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Tabor Group annual report, 2024
by Seán Millar
The Tabor Group is a provider of residential addiction treatment services in Ireland. It aims to offer hope, healing, and recovery to clients suffering from addictions through integrated and caring services. In addition to two residential facilities, the organisation provides a continuing care programme to clients who have completed treatment to assist with their recovery as well as a community-based programme. Its family support programme offers counselling to families whose loved ones are struggling with an addiction. In 2025, the Tabor Group published its annual report for 2024.1 This article highlights services provided by the Tabor Group to individuals with a substance use addiction in 2024.
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Adolescent stimulant drug use in Ireland: The role of the home environment and extracurricular activities
by Seán Millar
A new study published in PLOS One explores how family dynamics and extracurricular involvement influence stimulant drug use among Irish adolescents.1 Drawing on data from the 2020 Planet Youth Survey, the researchers examined nearly 5,000 secondary school students across Galway, Mayo, and Roscommon in order to assess lifetime use of cocaine and ecstasy, and to identify associated social and environmental factors.
Background
Cocaine and ecstasy remain among the most commonly used stimulant drugs worldwide, with both substances posing serious health risks, including cardiovascular complications, neurological damage, and heightened risks of both depression and suicidality.
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Courts Service Annual Report, 2024
by Ciara H Guiney
The Courts Service Annual Report 2024 was published on 7 July 2025. While the report presented data for all criminal cases arising within the Irish justice system between January and December 2024, this article only reports on statistics related to prosecutions for drug offences.1 The data provided are for overall drug law offences. The Courts Service in Ireland does not distinguish between the different supply offences and possession/use offences (Courts Service, personal communication, 2017).
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Dove Service: Rotunda Hospital annual report, 2023
by Seán Millar
The Danger of Viral Exposure (DOVE) Service in the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin was established in order to meet the specific needs of pregnant women who have or are at risk of blood-borne or sexually transmitted bacterial or viral infections during pregnancy. Exposure may also occur through illicit substance use. Figures from the DOVE Service for 2023 were published in the hospital’s annual report in 2024.1
Clinical activity
Figure 1 shows the number of women who booked into the DOVE Service for antenatal care each year during the period 2013–2023. It also shows the diagnosis of specific viral diseases for these women. During 2023, some 173 women booked into the DOVE Service for antenatal care. Among those attending the service, 100 were serology positive; of these:
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Hexahydrocannabinol and psychosis: Trends in Ireland’s mental health landscape
by Seán Millar
A recent study published in the journal BJPsych Bulletin sheds light on the growing concern over hexahydrocannabinol (HHC) and its apparent role in precipitating psychotic episodes.1 Conducted by a team of Irish psychiatrists and researchers from the University of Galway and Trinity College Dublin, the research explores the prevalence of HHC use among psychiatric admissions at University Hospital Galway and raises significant public health and legislative concerns.
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Hexahydrocannabinol use and harms in Ireland
by Seán Millar
A new study published in the International Journal of Drug Policy highlights the rapid rise in the use of hexahydrocannabinol (HHC) in Ireland and the potential public health implications associated with the drug.1 HHC, a semi-synthetic cannabinoid derived from cannabidiol (CBD), was marketed as a legal alternative to cannabis until its control under Irish law in July 2025.
The research, conducted by experts at the Health Research Board (HRB), the Health Service Executive (HSE), the School of Public Health at University College Cork, and the European Drugs Agency (EUDA), analysed data from more than 2,300 adults who took part in the 2024 European Web Survey on Drugs. These participants had used drugs in the previous year and responded to a dedicated module on HHC use.
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Coolmine annual report, 2023
by Seán Millar
Coolmine Therapeutic Community is a drug and alcohol treatment centre providing community, day, and residential services to men and women with problematic substance use in Ireland, and to their families. Established in 1973, Coolmine was founded on the philosophies of the therapeutic community approach to addiction treatment. This is primarily a self-help approach in which residents are responsible for their own recovery, with peers and staff acting as facilitators of change. Participants are expected to contribute to the general running of the community and to their own recovery by actively participating in educational activities and in group and individual therapy. At year-end 2023, Coolmine had 15 facilities and 22 satellite clinics operational across Ireland (Figure 1) and it provided treatment and recovery services to 2,523 individuals and their families. This represents a 6.5% increase on 2022. Programmes provided by Coolmine in 2023 are highlighted below.1
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