Pubdate: Thu, 12 Apr 2012 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2012 The Ottawa Citizen Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Elizabeth Payne A LACK OF INSITE There's a proven way to save vulnerable lives and vastly improve others, but elected officials fight it at every step Every week in Ottawa, two people die of causes that are largely preventable. Another two or three residents become infected with diseases that will shorten and worsen their lives and may eventually spread to others, something that could also be prevented. Are those numbers remarkable? Maybe not. Injection drug use is, after all, risky behaviour. But here's what is remarkable: In a city in which people are known to throw themselves into campaigns to help the sick and less fortunate, many are unaware of, or indifferent to, those facts, or even that Ottawa has an injection drug problem. More remarkable still is that the official attitude toward those who will die of drug overdoses this week or next, or who will contract HIV or Hepatitis C, is not simply indifference, but disapproval and blame. Ottawa does have an injection drug problem and, along with it, a serious infectious disease transmission problem. There is no single, or simple, solution. But harm reduction in the form of places where addicts can inject drugs safely will save lives, improve others, and help some addicts get off drugs. Peer-reviewed research supports the good that safe injection sites do from many angles. The Supreme Court of Canada has opened the door to other sites besides Vancouver's controversial Insite. Now, an extensive report recommends bringing safe injection to Ottawa. So why do many of those in power - from federal cabinet ministers to Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson - fight it every step of the way? It makes no sense, but that is the reality of harm reduction in Canada, especially safe injection sites. And the battleground has shifted to Ottawa with the release of the longawaited report recommending not one, but two, safe injection sites in the city, near where the addicts are. The "Toronto and Ottawa Supervised Consumption Assessment," a study from Ahmed Bayoumi from the Centre for Research on Inner City Health at St. Michael's Hospital and Carol Strike at the University of Toronto's Dalla Lana School of Public Health says Ottawa would benefit from locations where addicts could inject drugs safely. A group of concerned citizens is already discussing setting one up. Isn't it time politicians got out of the way? An Ottawa safe injection site makes sense to people such as Wendy Muckle, the executive director of Ottawa Inner City Health, who sees the effects of injection drug abuse daily in her work. "I don't want people to die, and I don't want them to be infected by HIV and Hepatitis C. I think most citizens would want their fellow citizens safer." Muckle says safe injection sites are just one strategy to reduce harm from drug addiction, and she says Ottawa should not expect to plant a replica of Vancouver's Insite clinic in downtown Ottawa because that probably would fail. "We need to go through a thoughtful process of talking it out as a community," she said, noting that her organization ran managed alcohol programs - a similar concept for alcoholics - that were designed in Ottawa and had been both successful and relatively uncontroversial. That might be too much to ask for a safe injection site, though, something that has been a political flashpoint in Vancouver and across the country and something the federal government fought all the way to the Supreme Court. Insite, which incorporates the view that addiction is an issue of health, not policing, has reduced overdose deaths and infectious disease transmission rates in the city. It has also been successful in getting addicts off drugs, which is a stated goal of the federal Conservative government. Still, Tony Clement, while health minister, said he believed it was a form of "harm addition." Locally, the official line is much the same. Mayor Watson and Police Chief Charles Bordeleau both oppose a safe injection site in Ottawa. Former police chief Vern White, now a Conservative Senator, said while still chief that such a site would have an "extreme negative impact" on the local community. If these seem like insurmountable odds against such a program setting up in Ottawa, Dr. Mark Tyndall, head of infectious diseases at the Ottawa Hospital, does not see it that way. Tyndall, who has been outspoken about the need for a safe injection site in Ottawa, is unfazed by the politics surrounding the issue. "I don't see a lot of hurdles. We have strong evidence and the backing of the Supreme Court." "The police can do a lot to obstruct this kind of site, but, at the end of the day, this is a health issue and they are not health providers. The Supreme Court didn't say anything about having your police force on side or the mayor. It would be nice, but it doesn't have to happen." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D