Pubdate: Tue, 19 Dec 2000 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: The Vancouver Sun 2000 Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Larry Pynn, Vancouver Sun Bookmark: Items related to the Vancouver plan and the Sun's series Searching for solutions - Fix on the Downtown Eastside http://www.mapinc.org/thefix.htm B.C. TO DEVELOP SWEEPING ADDICTION-SERVICES POLICY An Expert In The Field Says The System Is In Need Of A Complete Overhaul A comprehensive addiction-services policy ranging from prevention to treatment and including drugs, alcohol, gambling and cigarettes will be developed by March 1, the province announced Monday. Deputy Premier Joy MacPhail told a Vancouver news conference an 18-member task force of addiction experts from the senior civil service and non-government agencies will draft the policy. The chairman is Dan Reist, executive director of the Association of Substance Abuse Programs and author of a report earlier this year on addiction services for the Kaiser Youth Foundation. Reist said the province's current approach to addiction services is failing and "clients are falling through the cracks" more from poor coordination than lack of good intentions or programs. The foundation, originally called the Kaiser Substance Abuse Foundation, was created in 1985 with a $3-million endowment from businessman Edgar Kaiser Jr., the former Bank of B.C. chairman, after his own daughter beat a drug problem. Kaiser, who was beside MacPhail at the news conference, said the system of delivering addiction services in B.C. needs an overhaul from the ground up. Completion of planning for such a detailed overhaul in just over two months is a daunting challenge for the task force, which meets for the first time Thursday in Vancouver. "We're overwhelmed by the magnitude of the job given us," confirmed Kaiser, whose foundation will coordinate the task force and provide office and secretarial support. Part of the work will include tracking the success or failure of programs currently in place, he added. MacPhail said the task force will work closely with the city of Vancouver, which released its own 31-point plan in November modelled on the "four-pillar" approach of some European cities -- enforcement, prevention, treatment, and harm reduction. The city's most controversial recommendations include consideration of drug-injection sites and endorsement of a medical experiment in giving heroin to hard-core users. Vancouver Mayor Philip Owen said he fully supports the province's decision to strike the task force, adding the quick deadline indicates motivation to make changes sooner than later. "We need to rationalize all the provincial services," Owen stressed. "Fragmentation -- everyone doing their own activity -- isn't very effective." The Kaiser foundation report in May concluded B.C.'s drug and alcohol programs are poorly coordinated and fragmented. The report's indictment: "Inconsistent and under-funded education and prevention efforts. Wasted opportunities for intervention. Inadequate data collection and research capacity on which to base good decisions. Waiting lists for counselling and for treatment." MacPhail's task force will draw on the positive experiences of addiction services around the world, while creating a model that is flexible enough to allow for changes in the future. MacPhail would not commit the government to accepting the task force's recommendations, but denied the timing of the report so close to the next election is an attempt to get the province off the hook. "I expect we'll be government when the report comes out," she said, noting the province currently spends $150 million a year on the direct costs of addiction. "We can't avoid the tough decisions." Among the task force members are provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall; Art Steinmann, executive director of the Alcohol-Drug Education Service; Warren O'Brian, director of community development for AIDS Vancouver; Chris Kitteringham, clinical manager of the addiction program at B.C. Women's Hospital; Ray Baker, chairman of the B.C. Medication Association's addiction medicine committee; and Mary Clifford, director of health for the Prince George Native Friendship Centre. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake