The Strategy is discrete: the drugs problem isn't
Isolating a single ‘drugs strategy’ has inadvertently helped to foster the impression that there is a single ‘drugs problem’, and this is misleading.
It is clear that a multitude of problems arises out of drug use, especially problematic drug use. Problematic drug use is a health problem, because problematic users do serious damage to their own health. Drug use that is currently non-problematic can become so. The association between drug use and acquisitive crime inevitably means that drugs constitute a criminal justice problem. Not least, problematic drug use points to problems in the fields of education, housing, employment and social care.

A strategy that confronts all these various problems as though they constituted a single problem – and is based on a wholly unrealistic rhetoric – is bound to be flawed.
Immediately related elementsHow this works
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Drugs Policy in the UK »Drugs Policy in the UK
What drugs policy measures are open to the UK? »What drugs policy measures are open to the UK?
Maintain current drugs policy »Maintain current drugs policy
Current drugs policy is misconceived »Current drugs policy is misconceived
The Strategy is discrete: the drugs problem isn't
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