Rapport
2017 Drug strategy
Auteur(s) :
HM Government
Année
2017
Page(s) :
52 p.
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Éditeur(s) :
London : Home Office
ISBN :
978-1-78655-396-6
Domaine :
Alcool / Alcohol ; Drogues illicites / Illicit drugs
Discipline :
SAN (Santé publique / Public health)
Thésaurus géographique
ROYAUME-UNI
Thésaurus mots-clés
PLANIFICATION SANITAIRE
;
LUTTE
;
SANTE PUBLIQUE
;
PREVENTION
;
CRIMINALITE
;
DELINQUANCE
;
DISPOSITIF DE SOIN
Note générale :
- Editorial: Winstock A.R.; Eastwood N.; Stevens A. A new drug strategy for the UK. But no real prospect of reducing harm. British Medical Journal, 2017; 358(8118): j3643.
- Letters:
Bray J. Bleak outlook for community substance misuse services. British Medical Journal, 2017; 358(8124): j4403.
Scalvini M. UK's new drug strategy ignores social and cultural contexts. British Medical Journal, 2017; 358(8124): j4404.
Ford C., Nutt D., Eastwood N., Gold D., Jolly J., Murphy F., Halliday K., Bridge J. Is the UK's 2017 drug strategy fit for purpose? British Medical Journal, 2017; 358(8124): j4405.
- Letters:
Bray J. Bleak outlook for community substance misuse services. British Medical Journal, 2017; 358(8124): j4403.
Scalvini M. UK's new drug strategy ignores social and cultural contexts. British Medical Journal, 2017; 358(8124): j4404.
Ford C., Nutt D., Eastwood N., Gold D., Jolly J., Murphy F., Halliday K., Bridge J. Is the UK's 2017 drug strategy fit for purpose? British Medical Journal, 2017; 358(8124): j4405.
Résumé :
The drug strategy 2017 sets out how the government and its partners, at local, national and international levels, will take new action to tackle drug misuse and the harms it causes.
The strategy builds on our existing approach to preventing drug misuse, supporting people to recover from dependence and restricting the supply of drugs, with new action to:
- promote a smarter, partnership-based approach,
- enhance our balanced approach across the 3 existing strands (reducing demand, restricting supply and building recovery) with a fourth strand on global action,
- provide stronger governance for delivering the strategy, including a Home Secretary-chaired board and the introduction of a National Recovery Champion,
- expand the data we collect on levels of drug misuse and recovery from dependence, and develop a set of jointly-owned outcome measures to drive action across a broader range of local services.
The strategy builds on our existing approach to preventing drug misuse, supporting people to recover from dependence and restricting the supply of drugs, with new action to:
- promote a smarter, partnership-based approach,
- enhance our balanced approach across the 3 existing strands (reducing demand, restricting supply and building recovery) with a fourth strand on global action,
- provide stronger governance for delivering the strategy, including a Home Secretary-chaired board and the introduction of a National Recovery Champion,
- expand the data we collect on levels of drug misuse and recovery from dependence, and develop a set of jointly-owned outcome measures to drive action across a broader range of local services.
Affiliation :
UK
Historique