Pubdate: Mon, 10 Nov 2003
Source: Washington Times (DC)
Copyright: 2003 News World Communications, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.washingtontimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/492
Author: Jeremy Hainsworth
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms)

ADDICTS HAIL SAFE CLINIC FOR INJECTION

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) -- David Lands walked into the upscale 
office building, checked in with the receptionist and headed inside to 
shoot up heroin and cocaine.

The frail Mr. Lands was one of the first addicts to use North America's 
only government-sponsored safe injection site, which opened in September as 
a trial project in a seamy downtown neighborhood.

"They should have more places like this," he said, holding two peanut 
butter and jelly sandwiches provided by the staff at the Insite clinic as 
he recovered from his heroin and cocaine speedball. "You'd find less people 
in the alleys that have overdosed."

Critics disagree, predicting that providing a legal place for addicts to 
shoot up only will lead to more drug use. John P. Walters, chief of the 
U.S. anti-drug effort, called Insite "state-sponsored suicide."

Those who are using the clinic believe the opposite.

Mr. Lands, 32, who has been addicted to heroin since 1997, said junkies can 
end up injured or dead from robbers or from overdosing when they use drugs 
in alleys and other out-of-the-way spots.

"If you overdose, they help you here," he said. "Not in the alleys. They 
don't care."

A 39-year-old construction worker, who would identify himself only as Joe, 
agreed that Insite is safer.

"I was in an alley shooting up, and two guys stuck a knife in my throat," 
he said, describing a robbery of his drugs. "They would have killed me if I 
hadn't given it up."

Similar clinics operate in Zurich; Frankfurt, Germany; and Sydney, 
Australia. Canada's federal government has committed $1.2 million for 
research during the one-year pilot project at Insite, and British Columbia 
is paying $2.4 million in costs.

Mayor Larry Campbell, a former police office and coroner, won election last 
year pledging to establish safe injection sites in Vancouver as part of a 
"four-pillar" drug policy involving treatment, prevention, harm reduction 
and enforcement.

He says Insite is a vital part of efforts to reduce overdose deaths and the 
spread of HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C via dirty needles, and to provide 
primary health care to drug users.

The World Health Organization has singled out Vancouver as having a high 
HIV-infection rate in a wealthy, Western city. According to the British 
Columbia Center for Disease Control, more than 30 percent of the area's 
addicts are infected with HIV or have full-blown AIDS, and the city already 
was handing out needles to addicts in an anti-infection program.

Joanne Csete, a spokesman for Human Rights Watch, praised the opening of 
Insite as essential to helping users avoid overdoses and infection while 
exposing them to help toward kicking the habit.

"It's certainly a step forward," she said. "We hope they will continue to 
respect this as a part of essential humane services for drug users."

The clinic is exempt from Canadian drug laws, allowing the addicts to 
possess heroin and cocaine inside. Such an exemption can be made for 
medical or scientific reasons, or if it is in the public interest.

Mr. Lands and Joe the construction worker said Insite requires addicts to 
bring their own drugs. The clinic provides a bowl containing a needle, a 
"cooker" and matches to heat up the drugs, and an antiseptic swab.

Junkies using Insite's facilities have their backs to nurses when shooting 
up, but they are monitored by mirrors in the 12 injection booths, the two 
men said. Nurses show those who ask how to inject safely, but otherwise 
have no direct role in the process, they said.

After injecting, users are monitored in a "chill-out room" -- where Mr. 
Lands got his sandwiches -- before leaving. They also can get help if they 
want to kick their habits.

Vivianna Zanocco of the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, which runs the 
clinic with a local advocacy group, said smoking marijuana or crack cocaine 
inside is prohibited. She added that worries about drug dealers' 
congregating around the site have proved unfounded.

Police maintain a low profile outside, permitting addicts to enter the 
clinic with their drugs.

"It is not the police intention to intervene or interfere with anyone 
entering the site, unless there is a lawful reason to do so," said police 
Chief Jamie Graham.
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