To those who work in the health system, ‘ICE’ is but one problem among many and pales into the background of the prevailing problems of addiction and misuse of alcohol and drugs.
The ABC strongly promoted its series “The ICE wars”. The first episode showed the heavy investment in law enforcement and we learnt about the impact of clandestine ‘meth’ laboratories on the environment. We saw the Blacktown mental health team caring for a patient with schizophrenia tipped into psychosis by ICE and then calmly responding to a crisis call visiting him in his unfurnished accommodation. Next day, I attended a youth drug and alcohol service where the response was anger to the way the episode celebrated police actions.
The second episode featured a young man being apprehended by police in a country town. He had just been released from prison. I know that town, I know the people who cared for him, I know the impoverished life he had lived and the life-chances he had missed. The police came across as upbeat warriors bent on catching criminals. In this, I saw the state as the oppressor of its outcasts, victims of social and economic policies. Addiction is a proxy index of poverty.
In parallel, The Conversation ran two relevant articles. On 13th February in “Alcohol leads to more violence than other drugs, but you’d never know from the headlines” Stephen Wright and Martin Williams pointed to how alcohol is strongly linked to violent crimes, sexual assaults and murders but the illicit drugs capture the headlines.
The stuff of day-to-day media coverage are the seizures by customs, busts of clandestine laboratories, drug hauls in socially deprived areas and the loading of scruffy individuals into “paddy wagons”. Thus, public discourse becomes dominated by fear and the ‘ICE scourge’ dominates public policy. But to those who work in the health system, ‘ICE’ is but one problem among many and pales into the background of the prevailing problems of addiction and misuse of alcohol and drugs.
When there is violence and murder, it is the drug dealers and traffickers competing for territory. The ‘ICE’ problem is one of poor, underprivileged, people caught up in a cycle of addiction which started early in life but now demands more and more stimulus to maintain any sense of normalcy and to fight off the daemons of withdrawal and psychopathy.
There was a similar message from Nicola Lee in the Conversation on 14th February, “Ice wars message is overblown and unhelpful”, it aimed to disabuse readers about the ICE epidemic: the real facts tell the opposite – we are not “at war” with ‘ICE’.
Methamphetamine use, like most of the illicit drugs, is declining in Australia but, within that decline, there is a group seeking stronger forms of methamphetamine. This is the problem of addiction which needs treatment. Dr Lee points out around 1% in the community use ICE in a year with only a fraction of these being regular users. Among regular ICE users, 75% never become aggressive. Methamphetamine does increase anxiety, agitation and the risk of psychotic behaviour but it also provides comfort for some.
In Pearls and Irritations on 15th March 2015, in a piece “On thin “ICE”, I compared methamphetamine and alcohol harms:
- for every person who uses methamphetamine in a year there are 85 drinking alcohol;
- for every person addicted to methamphetamine there are 20 addicted to alcohol;
- for every ambulance call-out for methamphetamine problems there are 25 for alcohol;
- for every methamphetamine presentation to an Emergency Department there are 30 for alcohol;
- for every amphetamine-related death there are 65 alcohol deaths.
(The estimates of methamphetamine use have since been revised downward by researchers at the Burnet Institute in Melbourne.)
What we don’t see about alcohol is its massive social, health and economic impact ($36 billion in 2008). It harms many others as well as the drinker; it can damage whole communities. Of course, some of our friends, colleagues, may be alcohol dependent but this is outweighed by the depth of impoverishment alcohol wreaks on already compromised lives, lives which haven’t had the life chances that readers of this piece will have had. Research has shown that in one in three child protection cases in Australia the perpetrator had been drinking – one may conjecture on the role of alcohol in cases before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
Anne Deveson, who died recently, believed the public media is an integral part of public health – informing, educating and influencing behaviours for the well-being of society. On the other hand, the public media can do great harm as it promotes fear, sensationalism, celebrity, “quick fixes” and “silver bullets” for social problems.
In the 1990’s Australia took steps to reframe the media’s approach to mental illness and suicide and much has been achieved. We need to do the same for the problems of alcohol and drug use.
Unfortunately, the frenzy around ‘ICE’ has influenced the ABC. Let’s hope future episodes and programs are more balanced.
Ian Webster is Emeritus Professor of Public Health and Community Medicine at UNSW.
Ian W Webster AO is Emeritus Professor of Public Health and Community Medicine of the University of New South Wales. He has worked as a physician in public and regional hospitals in Australia and UK and in NGOs dealing with homelessness, alcohol and drug problems and mental illness.
Comments
2 responses to “IAN WEBSTER. The need for more balanced media reporting of alcohol and illicit drug problems.”
An incredibly sane and informative article about a problem which has been highly sensationalised. Alcohol – like gambling one of Australia’s major addictions – will never be able to be properly dealt with until advertising and the associated sports sponsorship deals are curtailed just as cigarette advertising was. Of course the hospitality industry is also involved and advertising is necessary to encourage people to drink. There are many ramifications of a advertising ban and the economic ramifications will need to be looked at. Breweries and distilleries are large employers and the wine industry is part and parcel of certain parts of Australia. It is a daunting task, as is playing down the ‘sexy’ ‘drug war’ scenario. The police may have to learn to be as much social workers in this field as they are in others. I think there is a difference between drug consumption and addiction and major trafficking and they need to be prosecuted differently. The people involved in major drug trafficking are real ‘nasties’ and need to be fought seriously. I am dreading the possible/likely entry of some of the Salvadorean drug gangs into this country. We need real leadership in government and the police, customs and border force here.
Dear Edward,
Thankyou for your comments.
Your point about there being separate problems of – ‘drug consumption and addiction and major trafficking ‘ – is, I think, the key to responding to these social and health issues. We must also deal with those factors and influences that drive drug consumption in the first place as they are the root cause of the problems experienced by too many people.
I am most appreciative of your response.