Loading In the letter to Premier Gladys Berejiklian, Dr Jennifer Stevens wrote that she and her fellow senior clinicians believed that a public health approach should be prioritised over criminal enforcement. “We find it abhorrent that strip searches are used to investigate young people – including children – for personal possession,” she wrote. “Strip searches, as currently conducted, demean both the individual and the police conducting the search.” The head of St Vincent’s acute pain service said she was prompted to write the letter after a coroner’s report recommending pill testing, reduced sniffer dog use and an overhaul of strip-searchers was "largely ignored" by Ms Berejiklian and her government.

“These reports are well informed by both personal lived experience and by the evidence, and we’d like her to look at them again,” she said. A spokeswoman for the Premier said the government will consider the coroner’s recommendations and that NSW Health has developed harm reduction guidelines for music festivals in consultation with experts. “The Premier has made her position very clear on pill testing – there is no such thing as a safe illegal drug and we cannot provide a false sense of security that these illegal drugs are safe,” she said. “We have already taken considerable steps to improve safety at music festivals and some of the recommendations for measures such as peer-based harm reduction services are already occurring.” The hospital's stance comes just weeks after Deputy State Coroner Harriet Grahame published her findings into the MDMA-related deaths of six young festival-goers, prompting Ms Berejiklian to double down on her opposition to pill testing and Police Commissioner Mick Fuller to back the use of strip-searching at festivals.

Loading The letter, sent to the Premier on Tuesday, also comes part way through an investigation into police allegedly breaching their strip-search powers, with a fresh hearing into a string of searches at an 18-years-and-under Sydney music festival in February this year set to begin on Monday. Dr Stevens said all her colleagues had front-line experience with drug issues, but they also had skin in the game thanks to the teenagers and children in their lives. “We felt that if the evidence about how to keep these kids safe was out there, that we should be looking to follow that evidence where it exists and also to conduct more trials to confirm that evidence,” she said. As many as 13 per cent of all emergency department admissions at St Vincent's were for drug- and alcohol-related problems, Dr Aguirrebarrena said.