Pubdate: Fri, 21 Apr 2000 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2000 David Syme & Co Ltd Contact: 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, 3000, Australia Website: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Chloe Saltau FIGURES POINT TO REDUCED DEATHS No heroin addict has died of an overdose in a supervised injecting room since the first centre opened in Bern, Switzerland, 14 years ago, according to overseas research. There has been little evaluation of the injecting centres scattered around Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Austria since the first opened in 1986, but statistics published in the International Journal of Drug Policy suggest that, combined with broader "harm-minimisation" policies, they have succeeded in saving lives and reducing the street crime associated with drug use. The figures, cited by international drug policy organisation, the Lindesmith Centre, show a dramatic reduction in street crime in the German city of Frankfurt since the harm minimisation approach was adopted in 1991. Frankfurt's first injecting centre opened in 1994. Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation president Dr Alex Wodak said the most persuasive statistic was that there had not been a single fatal overdose in a supervised injecting room in almost 15 years. He said one in five heroin injections resulted in the user "keeling over", wherever they injected, but they were far more likely to be resuscitated in an injecting room than outside. Dr Wodak said harm minimisation measures, including supervised injecting rooms, were no longer controversial in Europe, but accepted. He criticised Prime Minister John Howard for closing his mind to the overseas evidence. "It seems this is only controversial in Kirribilli," Dr Wodak said. A 1998 New South Wales joint select committee report on injecting rooms referred to the German experience, where "roughly 1200 injections a day corresponds to a cut in the annual number of overdose deaths of around 70". It also concluded, based on overseas evidence, that injecting centres may reduce public nuisance, such as the number of used syringes, and the kind of street crime that was a result of users being under the influence. Dr Wodak said it was difficult to evaluate the effectiveness of European supervised injecting rooms because they coincided with changes in law-enforcement and the introduction of more drug treatment and rehabilitation programs. But the Lindesmith Centre research found Swiss injection centres had encouraged users to take fewer health risks, and had resulted in fewer syringes discarded on Swiss city streets. It said fatal overdoses in Frankfurt had peaked at 147 in 1991, and fallen to 26 in 1997. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk