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A PRESCRIPTION FOR CHANGE

9. Tackling Addiction, Empowering Recovery

Fairer, safer and more efficient healthcare

HEALTH PLAN HOMEPAGE

UNIVERSAL HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE

LOCAL HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE SERVICES

HOSPITAL REFORM

MENTAL HEALTH

DELIVERING ON RIGHTS FOR DISABLED PEOPLE

STRATEGIC IMPROVEMENT PROGRAMMES

AGING AND OLDER PERSONS CARE

TACKLING ADDICTION, EMPOWERING RECOVERY

SAFE STAFFING FOR SAFER HEALTHCARE

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ACCOUNTABILITY AND REFORM

OTHER KEY INFORMATION

Tackling Addiction, Empowering Recovery

Sinn Fein recognises that addiction can affect anyone. Sinn Féin’s guiding principle in our approach to addiction and recovery is that we must reduce the harmful impacts of addiction while empowering communities. We have set out comprehensive policy in our 5 Year Community Addiction and Recovery Strategy (2021) and in our policy consultation document Priorities for Change in Health and Social Care (2023).

Those working on the ground in the addiction and recovery sector are best placed to identify and resource programmes and initiatives that will benefit individuals and families in their local communities. Local community initiatives are the backbone of addiction and recovery services. This localised expertise must be allowed, and funded, to respond proactively to emerging trends within communities.

Sinn Féin would end the criminalisation of addiction. We would not seek to penalise minor possession for personal use. Consumption of drugs in a public place and sale and supply would remain illegal. We would ensure that anyone found in possession of drugs would be afforded extensive opportunities to engage with health-led services where necessary.

Sinn Féin would return funding for local and regional Drug and Alcohol Taskforces to pre-recession levels and ensure sustained and appropriate funding increases every year to continue service development. We would fund additional family support and community development workers in each taskforce area. For many people, alcohol poses no risk, but supports and signposting must be available for those who need it. Sinn Féin would support community-based services along with clinical responses to Alcohol-Related Brain Injuries.

We are proposing to further support recovery services through an unprecedented investment in publicly owned, community operated rehabilitation and detoxification inpatient capacity. We would fund an expansion of capacity equivalent to 700 residential recovery, medical detoxification, and step-down beds over a term of Government. We would ensure that people are not isolated from support by a prison sentence.

Sinn Féin would offset assessment fees for addiction and recovery services through improvements to capitation funding.

We would support people in recovery through a recovery-specific housing programme, inclusive of wraparound supports. The programme would start as a pilot scheme with 3 initial bases across the regions. Each person utilising these services would have access to an addiction counsellor and support worker.

Addiction often overlaps with mental health challenges and conditions, both as a cause and a consequence of addiction. Lip service has been paid to the need for services equipped to care for people with dual diagnoses, but this has never materialised. Sinn Féin would implement a “No Wrong Door” policy for people with a dual diagnosis and enable addiction and mental health services to deliver the care a person needs when they present to a service they trust.

Sinn Féin recognises that staff in addiction services are often overlooked and under supported. We note reports finding that those working in addiction have some of the highest work-related stress across health services. We recognise that supervision is a key aspect in social work and social care in mental health fields, yet it is often overlooked in addiction services. We would support frontline workers with supervision and counselling services to reduce burnout and the mental burden of managing trauma on a daily basis.

Sinn Féin recognises that families are disproportionately and often unfairly placed with the burden of caring for and supporting an individual in active addiction and early recovery. This can have profound and often long-lasting impacts on family members from economic hardship to violence and without support, this can increase the likelihood of addiction amongst children especially. Sinn Féin would work with existing Family Support Networks to ensure fair processes, increase funding through DATFs to ensure that a whole-family approach can be taken to addiction across the State, and ensure that families are given a secure position on consultation bodies such as the National Oversight Council.

Sinn Féin also recognises the large proportion of individuals impacted by gambling-based harm in this state. We would implement strong, evidence-based gambling regulations to ensure that the Gambling Regulator can be a proactive force to reduce harm in this state. We would ensure that the Social Fund receives contributions on a ‘harm pays’ basis, similar to the approach in New Zealand, to provide the necessary treatment supports for those who need them.

We recognise the potentially life-saving intervention that Naloxone offers to those in addiction, those utilising Opioid Substitute Treatments and those who are legally prescribed opioids. We would explore evidence-based approaches to the expansion of the availability of Naloxone to ensure that every person whose life could be saved by this drug can access it.

Sinn Féin recognises that significant barriers exist to those in recovery and that we need to work at all levels of government, across this island, to remove these barriers. We believe that across the island, those on a recovery journey have rights and these rights must be respected. To this end, we would implement an All-Island Charter of Rights for those in Recovery.

Sinn Féin Will:

icon_check iconReturn funding to 2010 levels for local and regional drug and alcohol taskforces, and increase funding further by 2% every year

icon_check iconInitiate an unprecedented investment in community addiction and recovery inpatient capacity, delivering 700 residential recovery, medical detoxification, and step-down beds over a term of Government

icon_check iconWaive assessment fees for access to addiction services

icon_check iconImplement a “No Wrong Door” policy for dual diagnosis

icon_check iconEnd the criminalisation of addiction and pursue a comprehensive health-led approach

icon_check iconEmploy additional community development and family support workers in each taskforce area

icon_check iconDeliver multidisciplinary community neuro-rehabilitation teams which will work with community sector services to ensure state-wide coverage for substance-related brain injury

icon_check iconFund further research into gambling prevalence and behaviours and fully implement a Gambling Regulation Bill

icon_check iconWork across Government to support drug and alcohol misuse educational programmes in schools, recovery-inclusive programmes in sport, social inclusion and Traveller community-specific projects, and equip frontline services and the Gardaí to focus on harm reduction in communities

icon_check iconEstablish a Consultatory Working Group of people with lived experience of addiction to consult on, and influence, relevant policy

icon_check iconSupport a whole-family approach to addiction services and work to end the postcode lottery delivery of family support services

A Prescription for Change - Sinn Féin's Healthcare Plan

Sinn Féin has the plan, vision, and determination to deal with the big challenges in healthcare. Our plan sets out in detail how we will deliver better access to healthcare when you need it, improve access to a GP when you need one, and end the crisis in our Emergency Departments.
Our plan will transform your experience of our health service and to deliver fairer, safer and more efficient healthcare.