Pubdate: Mon, 17 Jan 2000 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2000 The Vancouver Sun Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Ian Mulgrew, Vancouver Sun Bookmark: MAP's link to Washington state articles is: http://www.mapinc.org/states/wa END WAR ON DRUGS, CONFERENCE CONCLUDES Health-care specialists gathering at the first international meeting on Preventing Heroin Overdose agree that cities must turn their focus to the needs of users and expand 'harm-reduction' strategies. SEATTLE -- Vancouver and other B.C. cities must assume responsibility for their drug problems and not wait for provincial or federal initiatives, according to health-care specialists from around the globe. At the first international conference on Preventing Heroin Overdose: Pragmatic Approaches, the consensus was that North American cities must abandon the War on Drugs and push for more treatment and services. Public health officials said a range of measures is usually required that could include safe injection sites, providing addicts with Naloxone (a drug used to counter the effects of an opiate overdose), and prescription heroin programs. "Significant action must be taken -- cities need to develop drug policies for their communities," said B.C. medical health officer Perry Kendall, who was one of more than a dozen representatives from the province attending the conference. "It's not a rural problem." Kendall was adamant that a lot more can be done and should be done in Vancouver to prevent the deaths and social disorder that result from drug addiction, without waiting for action or support from senior levels of government. "There are a huge number of reasonable, feasible actions that could be taken to significantly reduce the number of deaths and the public disorder," he said. "Cities such as Frankfurt, Amsterdam and Bern all experienced the same kind of neighbourhood disruption, public disorder that we're seeing in the Downtown Eastside. They took concerted action and have increased civic order and safety, reduced crime, improved health and reduced death rates." He said increased access to methadone and more counselling and support services are immediate steps that could be taken and that safe injection sites are something "we should be looking at more seriously than we are because they seem to work." "We have to sit down and work together. Otherwise, I think you could quite rightly point a finger and say this is therapeutic abandonment by the civic government, abandonment by the regulators and by the treaters and by the agencies out there to advocate on behalf of the addicts." B.C. coroner Larry Campbell echoed the need for quick, concerted action. "Somehow we have to get rid of the [political] polarization in this area," Campbell said. "At the moment, the right wing says everybody with a habit should go away and die and the left wing says everybody should be able to get anything they want. That's hurting people who need care." The two-day event at the glittering Sheraton Hotel in downtown Seattle drew more than 400 doctors, police officers, public-health officials, politicians and addicts. Expensively suited, well-heeled medical professionals milled about discussing drugs, doses, political strategies and first-aid emergency responses with tattooed ex-cons and young people with multi-coloured hair. The conference was sponsored by the Lindesmith Center, a U.S-based drug policy lobby group and think-tank, various Washington State agencies, and a handful of B.C. groups including the Vancouver/Richmond Health Board. Besides Kendall and Campbell, attendees from B.C. included Vancouver social planner Donald MacPherson, Health Board executive Jack Altman, NDP cabinet minister and Downtown Eastside MLA Jenny Kwan, Vancouver police officer Ken Frail and members of the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users. "My head's swimming," Frail said after attending several of the sessions. "I wish more of us [police officers] had a chance to come, because I hadn't realized just how big a problem this is." In his presentation, Campbell said that while he was once an RCMP officer, he has changed his mind about the efficacy of using the criminal law to combat drug use. Still, he was not prepared to go as far as those who, like Toronto-based outreach worker Cheryl White, advocated legalization and a host of measures to give health resources directly to addicts. "Interdiction and enforcement play some role," Campbell said, but a new approach is essential. Doctors and public-health officials told the meeting that aside from the tragedy that is occurring, huge amounts of tax money are wasted by failing to treat addiction as a health problem. Addicts are "chronic patients," they said, who arrive in emergency wards far more often than the rest of the population and as a group require far more extensive treatments. "We want to reduce the deaths and the costs," said Ethan Nadelmann, director of the Lindesmith Center and the most vocal U.S. proponent of so-called harm-reduction policies. "We could cut heroin overdoses in half if the information from this conference were widely disseminated." Staff from Vancouver's St. Paul's Hospital, a partial sponsor of the event, have identified the needs of the Downtown Eastside addict population (which is estimated at perhaps as many as 8,000) as one of the main reasons the hospital is in a financial crisis. "Cities have to take control of drug policy and we need this kind of research data to make these decisions," MacPherson said. "We need to have a sane public discussion." B.C.'s addict population is estimated at between 10,000 and 15,000, most of whom live in the Lower Mainland. Overdose deaths in B.C., Campbell said, skyrocketed from 39 a year in 1988 to 412 a year in 1998. Some European countries and Australia responded to their rising death toll by changing the focus of their urban police forces to target dealers rather than users, while expanding the kinds of health services available to junkies: providing safe rooms in which to fix, making heroin and other drugs available by prescription, distributing free needles and increasing social services for those who want to kick their habit. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst