
A report on substance abuse in Scotland has found that 331 children watched their parents die due to substance abuse in 2011. This is a dramatic increase from the 238 deaths the year before.
Some doctors are blaming this rise on the failing health of addicts who started heroin in the 1980s but others believe the Scottish practice of using methadone based treatments is backfiring.
Dr Roy Robertson, a GP who chairs the national forum on drug-related deaths, said: “The deaths are partly the legacy of the large influx of drugs we saw in Scotland in the 1980s. Inevitably people are going to die younger as a result of this.”
More than 50% of the drug deaths involved people using the methadone. This may be because of a negative interaction between the methadone and other drugs or it could be down to the methadone itself.
Methadone is the most common drug cited in drug deaths. It was implicated in 234 cases in 2011 alone. By comparison, heroin itself was only involved in 169 deaths and Diazapam in 101. Cocaine and ecstasy were only involved in 33 deaths.