Drug Deaths In England And Wales Hit Record High As Heroin, Cocaine And MDMA Kill More Than Ever

Those dying are 'often with poor physical and mental health... losing their battle with long-term addiction'.

Drug deaths have hit a record high in part because a “Trainspotting Generation” of older heroin users are dying after years of addiction, experts have said.

Deaths from heroin, cocaine and MDMA have all more than doubled since 2012 in England and Wales, Government figures published on Wednesday revealed, with fatalities from each drug at the highest ever recorded level.

It is the fourth year in a row deaths have risen. The figures prompted experts to condemn the Government’s Drugs Strategy, the latest version of which was condemned as “business as usual” last month for emphasising the need to get people off drugs altogether.

The 40 to 49 age group overtook those aged 30 to 39 as the group with the most drug deaths, the Office of National Statistics said.

Older heroin users from the 'Trainspotting Generation' partly accounted for the record number of deaths, Public Health England said
Older heroin users from the 'Trainspotting Generation' partly accounted for the record number of deaths, Public Health England said
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Overall, drugs killed 3,744 people in England and Wales in 2016, a 44% increase on 2012.

Heroin and morphine killed 1,209, up from 579 in 2012. MDMA killed 63 and cocaine killed 371, increases of 103% and 167% respectively.

Rosanna O’Connor, of Public Health England, said: “It is tragic that we are still seeing an increase in people dying from drug misuse, particularly among older heroin users.

“Many of these deaths can be explained as the ‘Trainspotting’ generation, often with poor physical and mental health, sadly losing their battle with long-term addiction to drugs.” Trainspotting is a 1996 film that follows the lives of a group of heroin addicts in Scotland.

The year also saw Fentanyl, the synthetic opioid that is 50 time more potent than heroin, kill 58 people. The National Crime Agency warned yesterday there have been 60 deaths linked to the drug since December.

Niamh Eastwood, executive director at Release, said: “The rise in drug-related deaths is a national crisis that needs a nationally-coordinated response.

“The government has abrogated its responsibility by withdrawing investment from treatment services and perpetuating the failed policies that created this crisis.

“The new Drug Strategy continues to pursue an agenda focused on abstinence and ‘recovery’ – an approach driven by ideology rather than evidence.

“We expect that this approach will contribute to more needless deaths as it contains little reference to harm reduction provisions, such as those advocated by the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD).

“The Government could take steps to prevent people dying from drug related causes but chooses to do nothing.”

She called on the Government to back drug consumption rooms and heroin-assisted treatment to help addicts.

Martin Powell, of the Transform Drug Policy Foundation, described the Home Office’s approach as “scandalous”.

He said: “The Government must accept responsibility for record numbers of people dying from overdoses year after year.

“Other countries value the lives of vulnerable people who use drugs enough to implement and fund many measures proven to save lives, like decriminalising drug users, safer drug consumption rooms and prescribing heroin.”

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