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November 26, 2004:
New Report on Drugs in Europe
The
European Monitoring
Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) has launched its 2004 Annual
report on the state of the drugs problem in the European Union and Norway.
More Europeans are seeking treatment for cocaine-related problems, says the
report. In the Netherlands and Spain, cocaine is now the second most commonly
reported drug in specialist treatment centres after heroin. Growing concern is
noted around crack use in a number of cities in Germany, Spain, France, the
Netherlands and the UK.
Between 1% and 10% of young Europeans (aged 15–34 years) report using cocaine at
some point in their life, around half of them having done so recently, says the
EMCDDA. Surveys also show recent cocaine use has risen among young people in
Denmark, Germany, Spain and the UK. In urban areas and specific sub-groups,
levels of use can be much higher: some surveys in dance settings have revealed
lifetime prevalence rates of 40–60%.
Quantities of cocaine seized in the EU rose in nearly all countries between 1997
and 2002. Deaths due to cocaine alone are still rare in Europe, but they are
rising. In the Netherlands, while 2 deaths were attributed to cocaine alone in
1994, this figure had risen to 26 by 2001, and in the UK, references to cocaine
on death certificates rose between 1993 and 2001 (although were much fewer than
those linked to opiate-related deaths).
Cannabis remains the most commonly used illegal drug in the EU with roughly one
in five (20%) adult Europeans having tried it at least once in their lifetime.
Cannabis prevalence rates are generally highest for young people (15–34 years),
ranging from less than 15% in Estonia, Portugal and Sweden and to 35% or over in
Denmark, Spain, France and the UK. Surveys show that 5–20% of young Europeans
have used the drug in the last 12 months.Most people who use cannabis do so only
occasionally, for limited periods. Around 15% of 15–16-year-old school students
in the EU who have used cannabis in the last year are ‘heavy’ cannabis users –
using a definition of 40 or more times per year. Young male students are more
than twice as likely to be ‘heavy users’ as girls.
Across the EU, cannabis is the most seized drug, except for Latvia where heroin
seizures predominate. Most cannabis seizures in the EU are made by the UK,
followed by Spain and France. But in terms of volume, Spain has accounted for
over half of the total quantity of cannabis seized in the last five years.
Ecstasy now rivals amphetamines as Europe’s No 2 drug; In some countries – Czech
Republic, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, Portugal and the UK – ecstasy may
be catching up or overtaking amphetamines as Europe’s No 2 drug after cannabis.
Europe continued to account for the majority of global seizures of amphetamine
(86% by volume) in 2002. Over the last five years the main amphetamine seizing
country in the EU has been the UK.
Europe remains one of the world’s most
important areas for the production of ecstasy; Belgium and the Netherlands
remain the most significant producing areas. Quantities of ecstasy seized rose
in most EU countries in 2002. Deaths involving ecstasy are relatively rare;
deaths directly caused by the drug are even rarer. In 2002, Germany reported 8
deaths where ecstasy was directly involved, France and Austria each reported 2
and Greece one.
Less than 1% of the European adult
population (15–64 years) can be defined as problem drug users, totalling between
1.2 and 2.1 million problem drug users in the enlarged EU.
The number of drug-related deaths has shown a modest decline in recent years
across the EU. Drug-related deaths fell from 8,838 in 2000 to 8,306 in 2001 (a
small but significant 6% decrease). Drug use in prison varies considerably
across the EU. Studies show that between 8% and 60% of inmates report having
used drugs while incarcerated, and between 10% and 36% report recent use.
Similar variation is also found in those injecting drugs in prison – the
practice is reported by as few as 0.2% and as many as 34% of inmates, depending
on the prison sampled.
Download the report
here.
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