Pubdate: Sat, 01 Feb 2003
Source: Tri-City News (CN BC)
Copyright: 2003, Tri-City News
Contact:  http://www.tricitynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1239
Author: Diane Strandberg
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)

DRUGS A DRAG ON FAMILIES

People are sick and dying from drugs in the Tri-Cities. Most of them are 
young, some are trying to get help but too many are falling between the cracks.

Statistics from the BC Coroner's office show as many as 56 people died of a 
drug overdose in this community between 1994 and 2001.

"I think [drug addiction] is an incredibly important part of health because 
of the devastation on families and the effect on families. It has a real 
impact on the health of the community," said Diane Miller, who oversees the 
Fraser Health Authority's $13.2 million drug and alcohol addiction services 
budget since taking responsibility from the Ministry of Health last spring.

Local health providers see the toll of drugs up close.

In 2001, 43 people were hospitalized at Eagle Ridge Hospital because of 
alcohol or drugs, not including those admitted for related illnesses. Of 
the 50 Tri-City residents who contracted HIV/AIDS between 1997 and 2001, 18 
were intravenous drug users.

"We are trying to get a handle on the [addict] population," said Miller, 
who's responsible for charting a course for drug addiction services for the 
coming years. She said she expects to see more integrated services, more 
help for people with mental illness who abuse drugs, and home and mobile 
detox services to cut waiting lists.

Although there are no figures on how many addicts live in the Tri-Cities, 
police suspect the population ranges between 300 and 500, based on 
statistical projections.

"Those are people who are seriously addicted," said Det. Jim Burton of Port 
Moody Police Department. Most addicts are between the ages of 16 and 35 - 
"probably the most productive age group and those we rely on for our 
future," said Burton, a former RCMP member who worked with youth and who 
now sees the impact of drugs daily as a detective with the PMPD. He said as 
many as 90 per cent of police crime files have alcohol or drug use at their 
core.

"Most of the crime we're dealing with, including most recent homicides, 
comes back to drugs," he said. "You can't get away from it." Alcohol is by 
far the biggest social problem in the suburbs but the number of young 
families makes youth drug addiction a huge concern.

And more young people may be using harder drugs at an earlier age, 
according to a survey conducted by a Surrey-based agency. Pacific Community 
Resources surveyed suburban youth and found that drugs were easy to get and 
that alcohol and marijuana were typically doorways to harder drugs.

The survey, taken outside the Tri-Cities - and in summer, when students are 
in "party mode" - may overstate drug use but local counselling services 
have seen a small spike in the number of kids seeking help, said SHARE's 
Lynda Edmonds, who is responsible for programming and services at the 
Coquitlam-based agency.

SHARE generally sees about 300 young addicts for counselling each year, 
about a third of whom are new admissions. SHARE saw 117 new clients for 
counselling in the first nine months of 2002 of, 25 per cent more than usual.

Edmonds can't explain the increase, though it is troubling. "We could be 
more out there in getting the message across," she said.

The adult numbers are much higher, with about 600 people a year seeking 
counselling; half of those are new admissions and most report problems with 
both alcohol and drugs. The good news is that these people are making an 
effort to get control of their addiction, although their prognosis is 
uncertain. Addicts can move in and out of detox as often seven times 
through a lifetime of their addiction and waiting lists for services are 
often long.

"We could use twice as many beds, we just don't have it," said Miller.

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The Lower Mainland Youth and Drug Use Survey found parents were the most 
trusted source of alcohol and drug information but the fifth highest actual 
source for this information.

The New Westminster Youth clinic saw 447 teens from Coquitlam, 148 from 
Port Coquitlam, and 128 from Port Moody, for drug issues, as well as 
concerns about sexually transmitted diseases, AIDS and birth control, 
between January and October of last year, representing about one-third of 
the clients who go to the clinic.

In 2001/'02, SHARE saw 636 adults, with 349 new clients, and 294 youth, 
with 112 new clients. In the first nine months of 2002/2003, SHARE saw 117 
new youth clients. The problems: 85 per cent of adults report drug and 
alcohol abuse, 15 per cent report alcohol abuse while drug abuse is the 
main issue for 44 per cent of youth clients, compared to six per cent for 
alcohol and 35 per cent for both drug and alcohol abuse.

Crime Statistics

RCMP crime statistics: Coquitlam reports 48,914 files to the end of 
November 2002, and 567 drug-related offences to the end of the year, with 
478 involving marijuana, 39 cocaine, 14 heroin and 36 other drugs. Port 
Coquitlam reports 20,904 files to the end of November, 2002, with 296 
drug-related offences to the end of December, 2002, with 254 involving 
marijuana, 29 involving cocaine, 17 other drugs, and 8 involving heroin.

Needle Use

The New Westminster Needle Exchange exchanges 110,000 syringes per year and 
has approximately 16-20 Tri-City clients (mostly from Coquitlam). Some 
intravenous drug users may also go to Vancouver or Surrey for clean needles.

Services

152 detox beds available in the region, none in the Tri-Cities, four are 
for youth.   Intensive group treatment for women and youth, with a pilot 
program for men.   Seventy recovery beds for men, 35 for women in the 
region, includes 20 FHA-funded beds in Tri-Cities run by Inner Visions, 
which also operates another 27 fee-for-service beds in the 
Tri-Cities.   Counselling, referral, group and prevention and education 
services provided by SHARE.   Needle exchange and youth clinic, located in 
New Westminster

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Injection Sites Not Answer Locally

Supervised injection facilities are not on the horizon for the Tri-Cities, 
although a needle exchange could be considered to reduce the rate of HIV 
AIDs infection. One in New Westminster draws between 16 and 20 drug addicts 
from the Tri-Cities, mostly from Coquitlam.

"That's our form of harm reduction," said Diane Miller, who's responsible 
for alcohol and drug addiction services with the Fraser Health Authority.

But a local youth advocate says safe injection sites are not the answer for 
ending the pain and suffering that goes along with drug addiction. Young 
people who get hooked on drugs still need to steal and sell sex to get 
their fix, and many are beaten by their pimps or are living on the streets.

"How safe is that?" said Diane Sowden, a Coquitlam woman whose daughter is 
using drugs and living on the Downtown Eastside.

Sowden, who speaks often about drugs and sexual exploitation of youth, said 
she would much rather see money spent on prevention and treatment than safe 
injection sites, which may be more about cleaning up streets than addicts. 
"Are we doing this to get it off the street to make it better for 
tourists?" she asked.

Safe injection sites provide a safer and cleaner environment than the 
street for drug addicts, with clean needles, showers, counselling and other 
services, including emergency health care, according to Dan Reist, 
president of the Kaiser Foundation, an addiction and research advocacy 
group. Suburbs like the Tri-Cities may not need supervised injection 
facilities because most people shoot up in homes that are relatively clean 
with people who can help nearby. "The socio-economic standard is probably 
higher," he said.

Coquitlam Mayor Jon Kingsbury says the suburbs need more addiction services 
but the provincial government, not the cities, should pay the bill. He said 
Vancouver is setting a dangerous precedent by considering its own safe 
injection sites. "We're responsible for land-zoning, they're responsible 
for health," he said.
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MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager