Pubdate: Fri, 28 Dec 2007 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v07/n1449/a05.html Author: Ann Livingston DRUG-USER ADVOCATE CANS COURIER To the editor: Re: "Former cop backs mandatory drug treatment," Dec. 14. Yikes! Mike Howell writes that Dave Dickson said the focus should shift from harm reduction services to mandatory drug treatment because that is the only way women in the sex trade will change their lives. It is irresponsible to write a story quoting a person like poor Dave Dickson mentioning "mandatory drug treatment" without letting us all know what "mandatory drug treatment" is. Kidnapping a person and holding them against their will while "treating" them is illegal and is perhaps a poor approach. As far as I know, "forced" treatment is legal for minors, so Canadian children can be locked up and "treated." I also know this approach when unsuccessful often creates a lifetime "treatment resistance" because it destroys the therapeutic value of treatment and instead associates a medical treatment with punishment. It is irresponsible to publish stories in the Courier that are completely out of context. With no details of what is meant by "mandatory drug treatment," Dave Dickson gets the hopes up of those who are related to people who use illegal drugs thinking there is a strategy that has not yet been tried here but is effective. I am horrified to read Dave's comment that the missing women "weren't women who phoned home every week. Their contact was minimal, so when they went missing, no one really noticed." A public dialogue about what is the "best practice" in "addiction treatment" is welcome and necessary in Vancouver, as is a review of how so many women went missing with no action by police. Please let's not flip off empty terms like "mandatory drug treatment" and keep spreading misinformation about whether the missing women regularly phoned home. Ann Livingston, Executive Program Director, Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake