Pubdate: Fri, 10 Feb 2006 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawa/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Jake Rupert Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?143 (Hepatitis) NEW DRUG ABUSE TEAM WILL TACKLE GROWING PROBLEM 'TOP TO BOTTOM' Broader Community Approach Needed, Mayor Says Ottawa's injection drug users have the highest hepatitis C infection rates in Canada, nine times higher than those in Toronto and the same as Vancouver's drug users, says a University of Ottawa study. The city's numbers beat Toronto and Montreal rates of HIV infection, too. Ottawa Mayor Bob Chiarelli and many others, including public health officials, police, and addiction specialists, hope to address these and other problems caused by drug abuse by creating an integrated drug strategy. The group had its initial meeting yesterday in Ottawa's city council chambers, and the goal is to have a report and concrete recommendations on what to do about drug abuse and related problems in the city before elected officials by June. Deputy city manager Steve Kanellakos said the group will make an inventory of all organizations and programs that deal with drugs and substance abuse -- from schools to Ottawa's new criminal drug court officials to methadone clinics -- to find better ways of working together and closing gaps in the system. He said the group will also review how private and public agencies that deal with the issue of drugs are funded. "This is the first time in Ottawa where we are bringing together all the stakeholders to see how things can be done better," he said. "From top to bottom, we're going to look at the problem and find solutions." In the past, he said, the problem was being dealt with, but the idea now is to develop a plan to get rid of the problem. Mr. Chiarelli said after looking at how services are now provided, "we concluded there was a need for a broader community approach to dealing with the issue of drugs and addiction." Among other things, he said the lack of a residential youth drug treatment facility is a gap in the system that needs to be filled. Under the plan, officials from roughly 100 organizations and programs will be surveyed to determine the issues and possible solutions, a priority list will be developed and a draft strategy will be ready by the spring when public consultations will take place. After this, the final plan and recommendations will go to city council for approval. The plan will focus on immediate, short-term and long-term fixes with the goals of reducing the use of drugs and the harm associated with abuse. This is good news to Ottawa's chief medical officer of health, Dr. David Salisbury, who has been fighting what an Ottawa university researcher has called "an epidemic" of HIV and hepatitis infection amongst Ottawa intravenous drug users. Dr. Lynne Leonard, professor and research scientist at the University of Ottawa's epidemiology and community medicine department, has been studying Ottawa's drug users for years. She estimates there are between 3,300 and 5,300 injection drug users in Ottawa. In the early 1990s, the rate of HIV infection among users was 10 per cent. Today, it's 21 per cent, while 76 per cent of drug users are infected with hepatitis C. "We truly have a major problem with hep-C rates," Dr. Salisbury said. "They are truly quite alarming." Health officials believe the spread of diseases may have been caused by a too-cautious start to a needle-exchange program in the 1990s, when public health officials handed out small numbers of clean needles to addicts. Dr. Salisbury said he hopes the new strategy will shift the focus from addiction fighting to preventing people from becoming addicted in the first place. "Too much focus has been on people at the end of the process (once they are addicted)," he said. "We need to shift the focus to prevention, and hopefully we'll all be working on similar strategies." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman