Pubdate: Thu, 01 Mar 2007 Source: Vancouver 24hours (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Canoe Inc Contact: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3837 Author: Erin Airton Cited: http://www.castvancouver.org/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) CAST A GOOD DEAL Every once in a while, an idea so innovative and so hopeful arrives into the public square for discussion, that one cannot help but be grateful that sometimes we can put political differences aside to focus on making lives better. This week, Mayor Sam Sullivan, along with Dr. Don Rix, John Reynolds, David Holtzman and Joy MacPhail announced the creation of the Chronic Addiction Substitution Treatment program. In the simplest of terms, this program will assist hardened drug addicts by providing paid-for legal prescription drugs so that they can leave the expensive, life-destroying illegal drugs like crack and crystal meth behind. Instead of hiding in dark alleys to shoot up and then breaking into cars or selling their bodies to get money to buy more, addicts will be assigned to a physician who will assess the correct legal drug for their needs and begin the process of peering into the layers - mental health or otherwise - that caused the drug abuse in the first place. The addicts in the trial program - estimated around 700 - will be assigned to a doctor wherever they wish. This way they can escape the hell-hole of the Downtown Eastside and begin to re-establish their lives, without the stigma of a crack addiction and potentially unbearable pressure from a former dealer or pimp. Social workers in the worst neighbourhoods in Canada will tell you that addiction is complicated and each addict has a different set of circumstances that led him or her into the deceptively comforting arms of drugs. However, it is almost impossible to treat the underlying issues without first addressing the drug abuse which leads to shortened lives, criminal records, disease, damaged children and hopelessness. It is no secret that political leader after political leader has struggled with the spiralling illegal drug issue, particularly in the Downtown Eastside. It is one of the most visible failures of our city. Each solution in the past addressed goals like less crime or less disease or less street prostitution. These were all admirable, but the real goal should have been helping people get off drugs. Period. If we know of a drug that we know will help a cancer sufferer live a better life we don't hesitate to prescribe it. We don't stigmatize that person with cancer - in fact, as a society, we wrap our arms tightly about him and support him in any way we can. These are early days for this new program. It will take perseverance and it will take courage, especially as there are bound to be failures. But it is so important we not allow our fellow man lie in filth and despair just because we are afraid. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom