[Oireachtas] Seanad Éireann debate - National Drugs Strategy: Statements. (08 Jul 2025)
External website: https://www.oireachtas.ie/en/debates/debate/seanad...
Victor Boyhan, Acting Chairperson: I welcome the Minister of State to the House for statements on the national drugs strategy. The Minister of State will have ten minutes to speak. Group spokespersons will have ten minutes, all other Senators will have four minutes, and the Minister of State will be called on to reply to the debate no later than 7.22 p.m. Statements will have to conclude by 7.30 p.m., in line with the Order of Business as agreed today.
Jennifer Murnane O'Connor, Minister of State at the Department of Health: I thank the Members of Seanad Éireann for inviting me to update them on the development of the new national drugs strategy and related policy developments. A health-led strategy recognises drugs as a health issue and it encourages people to avoid, reduce and recover from drug-related harm. It promotes the principle of a right to health for people who use drugs by supporting people to access healthcare and promoting recovery as an initial response. It also seeks to protect and improve public health and well-being by preventing and reducing the harms linked to substance use for individuals, their families and the community.
The Strategic Action Plan 2023-2024 marked a significant milestone in the implementation of the national drugs strategy, Reducing Harm, Supporting Recovery. It contained 34 actions across the six strategic priorities of strengthening the prevention of drug and alcohol use and the associated harms among children and young people; enhancing access to the delivery of drug and alcohol services in our communities; developing integrated care pathways for high-risk drug users to achieve better health outcomes, and we are very supportive of this and we know we have to deliver as many services as we can; addressing the social consequences of drug use in disadvantaged communities; promoting alternative coercive sanctions for drug-related offences; and strengthening evidence-informed and outcomes-focused practice, services, policies and strategy which we can implement and deliver.
The implementation of the strategy action plan marks the end of the national drugs strategy. The Department has commissioned an independent evaluation of the strategy and the action plan, which is due to be submitted to the Department in the coming weeks. The evaluation is being conducted by Grant Thornton, which was appointed following a public procurement process. Grant Thornton has consulted stakeholders involved in the oversight of the strategy, including the network of drug and alcohol task forces, civil society organisations, the voluntary drug and alcohol sectors, and CityWide and other community-based drug services.
The focus of the strategy is a health-led approach to drug use. To illustrate this, I will briefly highlight some significant achievements in the previous year. The Department and I believe these have been very positive. We opened the supervised injection facility, SIF, at Merchants Quay in Dublin in late December 2024, under a licence issued by the then Minister of State with responsibility for the national drugs strategy. Thus, Ireland became the 18th country in the world to have such a facility. The SIF is a partnership between the Department of Health, the Health Service Executive and Merchants Quay Ireland, which manages and delivers the service. The primary purpose of the SIF is the prevention of drug overdose and the reduction of harms associated with injection drug use. The licence for the facility is for a period of 18 months, during which evaluation of its impact will be completed. The evaluation will inform decisions about continuing the facility and the potential for applications to establish SIFs in other areas of the country
We also opened a new community care facility that provides a broad spectrum of drug and alcohol addiction services along with other health services especially for people who are homeless in Usher's Island in the Liberties, Dublin, in October 2024. It was recently spoken about in the Seanad. The facility is a partnership between the Department of housing, which funded the construction, the Department of Health and the HSE, which fund the operating cost, and Dublin Simon Community, which manages and staffs the facility. A total of 51 beds are in operation, with the capacity to provide 700 episodes of care, including step-up and step-down care with acute hospital residential treatment for drug addiction, treatment for blood-borne viruses and support for people in recovery.
The good news, having visited the facility today, is that the 12 beds to open this year under phase 2 will be opened on Monday. There are now 51 beds which can be occupied and the other 12 beds, which are part of the second phase for this year, will be opened on Monday, 14 July. I am delighted with this. This new facility is a game changer in providing timely access to high-quality healthcare services that address the complex health needs of people who are homeless. It is hoped that in the long term the facility will also contribute to a reduction in premature deaths and enable a pathway out of homelessness. It is giving people in the service, whether in local authorities or other services, guidance and a pathway.
We can also report on major progress in the implementation of the Government's health diversion scheme, whereby people in possession of drugs for personal use will be diverted towards a health response. Alongside the Minister for justice, I have agreed the scheme will commence on an administrative basis, working with An Garda Síochána and the Director of Public Prosecutions. At present they are finalising the operational details and we are waiting for the sign-off. This will be brilliant once we get it over the line. The scheme is in line with the recommendations of the Citizens' Assembly on Drugs Use for a comprehensive health-led approach with emphasis on drug use. With regard to how we can implement these and work on them, this is planned for a year and after this first year we will then have a look at it. This is a comprehensive health-led response to drug possession...
B Substances > Alcohol
MP-MR Policy, planning, economics, work and social services > Policy > Policy on substance use
MP-MR Policy, planning, economics, work and social services > Programme planning, implementation, and evaluation > Programme planning (strategy)
MP-MR Policy, planning, economics, work and social services > Economic policy
VA Geographic area > Europe > Ireland
Repository Staff Only: item control page