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UK: Test your kids for cannabis

W Coles

Hull Daily Mail

Friday 20 Feb 2004

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Parents in East Yorkshire are to be the first in the country to be offered
"over-the-counter" kits to test their children for drugs.

Hull-based firm Xy-tec Diagnostics has developed a kit it says will test for
cannabis and ecstasy, using a system similar to a simple pregnancy testing kit.

But today, youth workers and drug experts warned testing children could divide
families and harm the trust between parents and children.

Xy-tec Diagnostics is selling the UKP12 kit from its offices in Bowlalley
Lane in Hull city centre. Other kits on the market are available only through the
Internet.

The firm, which already supplies drug testing kits for employers to test new
staff, believes there will be a demand for the kits from parents worried that
their children are dabbling in drugs.

Matthew Williams, Xy-tec's technical support manager, said if the kit proved
successful locally it would be marketed nationwide.

He said the firm was already in talks with national retailers to see if the
kits, which include advice leaflets, can be sold over the counter.

Mr Williams said: "The kits will be sold from our office, but if successful
they could be sold over the counter in the same way such kits are in the United
States.

"It is a controversial move because of the question of trust and a lot of
parents will be unsure. But drugs affects all aspects of society and we regard
the kits as the first step to getting proper treatment."

A survey commissioned by primary care trusts in Hull found that in some areas
of the city almost 40 per cent of 14 and 15-year-olds admitted they had smoked
cannabis.

Today Paul Thomas, 56, of Ennerdale, Hull, said the kits should be used as a
last resort by parents.

Mr Thomas, whose son Simon died, aged 21, from a heroin overdose, works for the
East Riding County FA as a drugs awareness officer.

He said: "Asking a child to take one of these tests could affect their
relationship with their parents.

"You cannot force a child to take a test. I would hope a parent could talk to
the child first before getting to that stage."

Jeanette Hornby, a youth worker at the St Stephen's Neighbourhood Centre on
Hull's Greatfield estate, said the kits could suggest to a child they are
already guilty of taking drugs.

Mrs Hornby said: "It's tricky because the test could imply guilt before it is
even taken and it could upset your child and break trust."

Claire Cairns, senior drugs co-ordinator at the Hull and East Riding Drug
Action Team, is also wary about the kits.

She said: "I think the kits are disappointing because they question the trust
between child and parent and do not offer a real solution.

"The best policy from experience is always going to be talking to your child in
the first place."

Meanwhile, John Meakin, of the Hull and East Yorkshire Council for Drug
Problems, added: "I would encourage people to use them with caution.

"I can see why parents may be tempted to purchase a kit but I think they need
to look beyond that.''

'"They could be useful though in a situation where someone has come off drugs
and wants to reassure their parents that they are clean."'

A spokesman for the Home Office said there are no regulations governing the
sale of drug testing kits.

And a spokesman for Boots the Chemist said it does not stock drug testing kits
and has no immediate plans to do so.

Agencies listed in the advice leaflet include:

*The National Drug Helpline on 0800 7 66 00.

*Narcotics Anonymous on 0207 730 0009.

*Families Anonymous Helpline on 0207 498 4680.

 

 

 

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