Pubdate: Mon, 01 Jan 2007 Source: Columbia Journal (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Columbia Journal Contact: http://www.columbiajournal.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4403 Author: George Povery THE PURGATORY OF PROHIBITION Though not mentioned in guidebooks, some tours of Vancouver include a spin through our fresh-air chemical bazaar and shooting gallery at Main and Hastings where tourists may photograph consumers with evident under-nutrition, TB and AIDS, many of them homeless, often with sad histories of childhood violence and mental illness. Wealthier and healthier consumers shop more discretely from their cars and shoot up at home. Dependencies - on jobs, beliefs, gambling, relationships or food or sex or psychoactive drugs - are complex disorders about which we talk much but know little. What we know for sure is that not one of us is immune, and that management is lengthy, costly and uncertain. Beyond their immediate human damage, chemical dependencies deeply wound our society in many ways, including theft, violence and corruption of public servants from cops to cabinet ministers. The global illicit drug trade moves $400 billion yearly, more than the GDP of 90% of nations. The billion Canadian bucks we throw at drug control each year have trivial effect upon supply but powerfully inflate market value. A kilo of heroin that costs $3,000 in Pakistan sells for $150,000 on our streets, which explains why a serious user needs $50,000 spare change yearly to stay cool. The drug trade is the conjoint twin of the trade in women and girls. This vicious synergy has contributed to the disappearance of over 300 of them from Vancouver's darker streets in recent years, more than 100 found dead, many locked in thrall to pimps and gangs from which few escape except through overdose, suicide or murder. In 1995 all illegal drugs caused 805 Canadian deaths, alcohol 6,507 and tobacco 34,728. In 2002 the social costs (lost productivity, law enforcement, health care) of all illegal drugs were $8 million, of alcohol $15 billion, of tobacco $17 billion. So who's for a War on Tobacco? The Yanks fought their War on Alcohol from 1920 to 1933 and lost, during which the Mafiosi honed the social skills that contributed to their later spectacular marketing success in other chemicals. Hell's Angels have since adapted these same skills to our sub-arctic environment. Cannabis is sold openly in Amsterdam, yet Holland's per-capita use is half that of the United States. The mere mention of decriminalization of pot possession in Canada elicits dark threats of tighter border controls that terrify the business sector, knowing that our prosperity depends on cross-border trade and tourism, already jeopardized by 9/11. We're seen from the south as a sub-arctic banana republic. A Four Pillars Approach has been initiated in several European countries, in Sydney, Australia, and in Vancouver, B.C.: - Harm reduction through counseling, sale of medical-quality drugs at market prices and provision of safe use environments - Prevention targeting particularly youth through promotion, control of advertising and sale through tightly regulated frameworks - Treatment through detoxification, counseling and methadone or heroin maintenance - Enforcement of laws against theft and violence The only medically supervised injection site in North America opened near Main and Hastings in 2003. It serves 700 clients daily and has significantly reduced the two greatest user harms; overdose death and needle-transmitted infections. The New England Journal of Medicine published a study on June 8 reporting its successful management of over 200 overdose events and evidence that such support increases the likelihood of users seeking professional help. A heroin maintenance program began there in August, and 30 detox beds are planned. Baby steps, but in the right direction. Only government can take the necessary giant steps. Last October the Health Officers' Council of BC released A Public Health Approach to Drug Control that recommends international adoption of comprehensive, evidence-based approaches such as the Four Pillars. These address psychoactive drug dependency as a deficiency disease requiring social and medical support, resembling diabetes, rather than as a crime to be punished. Well-known health-based interventions have been applied to tobacco and alcohol, far from eliminating but greatly reducing their harm. It's long past time to apply such methods to other chemicals. We can't hope to eliminate their use, but can be certain to decrease their damage to human minds and bodies, reduce our burden of theft and violence, and remove their vast profits from criminal control. We'll free our public servants from irresistible temptations and offers they can't refuse and thus enable them to wage effective war against the truly mind-destroying drugs such as methamphetamines. We'll free many of our sex workers from slavery. George Povey MD Clinical Professor Dept. of Health Care and Epidemiology, UBC