Pubdate: Wed, 24 Oct 2001 Source: Victoria News (CN BC) Copyright: 2001 Victoria News Contact: http://www.vicnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1267 Author: Tarina White Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) SAFE DRUG INJECTION CENTRE PROPOSED FOR VICTORIA A proposal for Victoria, along with other urban Canadian cities, to host a safe injection centre for drug users has been raised by Canadian health officials as a way to combat against drug-related deaths and overdoses. Provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall is working at the federal and provincial levels of government in support of safe injection centres, which he says have the potential to reduce many of the problems associated with intravenous drug use. "If we look across Canada, we see problems with overdose, death and hepatitis C transmission," explains Kendall. "In Europe (safe injection centres) been shown to be effective in improving public health and public safety." According to Kendall, there is a high rate of such drug-related problems in Victoria. "There was (up to) a 25 per cent increase in the prevalence rate in Victoria over a five year period," notes Kendall. "Victoria, to my mind, would meet the criteria for a safe injection centre." According to Kendall, the obstacle facing the introduction of safe injection centres is the need for a regulatory framework for such facilities. which would, in essence, be a facility in which illegal activity takes place. "The issue is - politically can it be done?" he says. "The (B.C.) minister of health is supporting it and it looks optimistic." Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe says the issue has only recently been brought to his attention. On whether he would support a facility for Victoria's intravenous drug population to safely "shoot-up", Lowe said her doesn't know enough about the issue to comment at this point. He says, to his knowledge, the issue has come to the forefront following a recent meeting between provincial health ministers in Newfoundland. "It wasn't that they were targeting Victoria, they were floating around a few cities as possibilities," says Lowe. "I think it will have to be a national policy; it can't just focus on the east or west coast." Lowe concedes Victoria has a problem with drug use, however, he says a more pressing issue than safe injection centres is what he terms a need to review the justice system. "The issue we have to look at here is enforcement and the courts," he says. "Drug users are out the next day and slapped with a fine. It's a revolving door." Lowe says a decision on whether Victoria will play host to a safe injection centre rests in the hands of the federal government at this point, with funding provided federally. "I would have to have some discussion with police to determine whether safe injection centres work," says Lowe, of the process the city would go through if indeed it was targeted as a site for such an injection centre. Victoria police inspector John Ducker says the number of intravenous drug users in Victoria is of concern to police. "We are definitely not immune," says Ducker. "We have a lot of intravenous drug users (in Victoria) who put a great deal of strain on the police and the health department." Ducker says police view the introduction of safe injection sites for drug users as "inevitable". "The overwhelming health costs by people sharing needles means we have some support (for a safe injection site)," says Ducker. However, he says police would be more inclined to support a site that offers a safe environment for medical detoxification. "There has to be post-injection care and ongoing medical support," he says. And Ducker says it is essential to consult with the police on the location of such a site, if indeed one ever opens in Victoria. "What our research indicates is it is best to diffuse the site in a wide range of areas," he explains. "No one would want it in their area, so it would have to be decentralized." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager