The Netherlands
· Drug policy. The global
objective of Dutch drug policy over the last 15 years has been the
"normalisation" of drug abuse problems, which means treating drug users as far
as possible as "normal" citizens, to whom "normal" demands are made and to whom
"normal" chances for living should be offered and who are considered to be
responsible people, subject to the same rules as the rest of society. There
should be no prosecution of drug users because they use "illegal" drugs but, on
the other hand, drug users who commit crimes will have to face the consequences
of their acts. This does not mean that the Dutch do not carry out any law
enforcement or implement a control policy. The penalties for trafficking in
heroin and cocaine, for example, have been increased from 4 years to 12 years
imprisonment. New laws exist to trace, freeze and confiscate assets acquired
from the proceeds of drug related crimes.
Today there is general consensus among Dutch prevention
officials on the main features and principles of drug prevention which has to be
developed on a broad base, not simply at the level of publicity campaigns and
information. It is generally accepted that drug education should begin in
primary schools, at the age of 10, with alcohol and tobacco education. These
educational efforts should be repeated, and include cannabis education during
the first years of secondary school, where young people are in a critical phase
of their psychological development, exposed to peer pressure and media
influences. In higher secondary schools, alcohol, tobacco and cannabis education
should be repeated, and include other drugs.
Besides primary prevention programmes, there is now a movement
towards secondary prevention programmes. This means that prevention officers are
now faced with problems such as, how to contact high risk groups, how to
motivate them for education and information, how to communicate with minority
groups, with school drop outs etc. Those groups often have no institutional
relations, and cannot be contacted through community organisations. Therefore,
there is a need to develop local and regional networks of drug prevention
specialists, cooperating with community institutions (schools, youth clubs,
childcare centres, local police etc.) to create appropriate educational and
communication techniques which will permit contact with populations at risk.
· Mass media campaigns.
Mass media, especially media campaigns against drug abuse, have played a minor
role in Dutch prevention compared to those for alcohol and tobacco prevention
36). The most striking example has been the "What everybody ought to know about
drugs" carnpaign, carried out in the eighties, the main goal of which was to
educate parents and educators about drugs and drug abuse. The campaign designers
assumed that the social environment of experimenting drug users is usually badly
informed and mostly reacts wrongly to drug abuse. The campaign was aimed at
inciting parents to talk more openly with their children about drugs, and before
it started, interviews were conducted with parents to determine the tonality and
style of the campaign. It transpired that parents were not motivated by a
campaign suggesting that their children could be involved in drug abuse and it
was therefore decided to design a low-key communication campaign avoiding
pictures of needles, bad-looking youngsters etc. 37).
36) Buisman. W. R. Mass Media and Drug Abuse
Prevention in the Netherlands. paper presented at the 1st International Drug
Abuse Prevention Research Symposium. Lexington. K.Y. USAOctober 20-23 1991
37) See Note. 5
There were two phases to the campaign. Striking headlines were
slightly emotionally charged ("Fear is a bad advisor, let's talk about drugs").
The written press drew its readers' attention to the availability of receiving a
free booklet on drugs containing objective, factual information, written in an
easy, but serious style in order to eliminate fear and myths. The booklet also
included two examples of discussions between parents and children to illustrate
appropriate communication. Since the start of the campaign, more than 500.000
copies of the booklet have been distributed. In line with the main principle of
the "What everybody ought to know about drugs" campaign, to educate the social
circle of drug users, a few years later a series of six television and radio
programmes was broadcast on Dutch National Educational Television (40). Part of
the series has been published in a small education handbook for parents and
educators.
40) Van Amerongen, R. Cinderella's Portrait: some
observations on Dutch Drug Prevention Policy. Paper presented at the
French-Dutch Drug Prevention Symposium. Paris, France. 1986
More recently, a Cocaine Prevention Campaign was initiated by
the Jellinek Treatment and Prevention Centre in Amsterdam. The main aim of this
campaign was to change the attitudes of local youngsters heavily involved in
disco-dancing towards cocaine-experimentation. In the first stage of the
programme, a special campaign was directed towards correcting the general belief
of many youngsters that cocaine is a safe drug when used carefully. Large and
striking posters and information booklets were mailed to discotheques, coffee
shops, trendy youth bars and youth-centres. The slogan of the campaign was
"Coke, the white hammer" (copying a popular pro-milk drinking campaign "Milk,
the white motor"). The second stage of this campaign tried to change the belief
that cocaine use increases a youngster's status with his peer group ("Cocaine,
the illusion of being strong"). In both stages of the campaign, much attention
was generated in the mass media, with free publicity on television, radio,
newspapers and magazines.
Three video clips were produced for risk groups frequenting
youth centres, coffee shops and youth care institutions. Although no large-scale
evaluation was conducted, the use of cocaine in Amsterdam decreased from 1.6% in
1987 to 1.3% in 1990.
· School, community and other
prevention programmes. By far the greater part of drug education activities
are planned and carried out by trained drug education specialists working in
nearly all the large and medium-sized towns and local communities. Their main
task is to train and advise key-persons or intermediaries who work with
young-people-risk groups, ethnic minority groups, youth clubs, young people in
care, young prisoners and, of course students and pupils in schools. The Dutch
drug education system applies the "teaching the teachers" model, both in primary
and secondary prevention, but in practice, courses are provided for a broad
category of intermediaries in school, youth work police, prison, childcare
settings. These courses last several days, and the current policy is to include
drug education and drug intervention training for all these different
intermediaries, who are also offered educational and audio-visual materials for
use in their own prevention activities.
One important area of drug prevention is, of course, school drug
prevention. To some extent a similar development can be observed as in the UK In
the beginning there was strong emphasis on factual drug education "Give them the
naked facts on drugs". Later the focus changed and was directed towards a
person-oriented, value clarification based approach. In the late eighties the
peer resistance and skills development approaches were adopted. The latter are
still popular, but there is a tendency to offer the education market whatever
they most appreciate. The main criterion is still that only qualitative
materials are marketed to schools. However, this does not mean that teachers can
only choose between types of materials. There are also large-scale training
projects for teachers, both at primary and secondary school levels, which are
developed nationally, but carried out locally, adjusted to the specific demands
of local schools.
Among many other initiatives and drug education programmes, we
should mention a specific "theatre drug education" project, called
"Kick-seekers" which is aimed at secondary school children, aged 14-18, who are
presumed to be at risk of becoming involved in drug use. Based on the assumption
that many young people are looking for kicks, often to prevent feelings of
depression, disappointment and disapproval, the young actors depict real-life
situations and tell of their own search for friendship and acceptance in
connection to drinking, smoking and sniffing. After watching the play, all
schools having participated in the project were invited to join a chat show, in
which the actors discuss and share their experiences and opinions with the
public.
· Training programmes for
health professionals. During the early eighties, much attention in drug
prevention was paid to health professionals, especially physicians, several
training courses on drug problems being offered both in undergraduate and
post-graduate medical training (41). In most Dutch medical schools, courses in
substance-abuse problems are taught in the second or third year. Attention is
paid to knowledge and attitudes of medical students, their own use of drugs,
including alcohol, aspects of early intervention and detection. In the training
for general family physicians, a module of substance abuse has been integrated
into the curriculum. Similar courses are being developed for the vocational
training of nursing staff and social workers.
41) Lange. W. M. Alcohol Consumption and
Alcohol-related Problems in the Netherlands Paper presented at the Who Working
Group on the Role of Physicians in Alcohol Abuse Prevention. Oslo, 26-29 August
1986
· Evaluation of drug
prevention in the Netherlands. As with the general international situation,
it is difficult to determine the results and effects of the Dutch drug
prevention programmes. However, there has been some evaluation. For example, an
assessment of the "What everybody ought to know about drugs" campaign indicated
that 50% of the respondents reported that they had become more interested in the
problem of drug use, about 75% had developed better attitudes towards open
communication on drug use, and another 35% indicated that they had changed their
behaviour and discussed drug problems with friends or family members 42).
Another study on school drug education indicated that a person-oriented approach
is to be preferred to a factual or alarmist approach (De Haes, (43)). Yet
another study indicated that educated pupils in primary school used less alcohol
and drugs than a control group (Van de Wijngaart, (44)).
42) See Note. 5
43) De Haes. W.F.M. & J.H. Schuurman. Results of an
Evaluation Study of Three Drug Education Methods. In: International Journal of
Health Education. 1975. 18 (Suppl) pp. 1-16
44) See Note.
36