| You are in: UK | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Thursday, 18 January, 2001, 12:37 GMT The drug addict's 'friend' ![]() Mike Arch: "Offending drops as they stabilise their lives" Jail is no longer the sole destination for convicted drug users who steal to feed their habit. Here, probation officer Mike Arch, of Gloucestershire, explains drug testing and treatment orders - the strictest community-based penalties meted out as an alternative to prison.
Someone with a 10-year habit has to make such profound changes to their thinking and their lifestyle - it's extremely difficult. Normal probation orders involve a weekly meeting. This is a five-day a week programme, particularly in the first three months.
But their offending drops as the treatment works, as they stabilise their lives. Whereas they may have been using up to �1,000 worth of drugs a week, that can fall to �40 a week. There's far less crime required to fund that. Rebuilding shattered lives Although it's called coercive treatment, the majority want treatment because their lives have gone horribly wrong and they are facing prison.
If they miss two - and that's two in a year - without a valid reason, then we take them back to court for breaching the order. Most come back and start going to meetings again. This initiative is the first step in moving resources away from punishment and into treatment. "But it is not a palliative for all problems that are drug-related in crime.
He was living in really dreadful B&Bs and spending up to �500 a week on drugs, most of which was funded through crime. I think he enjoyed coming to probation, it gave structure to his day. Intelligent, articulate, isolated We talked about his drug use - in which he was economic with the truth, both with me and with himself - his lifestyle, his relationships.
It's almost the old befriending approach, which was the original approach of probation many years ago. He really struggled to come to terms with his drug use - it was eight months before he got his first clean test. After six months, he realised that residential treatment was his only realistic option. He lasted about two weeks. It was very intensive group work, and it turned out to be too painful for him.
He was still making five probation appointments a week throughout all this. But in the end, it wasn't enough for him and I've not heard from him since. Seeds of change But it's still a success, as far as I'm concerned. This guy - and there's many like him - hadn't contemplated a drug-free lifestyle in 10 years. Yet he seriously looked at his drug-use and how it was affecting his life. And he did manage a period of abstinence, albeit short-lived. People often take three or four attempts to address their drug-use and fail. That can motivate them to try again, to look at what went wrong. Pictures by Gloucestershire Picture Agency |
See also: 06 Dec 00 | e-cyclopedia 06 Dec 00 | Politics Top UK stories now: Links to more UK stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Links to more UK stories |
![]() | ||
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- To BBC Sport>> | To BBC Weather>> | To BBC World Service>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- © MMIII | News Sources | Privacy |