Pubdate: Sat, 26 Aug 2006 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2006, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Camille Bains, Canadian Press Alert: Save Lives by Preserving InSite http://www.mapinc.org/alert/0334.html Cited: British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS http://www.cfenet.ubc.ca Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/InSite Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Downtown+Eastside Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) EXPAND SAFE-INJECTION SITE, ADDICTION STUDY URGES B.C.'s Insite Praised but Project's Fate Remains Uncertain VANCOUVER -- The first study to gauge drug addicts' experiences at a safe-injection site suggests North America's only such facility needs to be expanded to reduce public drug use and the unsafe disposal of needles. But as the clock ticks toward the site's licence expiring on Sept. 12, the federal government remains tight-lipped about whether the site will be allowed to continue operating under an exemption of Canada's drug laws. The study, published in the current issue of the international scientific journal Addiction Behaviors, surveyed 1,082 injection drug users, 75 per cent of whom said the facility positively changed their injecting behaviour. Seventy-one per cent of respondents said using the facility meant they weren't shooting up outside, while 56 per cent reported less unsafe disposal of dirty needles. Addicts who use the centre, known as Insite, inject their own heroin or cocaine under the watchful eye of a nurse as part of a pilot project that began three years ago. Evan Wood, a senior author of the study, said yesterday that HIV rates have also come down in the drug-riddled Downtown Eastside since Insite opened. That means health-care costs have been reduced, because it costs taxpayers $250,000 to treat each person infected with the virus, he said. Dr. Wood is concerned that the federal Conservative government received a request to continue the exemption six months ago and still has not made any kind of announcement so close to the licence expiring. "I'm worried, from a public health perspective, about what will happen if the site closes," said Dr. Wood, an epidemiologist at the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS and an assistant professor in the department of medicine at the University of British Columbia. "I think there will be such a backlash in Vancouver when we go back to the same patterns of needles in storefronts and people injecting in public in the tourist areas of Gastown, that British Columbia will probably not tolerate it for long." Federal Health Minister Tony Clement was not available for comment. Robin Walsh, a ministry spokesman, said no decision has yet been made on the fate of the site. "The minister is undertaking assessment of the pilot project and the results to date," Mr. Walsh said from Ottawa. The success of Insite -- modelled after safe-injection sites in Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands -- has been hailed by police, community leaders in the Downtown Eastside, Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan and four of the city's former mayors, including Liberal Premier Gordon Campbell. "I would say that the international scientific community working in addiction is essentially holding its breath and watching to see what happens here," Dr. Wood said. Insite's positive impact has been written about in studies published in top international journals such as The Lancet, the British Medical Journal and The New England Journal of Medicine. The facility represents the harm-reduction component of Vancouver's four-pronged approach to the drug problem in the Downtown Eastside, where about 5,000 addicts live in a 10-block area often referred to as Canada's poorest postal code. Prevention, treatment and enforcement are the other aspects of dealing with the issue, which keeps tourists away from the area and its open drug trade. "I'm a little bit concerned that some of the key players with the federal government aren't aware, not appropriately informed, about the evidence in terms of the public health issues and how to address them," Dr. Wood said. "For [Prime Minister] Stephen Harper to have said recently that 'our government will support prevention, enforcement and treatment,' and not mention harm reduction is very disturbing to people who are familiar with addiction." Harm reduction has the greatest scientific support behind it, while there's not a lot of evidence to suggest strategies to prevent drug use work, Dr. Wood said. As for enforcement, 30 per cent of HIV-infected drug users likely acquired the virus while in prison, he said. And while people support treatment, only a fraction of drug addicts are attracted to that option, Dr. Wood added. Ernie Crey, a first-nations advocate, noted that aboriginals are overrepresented in the Downtown Eastside and said he's worried about his community's fate. "I'm trying to encourage more prominent aboriginal leaders in British Columbia to make their position known on the site to the federal government," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake