Pubdate: Wed, 22 Aug 2001 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: The Hamilton Spectator 2001 Contact: http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Robert Howard SAFE HAVEN FOR ADDICTS IS A FORM OF SURRENDER We would be hard-pressed to disagree with those who would condemn the idea of establishing supervised safe injection rooms, where drug addicts could shoot up their own cocaine or heroin with sterile needles and clean water. The idea is raised in the current issue of the Canadian Medical Association Journal, in which an editorial calls for safe injection facilities. That editorial accompanies two research reports and a commentary that illustrate the horrific impact of injection drug use in Vancouver. Those studies show that users still commonly share needles, clog hospitals and suffer an appalling rate of fatal overdoses. Injection facilities would reduce sharing of needles, the authors say, and thereby slow the terrible rates of HIV and Hepatitis C infection. As well, supervised facilities would reduce deaths by overdose. But has it come to this? That our society would tacitly condone illegal drug use by providing the place, the facilities and the security and safety of supervision? What message does this send to our children: That drugs are very, very bad -- but if you use them, we'll give you a safe place to do so? A case can be made that dangerous and disease-ridden alleys and shooting galleries are where heroin and cocaine use belongs. Perhaps that's a good message to give anyone considering heroin or cocaine use: This is where you will end up. This is how you will live. This is how you will die. Use of illegal drugs is hugely destructive to individuals and their families, is enormously costly to society in terms of health care, the justice system and lost productivity, and is accompanied by a culture of violence. Injection facilities would be seen as a moral and legal surrender to illegal drug use and much of what goes with it. Too, we live in a time in which social-welfare and health-care programs are scrabbling to maintain existing funding, let alone find money for increasing demand or for new initiatives. It is difficult, verging on the impossible, to justify spending limited public money on the space, facilities and staff for injection facilities when other programs that do not assist in an illegal activity so badly need it. That, together with concerns of implicitly legitimizing behaviour that is both criminal and destructive, would be one of our strongest objections: Safe injection facilities simply don't rank against competing priorities for funding. But look at the numbers: * 100,000 Canadians inject cocaine or heroin. * One third of new cases of HIV infection and almost two-thirds of Hepatitis C infection result from injection drug use. * In B.C., drug overdose is the leading cause of death of people 30 to 49 - -- even among people with HIV. This is a crisis. And the people most at risk in that crisis are, in essence, outlaws. There is a moral distance, albeit an arguably legitimate one, between "them" and "us." It is time and it is right to have this discussion: Not to decide whether to continue the "war on drugs" but to decide if compassion for its casualties has to necessarily be a form of surrender, as this idea is. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth