Summary
"Methamphetamine is of national concern (ACC 2014), but what does this statement mean
to frontline police officers? In real terms it means that frontline police are required, on an
increasingly frequent basis, to engage with methamphetamine users. This presents a
number of challenges to police. First, methamphetamine intoxication and withdrawal can
impede an individual’s ability to follow police directions. Second, use is associated with
behavioral and psychological disturbances, including aggression, which can increase the
risk of harm for the police and members of the community. Third, the user is at increased
risk of serious physical harms when in custody due to the effects of intoxication or
withdrawal. Risks to the user may be exacerbated by physical exertion during interactions
with police or due to use of restraint by police. Being armed with information about what
methamphetamine is, the nature and extent of use of methamphetamine among Sydney
police detainees, and details of the Sydney methamphetamine market can assist police to
identify risks to themselves and others.
The Australian Institute of Criminology’s (AIC) Drug Use Monitoring in Australia (DUMA)
program interviews police detainees at selected police stations and watch houses across
Australia on a quarterly basis. DUMA data collection sites in Sydney include the Bankstown
and Surry Hills police stations. Detainees present at the police station during data collection
are asked to complete an interviewer-assisted self-report survey on their use of alcohol
and other drugs and their offending habits. Urine samples are also requested twice a
year during data collections. Urine samples are subjected to urinalysis at an independent
toxicology laboratory to detect the presence of a number of licit and illicit drugs, including
methamphetamine. Participation in DUMA is voluntary and confidential. Since the program
commenced in 1999, 53,858 detainees have been interviewed and 38,574 urine samples
have been collected nationally. The data presented in this report were collected at the
Bankstown police station during Quarter 4 (October) of 2014 and Quarter 2 (April) of 2015,
and at Surry Hills police station in Quarter 3 (July) of 2015.
From 2014 to 2015, 116 police detainees were interviewed at Bankstown police station
and 55 detainees at Surry Hills police station. They were, on average, 34 years of age. The
majority of detainees interviewed were male (approximately 80%), which is representative of
the gender composition of the overall Australian detainee population. It should be noted that
the data cannot be directly compared between sites due to differences in sample sizes."--Page 1.