News and recovery-oriented commentary about current controversies, emerging trends and research findings related to drug and alcohol addiction, treatment and recovery.

Wednesday, January 03, 2007

Alcoholics forced into hospital treatment

Australia is piloting a program that commits their most severe addicts and alcoholics for 28 days. Interesting in light of Australia's embrace of harm reduction:

HEAVILY-addicted drug users and alcoholics will be forced to have treatment in hospital under a two-year pilot proposed by the New South Wales Government.

The trial, with up to 28 days of involuntary care at Nepean Hospital, would be a "circuit breaker" for the most severely addicted, state Health Minister John Hatzistergos said today.

"The four-bed service at Nepean Hospital will aim to break the addiction cycle for alcoholics and long-term entrenched drug users, before they are referred to longer-term treatment and rehabilitation with community support and follow-up," he said.

"We expect up to 50 patients a year from western Sydney will be treated in the four-bed secure unit."

The Government is drafting changes to the Inebriates Act 1912 to enable the trial to take place.

The changes would allow medical practitioners to seek a court order referring a severely drug- or alcohol-dependent person to compulsory treatment.

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