Pubdate: Sat, 12 Jul 2008
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2008 The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Margaret Wente
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Insite (Insite)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Downtown+Eastside
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites)

THEY'RE SICK OF WATCHING PEOPLE DIE

Just Ask the Police and Doctors on the Front Line - Harm Reduction Doesn't Work

VANCOUVER -- Sergeant Mark Steinkampf knows every back alley in 
Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. He greets the regulars by name and 
doesn't miss much. On street patrol one balmy evening, he spots a new 
face - a young, attractive woman on a bicycle. He motions her to 
stop. "I can see that crack pipe in your bra there," he says. He 
pulls it out and dangles it in the air. "You're under arrest. Let me 
read you your rights." He drops the crack pipe and crushes it beneath his shoe.

The woman doesn't have drugs on her. If she's smart, she'll get out 
of here fast and he'll never see her again. If she's not, her 
prospects aren't good. A year from now, she'll likely be ravaged by 
drugs and infections, turning tricks to get the money for a fix. If 
she's very unlucky, she'll wind up like another girl, whose body was 
found by a dumpster, stuffed into a plastic bag like so much garbage.

Vancouver is famous for its innovative approaches to drug treatment. 
Twenty years ago, it launched a bold experiment to tackle the 
problems of the notorious Downtown Eastside. The guiding idea was 
harm reduction. If you couldn't cut off the drug supply or jail all 
the addicts, then at least you could reduce the secondary damage - 
HIV, hepatitis and the like - by giving people clean needles. You 
would surround them with medical and social services. Addiction, all 
agreed, was an illness, and addicts deserved compassion and respect.

Vancouver's needle exchange, the first in North America, opened in 
1989. That first year, about 128,000 needles were handed out. Today, 
the streets are flooded with more than three million free needles 
each year. The sick and malnourished, many of them with open sores, 
freely inject drugs. Between 5,000 and 10,000 addicts live within 
these eight square blocks. The HIV rate hovers around 40 per cent; 
hepatitis-C rate is 85 per cent. There are more than 150 social 
services located in the area, offering everything from counselling 
and shelter to free lunch and art supplies. But there are virtually 
no treatment beds.

Mark Steinkampf, who heads the Downtown Eastside detail, has worked 
this beat for 18 years. He cares about the people, and wants to get a 
message out: Harm reduction - the philosophy that has come to 
dominate drug policy - doesn't work. Just the opposite. It digs the 
pit of addiction deeper and wider.

Insite is the supervised-injection facility that has come to 
symbolize harm reduction. Here, addicts can shoot up in a clean, 
well-lit booth under the eye of helpful nurses, who supply them with 
clean needles and treat them if they overdose. Its supporters say 
Insite is a remarkable success story that reduces infections and 
saves lives. But Sgt. Steinkampf just laughs. "It's like saying, 'Hey 
man, you're really high. Want some treatment? Here's some more drugs!' "

Advocates say the Insite experiment (now in its sixth year) is a 
progressive, compassionate approach that is supported by almost 
everyone. As they tell it, the only opposition comes from a few rogue 
cops, hard-line abstinence types and right-wing ideologues.

In fact, that is not the case. Many front-line workers, including 
addictions doctors, nurses and people who run successful rehab 
programs, believe the philosophy Insite represents has been a 
disaster. Some are hesitant to speak out, because harm reduction is 
official policy and criticizing it can be a career-killer. Others 
think it's time people heard their side.

"We here treating addicts see a very different world," says Stan de 
Vlaming, an addictions doctor who's worked with the Downtown Eastside 
population for a dozen years. His patients are the most entrenched 
and addicted of all. As he sees it, they don't need more free lunch. 
They need entry-level recovery houses - preferably far away from here 
- - where they can be closely supervised for months.

They also need a far more aggressive push into treatment and recovery 
- - something they don't get from the many, many helpers who are busy 
finding them housing and giving them free needles. "Harm reduction 
without a treatment component is a failed policy," he says.

Today, rehabilitation is the treatment of last, not first resort. 
"Rehabilitation" and "recovery" are terms you don't hear from 
advocates of harm reduction. What you do hear, over and over again, 
is the word "safe" - a word that many addictions doctors take issue with.

"I saw a patient the other day who's still injecting two or three 
times a week," says Dr. de Vlaming. "I explained that there's no safe 
way of injecting drugs. He said, 'No one's ever told me that.' "

"Safe injection is a misnomer," says Milan Khara, another veteran 
addictions doctor. "Insite is a supervised injection site. Injections 
inevitably lead to medical complications."

St. Paul's Hospital is the big red-brick building where they deal 
with the complications. It treats addicts with life-threatening 
infections of the heart, brain and bone. "When you put a needle into 
your arm, the infection can land anywhere," Dr. Khara explains. 
Bringing the infection under control with antibiotics takes weeks or months.

Despite the supervised-injection site, the number of addicts with 
such complications has steadily increased. Today, they make up 10 per 
cent of the patient population at St. Paul's, and account for nearly 
20,000 hospital days a year. "Insite did not have any effect on these 
serious infectious complications," says Dr. de Vlaming.

One such patient, a 32-year-old woman with a heart infection, has 
been hospitalized repeatedly. This time, she knows she'll die if she 
can't get a treatment bed. But those are scarce. This month, the 
government finally opened a long-awaited recovery facility in nearby 
Burnaby. It's a drop in the bucket.

"I've lived down here for the best part of a decade and it's been 
getting crazier every day," says Dr. Khara. "I don't see any return 
on our investment." An increasing number of ordinary citizens agree. 
"For the life of me, having lived in that 'hood, I see no evidence of 
any 'harm' being 'reduced,' " wrote Ruth Meta in a letter to The 
Vancouver Courier.

Back on the beat, Sgt. Steinkampf tries to reassure a frantic mother 
who's searching for her son. "Look around!" he says afterward, 
gesturing at the dishevelled men with their shopping carts and the 
ravaged women who look 60, but are 30. "And they're calling this 
fucking mess a success? Anyone can see it has failed utterly."

The police - and many others - argue that well-intentioned but 
misguided social policies have turned this place into a vast enabling 
industry. Contrary to popular belief, the police have no desire to 
throw addicts in jail. They want to help them kick the habit and escape.

They want more drug-court diversion programs, and they want treatment 
to be made a part of sentencing. They're sick of watching people die.

Ten years ago, some of the police, including Sgt. Steinkampf, began 
documenting this world on videotape. They wanted to put a human face 
on the statistics. They called themselves the Odd Squad, and invested 
thousands of hours of their own time to bring their stories to the 
world. Their latest film, Tears for April, should bring shame to 
policy-makers. It chronicles the struggles of several addicts - 
including a girl named April, whom they followed from the time she 
first arrived on the street as a pretty teenager. It was she who was 
found murdered, stuffed into a plastic bag by the dumpster.

[sidebar]

FOUR-PART SERIES

TODAY Three million needles a year

TUESDAY Insite: What the science really says

THURSDAY Sweden and Scotland's U-turn on drugs

NEXT SATURDAY Next stop: Legalize drugs? 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake