Pubdate: Fri, 09 Nov 2007 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Joey Thompson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) WHY WE MAY BE TACKLING DRUGS THE WRONG WAY Prevention And Treatment Come First, Critics Say Faith-based charities helping addicts in Vancouver's skid row are not the only ones to question the almost blind fixation on harm reduction at the expense of prevention and recovery. Many of the officers deployed to police the grimy results of destitution and prostitution in the Downtown Eastside are also troubled by the glaring absence of programs aimed at helping -- and if necessary forcing -- druggies to get clean. Indeed, much-needed funds to establish treatment and recovery facilities for hardcore users isn't even a blip on the radar of advocates for harm reduction -- an ideology that addresses the health and social problems associated with drug use but not the use itself. "Front line officers were not convinced but we reluctantly supported [the supervised injection site] because it was supposed to be a comprehensive strategy designed to make a difference," Vancouver police union representative Tom Stamatakis told me this week. "Where is the focus on prevention and treatment -- with treatment being the most important and most under-committed?" Critics of the current preoccupation with harm reduction -- needle exchanges, injections sites, that kind of thing -- say we ain't seen nothing yet. Legalization of drugs is next on the agenda if the boards of publicly funded drug-policy groups, such as the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse and the House Committee on Illegal Drugs, continue to be influenced or controlled by HR buffs. Dr. Colin Mangham, one of Canada's top addiction specialists, agrees federal and provincial governments as well as the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority are ignoring the dire need for prevention and treatment. He says HR libertarians are steering the nation's drug policy now. "Harm reduction has so permeated governments and the civil service and so politicized drug policy that evidence against [it] is being ignored, information is being managed in support of it, voices in opposition are decreasingly being included in drug-policy dialogue," he warned in a policy paper released last January. "Canada's drug policy has become vulnerable to the drug-legalization movement. This can only harm efforts to reduce drug problems." But would legalization and regulation of drugs be a bad thing? After all, tobacco and alcohol are legal. "One of the most serious drawbacks of legalization is its virtual irreversibility," Mangham says. "Preventing a bad habit is far easier than getting rid of one." The B.C. physician lists a host of reasons why drug-legalization won't fix the country's drug-use problem: - - Legalization sends a message to kids that drug use is acceptable. - - Violent crime committed by users of psychoactive drugs will rise. - - Organized crime won't leave town; it will turn to other profit-generating crimes, as it did when alcohol-prohibition was repealed. - - Addicts who commit crimes for cash do so not just for drug money. Many are jobless and have no legal source of income. - - The black market will continue to exist unless all currently illegal drugs are available, free, to everyone in unlimited quantities and combinations. Supplied drugs would have to be of the highest purity because users seek the highest high. - - Studies indicate if adults use drugs at home, kids are likely to too. - - Moderate users may increase intake, developing a tolerance to the drug with increased use. - - Sure, tobacco and booze kill many more Canadians than do illegal drugs, but that's because they're legal and easily accessible. Besides, with two dangerous "legal" drugs, do we really need more? - - Illegality of drugs is a deterrent, studies show. Remove the deterrent and usage will climb. - - Revenue generated by taxing drugs would be quickly gobbled up by the increased social costs for health and treatment services, family violence, child abuse and impaired-driving accidents. Mangham calls on the authorities to bolster treatment programs and the mechanisms required to get addicts into them. He advocates compulsory abstinence and treatment, if need be, for those who break the law or who put themselves and/or others at risk. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman