(CARICOM Secretariat, Turkeyen, Greater Georgetown,
Guyana) Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Member States
are reporting progress in their efforts to reduce
the demand for illicit drugs in the Region.
Based on the ten Country reports presented
yesterday (3 March) at the regional training
workshop on Standards of Care for Treatment and
Rehabilitation Facilities for Substance Abusers, in
Jamaica, several countries have varying types of
care and treatment methods for drug and alcoholic
dependents.
Several Member States have also noted the
positive impact of care and treatment in reducing
the demand for illicit drugs in their country and
agreed that quality care and treatment was critical
in drug demand reduction.
Despite this however, it was noted that while
there was a wide range and reasonably high quality
of service in some countries, others were still
struggling to set up structured systems and yet
others had no formal systems or mechanisms for the
provision of quality services.
Participants attributed this to the challenge of
mobilizing resources as well as the absence of
established standards, and agreed that it was of
critical importance to bring each country to a level
of minimum standards of care and treatment for drug
and alcoholic dependents.
It was also agreed the more public /private
sector partnership was necessary to assist with the
mobilization of both human, financial and materials
resources.
The two-day workshop which is being held in
Montego Bay, Jamaica is organized jointly by the
CARICOM Secretariat and the Inter-American Drug
Abuse Control Commission (CICAD). It has created a
forum for more than forty regional and international
stakeholders in drug demand reduction to discuss,
identify and establish standards for care and
treatment for substance abusers.
The Meeting which started on 3 March precedes the
meeting of European Union and Latin American and
Caribbean (EU-LAC) countries, at the same venue, on
improving drug treatment services in EU-LAC cities.
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org