Pubdate: Thu, 08 May 2003 Source: Westender (Vancouver, CN BC) Copyright: 2003 WestEnder Contact: Http://Www.Westender.Com/ Details: Http://Www.Mapinc.Org/Media/1243 Author: Mary Frances Hill URBAN LEGENDS: A DOWNTOWN EASTSIDE NURSE BREAKS DOWN BARRIERS BETWEEN HEALTH CARE AND ACTIVISM Who: Megan Oleson What: Registered Nurse, On Site As A Volunteer At The "Safer Injection Site", Organized By The Coalition For Harm Reduction, At 327 Carrall, Near Pigeon Park. The site, which is not government sanctioned, opened last week and has so far welcomed about 15 addicts each night, between 10 a.m. And 2 p.m. Roots: Raised in victoria, studied nursing there at Camosun College. Has worked as a community activist with Vancouver's Anti-Poverty Committee, the Housing Action Committee and the Vancouver Area Network Of Drug Users. Born In Scrubs: "I Was very sick when I was younger (with hemolitic anemia) and it was challenging as I was growing up. I spent a lot of time in hospitals. I have this philosophy that you become what you're most familiar with." Beat The Heat: "We opened this space because our needle exchange was dropping by more than half, and our condom exchange was dropping by more than half, because of the 41 reallocated policemen in the downtown eastside. We knew we needed to do something and we needed to do it now . People aren't accessing clean needles (at needle exchanges). The police walk by, park their car out on the front. They make their presence known around here. We pretty much ignore them." Syringe In One Hand, Protest Banner In Another: Aside from her work in the downtown eastside, Oleson works as a critical care nurse at Vancouver General Hospital. "There are a lot of obstacles in nursing. You have to work really hard for the maximum wage that you get. And there are a lot of politics involved. That increases your workload by more than a half. It becomes so physically and mentally demanding. Here I have relationships with everyone who walks in the door. It's not a medical model. It's a beautiful thing because it's so much more holistic." A Room Of One's Own: "A lot of addicts don't want to be rushed. They don't want to inject alone, and they need access to clean water and rigs and supplies. Here they aren't going to be harassed, there won't be a million questions when they come in . There was a woman last night, it was the first time she had come into the space. She was so happy she could sit at the table and take her time." Out Of Sight, Out Of Mind: Oleson cites a report from the BC Centre For Excellence In HIV/AIDS, In which a majority of polled injection-drug addicts stated that immediately after a police officer confiscated their drugs, they scored more. "Policing doesn't prevent drug use, it doesn't prevent selling drugs. It just clears an open-air market that is visible, but it pushes it somewhere else. It forces (drug users) into riskier situations, like further back into the alleys, under the viaduct, or alone in their rooms." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth