Footnotes
1) Report: NTA Annual Report 08/09
Annual Report
NTA 8 October 2009 ‘Drug treatment has come a long way. Record numbers are now getting help to overcome their addiction, the average time to start treatment is less than a week, and most stay in treatment long enough to benefit. The dedication and commitment of staff in drug action teams and providers across England ensured that 207,580 adults were in contact with structured treatment services during 2008-09. There is no cause for complacency, however. We need to consolidate these achievements and build on them, in the spirit of the new drug strategy, putting as much emphasis on improving quality as maintaining quantity. Hence the twin themes of recovery and reintegration set out in this report.’ 2) NTA Annual Report 08/09
"Record numbers of adults are on the road to recovery from drug addiction, according to national figures for 2008/09 published today (8 October) by the National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse (NTA). For more information, and to view a copy of the annual report and statistics, click here (www.nta.nhs.uk)"
NTA 2009 3) The Long View [Paul Hayes Drink and Drug News 09]
The Long View
With the revised agenda comes an acknowledgment – for which Hayes credits ‘the doctors who are always very keen to remind us’ – that there will be a certain proportion of people who will probably never leave the system. ‘So we need to be working with the people who can leave, who can get out at a sensible pace,’ he says. |
News and articles library
WOMEN IN DRUG TREATMENT: WHAT THE LATEST FIGURES REVEAL >>
23rd March 10 – Women in drug treatment: what the latest figures reveal. There has been a big drop in the number of young women entering drug treatment addicted to heroin. For those under 25, the number fell by a quarter between 2005 and 2009 Comparing coercive and non-coercive interventions >>
26th February 10 – The incidence of imprisonment for under-18s in England and Wales is one of the highest in the world. James McGuire examines the evidence that shows resorting to incarceration and strict control has little or no benefit in reducing reconviction [Centre for Crime and Justice Studies, King’s College London, UK] Garda Recorded Crime Statistics 2004-2008 >>
26th February 10 – Chapter 10 Controlled Drug Offences [Central Statistics Office, Ireland] |