average consumed
15.5 units. Girls in the East Midlands, North
West and Yorkshire and Humber drank similar
amounts.
The
pattern was less clear for boys but in general
those in the Midlands and the North were more
likely to have drunk in the last week than those
in the south and to have consumed more.
More
than one in four boys in the North East had a
drink in the last week and on average drank 20.2
units, the equivalent of eight and a half pints
of strong lager or more than two bottles of
wine.
Boys
and girls in London were the least likely to
drink and average consumption of those who did
was also lower.
The
data, based on surveys of over 23,000 children
in England, showed boys drank more than girls in
almost all regions.
It
is the first time that alcohol consumption for
children aged 11 to 15 has been calculated by
region.
Previous
studies have shown that fewer children are
drinking alcohol but those who do consume large
amounts.
On
smoking children in the north of the country
were more likely to have smoked a cigarette in
the last year than those in the south and were
more likely to smoke regularly.
Children
in all of the regions were less likely to have
tried drugs than cigarettes or alcohol.
A
fifth of 11 to 15 year olds in the North West
had taken drugs in the last year compared with
around one in seven in the South West.
One
in eight children in the North West said they
had taken cannabis in the last year compared
with one in 12 in the North East.
Tim
Straughan, Chief executive of The NHS
Information Centre, said: “The report shows
there are significant regional differences in
the percentages of young people who smoke, drink
or use drugs.
“It
is interesting to note that London has such
comparatively low levels of drink, drug and
alcohol use among its 11 to 15-year-olds.
“In
contrast, youngsters in the North East are more
likely than their peers anywhere else in the
country to smoke and drink alcohol. However,
they are the least likely to take cannabis.”
Don
Shenker, Chief Executive of Alcohol Concern,
said: “Today’s figures are very worrying.
We’ve seeing a slight decline in the number of
children who drink, but those who do drink are
drinking much more.
“Too
many young people are now drinking at or above
safe adult levels, yet their bodies are less
able to cope with the harm alcohol can cause.
“We’ve
already seen an almost one thousand per cent
increase in liver cirrhosis deaths in the 25-44
age group. This is impacting our health services
and the lives of families across the UK."
He
said the government must heed advice and opt for
minimum pricing of alcohol which would mean it
could not be bought at pocket money prices.
Professor
Ian Gilmore, President of the Royal College of
Physicians and Chairman of the UK Alcohol Health
Alliance said:“These figures indicate that for
many young teenagers drinking has moved beyond
experimentation and into far more dangerous
territory.
"Regular
consumption at these levels, especially when
compressed into heavy sessions at the weekend
puts boys and girls at considerable risk.
"At
this age the adolescent mind is still
developing, and for an unlucky minority heavy
drinking so early will have profound and long
lasting implications for their learning and
problem solving skills. Tougher penalties for
those found to be selling alcohol to youngsters
are welcome, but parents and families also have
a responsibility to help their offspring make
healthy choices.”
Children’s
Minister Dawn Primarolo said: "I am pleased
that these statistics show a decline in the
number of young people smoking, drinking alcohol
and taking drugs.
"The
Government has been committed to providing young
people with the right advice and support they
need to make safe and sensible decisions.
Importantly we have given parents, carers and
schools additional guidance and expert advice so
that young people can turn to a trusted adult to
discuss their concerns about smoking, drinking
and drugs."
From
the Telegraph.co.uk
By
Kate
Devlin, Medical Correspondent Published:
8:30AM GMT 19 Dec 2009
Professional
women 'more likely to be heavy drinker than
those in other jobs'
Professional
women are more likely to be heavy drinkers than
those in other jobs, experts have warned.
Women
in managerial and professional occupations were
more likely to drink too much and too often,
indulging at least once a week, they found.
Researchers
warn that as ‘ladette’ culture is on the
wane there should be a new focus on career
women, in particular those who drink large
amounts at home.
Doctors
are increasingly concerned about professional
women who drink too much alcohol, especially
wine.
Higher
strength wines and larger glasses in recent
years mean that many underestimate their alcohol
intake, they warn.
Drink
related deaths among women have doubled in the
last 16 years, official figures show, while
cases of cirrhosis of the liver are starting to
seen in women in their twenties, unheard of just
a few decades ago.
The
new warning comes on the busiest night of the
year for Christmas parties, when millions are
predicted to overindulge across the country.
The
research analysed evidence of women’s drinking
patterns in Britain and Denmark.
While
there has been a fall in binge drinking in pubs
and clubs, other forms of drinking are on the
increase, they warn.
These
include professional women drinking large
amounts at home, from a young age until well
into their middle years,
The
review of research also found that women who
work full-time were also more likely to drink
heavily and binge on alcohol than those with
part-time jobs.
The
more they earned the more likely women were to
drink frequently.
Single
women were also more likely to drink heavily
than those in relationships.
Dr
Fiona Measham, from Lancaster University, one of
the co-authors of the report, said: “Young
women’s drinking has been a focus of concern
during the last decade.
“Yet
whilst national figures suggest that young
women's binge drinking may be falling, these
changes have not been generally acknowledged in
recent years.
“Previously
the debate on problem drinking has very much
focussed on the public spectacle of the young
woman binge drinking – the work-hard play-hard
‘ladette’ stumbling round city centres with
clothes askew, the doubly deviant figure of
drunkenness in a dress.
“Current
alcohol trends challenge some of these enduring
stereotypes of problem drinking and lead us to
question why we are so eager to demonise young
people yet so reluctant to recognise that
drinking trends can go down as well as up.
“This
research, for example, highlights the ‘hidden
harms’ of increasingly frequent drinking in
the home by professional women from early
adulthood into middle age.”
The
findings were published in the journal Probation
Journal.
Earlier
this year a study warned that female office
juniors, who did typical jobs such as
photocopying, delivering mail and data entry,
were almost twice as likely to die from drinking
too much than the rest of the population.
From
the Telegraph.co.uk
By
Kate Devlin, Medical Correspondent Published:
8:00AM GMT 01 Jan 2010
One
in five admissions to hospital casualty
departments because of alcohol.
More
than one in five admissions to hospital casualty
departments are because of alcohol, a new report
suggests.
Excessive
drinking is putting the health service under
“immense strain” and the cost of treating
alcohol-related ilnesses is “unsustainable”,
experts have warned.
In a joint
report the Royal College of Physicians and the
NHS Confederation, which represents hospital
trusts, called for a rethink in public opinion
on alcohol and warned that doctors alone could
not solve the problem.
“The
nation’s growing addiction to alcohol is
putting an immense strain on health services,
especially in hospitals,” said Prof Ian
Gilmore, president of the Royal College of
Physicians.
“This
burden is no longer sustainable.
“We know
that the NHS is facing very lean financial times
in the coming years.
“It is
time to start looking more closely at prevention
and at factors like price and availability.”
The number
of people admitted to hospital because of
alcohol is approaching a million a year, a rise
of 47 per cent in just five years, official
figures show.
The new
report highlights the strain that treating
alcohol-related illnesses injuries places on
hospitals, especially accident and emergency
units.
An audit
carried out for the report by St James’s
University Hospital, in Leeds, found that 21.8
per cent of all casualty admissions were because
of alcohol.
Earlier
this year a similar study by St Mary's Hospital
in London estimated that on a Saturday night
that figure could rise to as much as 70 per cent
of admissions.
Even if
drinkers dramatically reduce their intake the
costs of treating the ill-health created will
still affect the NHS for the next 10 years,
according to the report.
It calls
for better identification and treatment of
people with alcohol problems, estimating such
moves could save the NHS as many as 1,000 bed
days a year per hospital.
Currently
only 1 in 18 people addicted to alcohol receive
treatment.
Steve
Barnett, the chief executive of the NHS
Confederation, said that the NHS could do its
bit but warned that “a reappraisal of social
attitudes to drinking is also well overdue.”
He added: “We hope this report helps to
outline the scale of the problems facing the NHS
and acts as a warning that if we carry on
drinking in the way that we are currently, the
bar bill will be paid in worse health and a
health system struggling to cope.”
Andrew
Lansley, the Shadow Health Secretary, said:
"The human and financial cost of alcohol
abuse in Britain is greater than most other
European countries.
“We
cannot afford to go on like this.”
A
spokesman for the Department of Health said that
the Government was “working harder than
ever” to reduce the number of alcohol related
hospital admissions.
More than
10 million people in England alone are thought
to be drinking at “hazardous” levels, which
experts warn could be affecting their health.
From
the Telegraph.co.uk
By
Kate
Devlin, Medical Correspondent Published:
8:00AM GMT 26 Dec 2009
NSH
iPhone app to alert drinkers when they go over
their limits 'encouraging bingeing'
An
official NMS iPhone application designed to
alert revellers when they go over their limits
is actually encouraging binge drinking, users
claimed.
The
"app", which measures drinks in
alcoholic units, has sparked something of a
craze among drinkers to get the highest score.
The
NHS drinks tracker was launched at the start of
December and is designed to help people avoid
overindulging.
It
works by converting drinks into units to show
drinkers when they have gone over the
recommended daily limit.
But
within days of the tracker being released it was
being described on the internet as an “awesome
game” and users were boasting about trying to
beat their “top score”.
The
converter is not the first time that iPhone
applications have caused controversy.
One
app had to be taken off sale when it emerged
that it encouraged users to quieten a screaming
baby by shaking it.
The
free tracker allows users to enter how many
drinks they have had and what kind.
The
amount they have consumed in units is then shown
by blue bars on a bar chart.
A
horizontal line shows drinkers when they have
gone over their daily recommended limit of two
to three units for women and three to four units
for men.
Ministers
insist that the application is useful because
many people struggle to realise how many units
they have drunk.
By
tapping a button users can also get feedback on
how much they are drinking, including health
warnings.
The
app is part of the Government’s £9m Know Your
Limits marketing campaign to encourage
responsible drinking.
But
one review on the iTunes website, from where the
tracker can be downloaded and reviewed, gave the
app five stars and claimed it was an “awesome
game”.
“This
is the best game ever,” it continued. “Gonna
try and outdo last night’s score on Friday
night.”
Another
user wrote: “I love this app. Been using it a
week now and my blue bars are half way up the
scale most days.
“This
week I intend to fill all the bars every day.
“I
filled in last night’s booze intake and my
iPhone automatically dialled Alcoholics
Anonymous. Lol (laugh out loud).”
One
user, who called himself Sheepstarr, even
suggested an online scoreboard, where strangers
could compete to drink the most.
He
wrote: “Great app, just wondering what
people’s top scores are?
“Also
could there be an online league table or
something so you can submit them.”
Don
Shenker, from Alcohol Concern, said: “There
will always be some people who use these things
irresponsibly and they need to be made aware of
the very serious health and other consequences
of their binge drinking.
“At
the moment users of the tracker fill in how much
they drink before they are given the health
information – perhaps that needs to be the
other way around.”
A
Department of Health spokesman said that they
preferred to “focus on the positives” of the
application.
He
said: “The tracker helps people to keep tabs
on their Christmas drinking, wherever they are.
"By
monitoring alcohol intake and drinking less, you
stay in control and avoid risky situations.”
A
study released last week, and based on sales
data, estimated that the average drinker in
Britain was underestimating their alcohol
consumption by the equivalent of around a bottle
of wine a week.
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