Pubdate: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: John Bermingham, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Safe Injecting Rooms) SAFE-INJECTION SITES A SUCCESS, SAYS OFFICIAL Pilot Program: We Need More, Adds Drug Policy CO-Ordinator It's time to make safe-injection sites part of B.C.'s health-care system, says provincial health officer Perry Kendall. Two years after Vancouver's safe-injection-site opened, Kendall has ruled the experiment a success. The Downtown Eastside facility is reducing overdoses, preventing HIV and hepatitis C infections and getting drug addicts into treatment, Kendall says. The pilot program at 139 East Hastings, which opened in September 2003, is North America's first supervised-injection facility. Kendall said most of the 6,000 IV-drug users in the Downtown Eastside are currently shooting up on the street. Only one in 10 use the site daily, and "there's probably room for more." Kendall concedes that finding locations for other injection sites may pose a challenge: "In general, people are quite in favour. They're just not quite sure they want it in their back yard." Donald MacPherson, the city's drug-policy co-ordinator, sees the need for at least one or two more sites in the Downtown Eastside. "We should be treating these facilities in a much more low-key fashion than we do," says MacPherson. "And we should have enough sites to deal with the need for them." Ann Livingstone of the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users (VANDU) says there's a need for an extra four or five injection sites in the Downtown Eastside alone. And she doesn't want authorities to wait until the project ends in 2006. Viviana Zanocco, speaking for the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, says the agency will await the final evaluation of the site before deciding to open another. "We've got to make sure this works," she said. "People want to know what the outcome of the scientific and research part is before any other community or any neighbourhood opens their doors to this. If we can prove to them . . . why it works, then it's easier to make a case." [sidebar] ABOUT THE INJECTION SITE - - North America's first safe-injection site opened in September 2003 as a three-year pilot study. Victoria spent $1.2 million renovating the site at 139 East Hastings. It costs $2 million a year to run the site. At the end of 2006, Health Canada experts will spend a year analyzing the data. - - The safe-injection site gets 630 daily visits, or 18,000 a month. That's up from the 588 per day in 2004. - - There are 12 booths and a public-health nurse on duty. The average visit lasts 20 minutes. There have been at least 200 overdoses but no deaths. More than 1,000 people have been referred this year to addiction counselling services. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake