Pubdate: Fri, 12 Jul 2013 Source: Coast Reporter (CN BC) Copyright: 2013 Coast Reporter Contact: http://www.coastreporter.net/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/580 Author: Paul Martiquet Note: Editor's note: Dr. Paul Martiquet is the medical health officer for rural Vancouver Coastal Health including Powell River, the Sunshine Coast, Sea-to-Sky, Bella Bella and Bella Coola. PRESCRIPTION FOR A FAILED DRUG POLICY We recently discussed the failure of Canadian drug policy in these pages, along with a call by the Canadian Drug Policy Coalition (CDPC) to decriminalize currently illegal drugs and to regulate cannabis. The CDPC is a broad coalition of non-governmental organizations and individuals committed to improving Canadian drug policies to help people rather than criminalize them. In Canada, drug crimes fall under the authority of the federal Controlled Drugs and Substances Act and include possession, trafficking, importing and exporting and production-related offences. The Act, unfortunately, does not recognize that drugs such as alcohol and tobacco are at least as harmful as some illegal drugs. A multitude of harms result from fighting a 'war' on drugs that does not achieve its goals. The time has come to reduce the incidence of death, disease, crime and addiction. This can be done by ending drug prohibition and supporting a public health approach. To that end, the CDPC recently delivered a report, Getting to tomorrow: A report on Canadian drug policy, that point the way to making the changes that will support people, not just criminalize them. Current Canadian drug policy reflects an outdated understanding of the problems related to substance use. Drug policies need to be reviewed, evaluated and updated where necessary. Getting to tomorrow identifies four broad areas for improvement to adequately address public health and safety issues related to drug markets and substance use in communities. The first step is to modernize Canada's legislative, policy and regulatory frameworks in regards of psychoactive substances. We should eliminate the National Anti-Drug Strategy and replace it with a socially just, public health approach to substances that includes prevention, harm reduction, treatment, education, health promotion and enforcement. We also need to eliminate mandatory minimum sentences for drug crimes - they do not work and are costly. And cannabis needs to be removed from the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act placed into a regulatory framework under the auspices of provincial governments. A second key will be to support and expand efforts to create evidence-based approaches to eliminate stigma and discrimination, and social and health inequities that affect people who use drugs. Scaling up health and social services is the third recommendation. The purpose is to engage people with drug problems and support their efforts to change. A focus on reducing the harms of substance use is crucial. This means integrating the services for substance use into the larger health care system. In addition, scaling up the harm reduction services to include more education, safer consumption services, programs to distribute new supplies for injection and crack cocaine use and heroin assisted treatment. The fourth element is to improve the collection of data on substance use and its effects across jurisdictions. With a clear understanding of where we are, moving forward means policies and treatments can be best targeted and made most effective. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom