Pubdate: Wed, 18 Feb 2009 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2009 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/feedback/?form=lettersToTheEditorForm Website: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Frances Bula Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Insite MEDICAL OFFICERS SEEK MORE INJECTION SITES Battling both the federal government and drug problems in their communities, B.C.'s medical health officers have quietly passed a resolution asking all health authorities to develop supervised injection sites where needed. The resolution, passed at the officers' biannual council meeting in Prince Rupert and posted publicly last week, recommends that supervised injection sites should "now evolve from a current single research project into being integrated into community primary-care settings, addictions services, hospitals and other health care services" everywhere in the province. The suggestion is controversial. While many health workers and social advocates support injection sites as a way to prevent HIV and hepatitis C infections or drug overdoses associated with injection-drug use, critics say the sites send a dangerous message that it's okay to keep using drugs. At the same time, Health Minister George Abbott confirmed to The Globe and Mail this week that the province will intervene in the court case between the federal government and advocates for InSite, the current injection site in the Downtown Eastside. Last year, Mr. Justice Ian Pitfield of the B.C. Supreme Court ruled that the site is an important health service and is protected by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, a decision the federal government is appealing. Mr. Abbott sent a statement to The Globe, saying: "Our government appreciates the role of the Health Officers Council of British Columbia in advocating for preventative health services for British Columbians. We believe InSite is an important part of the continuum of care and look forward to a positive response from the courts so we can consider the further use of this service to British Columbia's health care system." Medical health officers say they passed their resolution partly to make it clear where they stand in the federal appeal case, and partly because they are grappling with a skyrocketing rate of injection-drug use and infections in some B.C. communities, especially in the north. "I don't understand why the federal government is appealing this decision, but we just wanted to say that many of us have looked at the science and it does have benefits," said Roland Guasparini, the chief medical officer for the Fraser Health Authority. "We don't want the public to be confused." Dr. Guasparini said he doesn't think a site would be considered in his health region currently, because it is trying to get other services in place to deal with drug addiction. Surrey is seeking funding for a sobering centre, for example, that can handle people with addiction problems who now overwhelm emergency wards. As well, he said, the region doesn't have the kind of street scene Vancouver does, so an injection site would not be effective in preventing overdoses. However, medical health officers in northern regions of B.C. are seeing an alarming spike in injection-drug use and infections. David Bowering, the chief medical health officer for the Northern Health Authority that geographically covers 63 per cent of B.C., said there is no immediate recommendation for an injection site, but it is something Prince George and other northern communities might have to consider. Dr. Bowering said there has been a steep increase in HIV and hepatitis C infections in Prince George in the past five years, especially among the native population. That city's needle exchange now gives out 100,000 needles a year. "We're seeing a pattern in Prince George that's reminiscent of what happened in the Downtown Eastside in the '90s," Dr. Bowering said. The Downtown Eastside's infection rate was so high then that it exceeded that of some Third World countries and was labelled an epidemic. It has since dropped and levelled off. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom