South
African Community Epidemiology Network on Drug Use (SACENDU)
KEY ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE TRENDS:
JULY DECEMBER 2000
Charles
Parry, Andreas Plüddemann, Arvin Bhana, Sanchia Matthysen,
Hennie Potgieter, & Welma Gerber
Update
(June 2001)
Background
The SACENDU Project is an alcohol and other drug (AOD) sentinal
surveillance system operational in Cape Town, Durban, Port Elizabeth
(PE), Mpumalanga, and Gauteng (Johannesburg/Pretoria). The system
monitors trends in AOD use and associated consequences on a
six-monthly basis using multi-source information from specialist
treatment centres (50+), psychiatric hospitals, mortuaries,
trauma units, the police (SA Narcotics Bureau (SANAB), Organised
Crime Units & Forensic Science Laboratories (FSL)), and
from research conducted in schools and with sex workers, street
children, service providers, persons attending primary health
care clinics, arrestees, and persons attending rave parties.
Key
findings
The proportion of patients under 20 years old has increased
substantially over time (e.g. in Cape Town from 6% in 1996 to
24% in 2000, and in Gauteng from 11% in 1998 to 18% in 2000).
Latest
key findings by substance of abuse (unless stated otherwise
the findings relate to the 2nd half of 2000):
Alcohol is still the dominant substance of abuse across sites
and has a major impact on individuals and society particularly
in the area of violence and traffic-related morbidity and mortality.
In PE 92%, Cape Town 52% and Durban 40% of trauma patients had
positive breath-alcohol, and in Cape Town 56% of mortuary cases
in 2000 had blood-alcohol concentrations 0.05 g/100ml.
Use of cannabis
(dagga) and Mandrax alone or in combination (white-pipes)
continues to be high. Across sites between 13% (Mpumalanga)
and 32% (Cape Town) of patients attending specialist treatment
centers had cannabis and/or Mandrax as their primary drug of
abuse. About 20% of trauma patients in PE and 35% of trauma
patients in Cape Town and Durban in 2000 tested positive for
cannabis. In Cape Town 19%, PE 11% and Durban 7% of trauma patients
in 2000 tested positive for Mandrax. Across sites, between 24%
(Gauteng) and 50% (Cape Town) of arrestees tested positive for
cannabis, and between 5% (Gauteng) and 32% (Cape Town) of arrestees
tested positive for Mandrax. Across sites, over 60% of persons
arrested on drug/alcohol charges or for housebreaking tested
positive for cannabis, and over a third of persons arrested
for housebreaking tested positive for Mandrax. Over 2 million
Mandrax tablets were seized nationally in the 2nd half of 2000.
The proportion
of patients in treatment for cocaine has been increasing over
time. Between 7% and 12% of patients in Cape Town, Gauteng and
Durban had cocaine as their primary drug of abuse.

Sixty-five
kilograms of cocaine powder was reported as being seized in
Gauteng in the 2nd half of 2000, up from 48 kgs seized in the
1st half of the year. The proportion of arrests for dealing
has shown a substantial increase over time in Cape Town and
Gauteng.

Across sites
between 3% (Cape Town) and 6% (Durban) of arrestees tested positive
for cocaine. Cocaine positive arrestees were most likely to
be found in police stations like Sea Point, Hillbrow and CR
Swart that serve high density residential areas, and for the
first time among younger arrestees (20 years). In Cape Town
3%, Durban 4% and PE 14% of trauma patients in 2000 tested positive
for cocaine.
The proportion
of heroin abusing patients appears to have increased in both
Cape Town and Gauteng, especially in younger and female patients.
Most heroin is sniffed (chasing the dragon), but
36% of patients in Gauteng and 47% of patients in Cape Town
having heroin as their primary drug of abuse report some injection
use. Heroin seizures showed a substantial increase in Gauteng
(from less than 1 kg to over 12 kgs between the 1st and the
2nd half of 2000).
Club drugs
in general appear to be entrenched in the rave culture. Twenty
percent of ravers studied in Gauteng report weekly use of Ecstasy.
The abuse
of over-the-counter and prescription medicines, such as slimming
tablets, headache medications and analgesics, and benzodiazepines
continues to be an issue across sites.
The
following were among regional differences that were noted:
- The
level of drug use as well as the range of drugs used is higher
in Cape Town and Gauteng as compared to PE, Durban and Mpumalanga.
- Heroin
use, in particular, continues to be lower in Durban, Mpumalanga
and (especially) PE as compared to Cape Town and Gauteng.
- The
use of Mandrax is more common in Cape Town and PE than in
the other sites.
- Durban
experienced a major increase in patients coming to treatment
for problems associated with cocaine use. Cocaine now appears
to be firmly rooted in Durban.
- In more
rural Mpumalanga the main substance abuse problems appear
to be alcohol and dagga, although there is evidence of an
increase in use of harder drugs (e.g. cocaine).
Selected
implications for policy/practice
- Equip
teachers to identify AOD use and refer.
- Implement
measures to combat increase in heroin use by young persons
in Cape Town and Gauteng.
Selected
issues to monitor
- Changes
in user demographics
- Increase
in IV use (especially heroin)
Selected
topics for further research
- The
drug/crime link focusing on juveniles
- The
relationship between drug use and HIV
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