Pubdate: Tue, 19 Feb 2008 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2008 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Margaret Munro, Canwest News Service RESEARCHERS SLAM TORIES OVER SAFE DRUG SITE CONTROVERSY Leading researchers are criticizing the Harper government for not differentiating between legitimate science and a report endorsed by a U.S. law-and-order lobby group about Vancouver's controversial safe drug injection site. "Alarmingly," they say, Health Minister Tony Clement has been citing the lobby group report as evidence of growing "academic debate" over the safe injection site. In a report published Monday in a British medical journal, they say advancing evidence-based public health in Canada "will now require that politicians are able to tell the difference between valid peer-reviewed science and essays posted on the websites of lobby groups." The Drug Free America Foundation lobby group is dedicated to strengthening laws to hold drug users and dealers criminally accountable for their actions. The group's online journal, "which to the untrained eye could easily be mistaken for a scientific journal," disseminates material and essays that oppose the concept of harm reduction, researchers and doctors Evan Wood, Julio Montaner and Thomas Kerr say in an article published Monday in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, a British medical journal. Wood, Montaner and Kerr of the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS are principal investigators at INSITE, an experimental safe injection site in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. Since September 2003, heroin and cocaine addicts have been injecting street-bought drugs at the site staffed by government-paid nurses and counsellors. The researchers' two dozen reports, published inpeer-reviewed journals, conclude that INSITE has reduced the number of syringes on the street, reduced syringe-sharing that can spread infection, increased entry into detox, and reduced drug-overdose deaths. Drug Free America prefer to tout a critique of the injection site. The critique was written by Colin Mangham, a former academic and was, according to Wood, funded by the RCMP. Mangham says INSITE has resulted in "little or no reduction in transmission of blood-borne diseases or public disorder (and) no impact on overdose deaths in Vancouver." Wood and his colleagues say they were alarmed when Clement alluded to Mangham's report and suggested there is academic debate about safe injection sites. "If the health minister equates a report from an RCMP-funded, advocacy group to 24 peer-reviewed scientific papers, including articles in the New England Journal of Medicine, then Canadians need to be worried about the person who is in charge of public health in this country," Wood said Monday. Clement could not be reached for comment. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek