Pubdate: Mon, 27 Jul 2015 Source: Vancouver 24hours (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Vancouver 24 hrs. Contact: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/letters Website: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3837 Author: Petr Pospisil Note: Petr Pospisil an educator, musician, union and social organizer. He studied genetics at UBC and co-created www.crackshackormansion.com Page: 6 The Duel This Week's Topic: Are Safe Injection Sites Like Insite in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside Good Public Policy? INSITE SAVES LIVES AND GIVES ADDICTS A CHANCE TO CLEAN UP We know addiction results in violence, depression, illness and early death. We've learned how addiction can devastate families, friends, and colleagues. We have seen people-once children full of potential - become addicts contorting their bodies in the middle of busy streets, pestering citizens for change, or selling their bodies. People of all income levels are affected. Yet addiction imposes the stiffest penalties on those living in the Downtown Eastside, sometimes with mental illness, often with no support network. Insite is a medical facility in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside where users inject drugs under the supervision of medical staff. Some believe Insite encourages criminality by promoting drugs. Many feel this facilitation of drug use sends mixed messages about the dangers of drugs. However, no credible evidence supports those opinions. Since opening in 2003, fewer needles litter the streets, overdose deaths in the vicinity have dropped by 35%, and there has been a reduction in HIV infections. At Insite, unlike in the crevices of society, addicts have the opportunity to engage with medical staff. They are offered health care and addiction treatment. Not a single death has occurred under Insite's caring supervision. No shared needles, no hiding in alleys. According to clinical coordinator Tim Gauthier, Insite handled 30 ODs on the 2014 Thanksgiving weekend alone. Would we have preferred many of those died in the streets? Even the Vancouver Police Department recognizes Insite's value. They often issue advisories to the public recommending addicts use it services. But the federal government wants Insite, and its innumerable services, terminated. Instead of supporting a clearly effective program, they fought a long court battle against Vancouver-Coastal Health and the B.C. Ministry of Health. The Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the closing of Insite is unconstitutional. Chief Justice McLaughlin wrote, "Insite saves lives. Its benefits have been proven. There has been no discernible negative impact on the public safety and health objectives of Canada during its eight years of operation." The Conservatives haven't listened, and recently rammed Bill C-2 through Parliament as an obstacle to new treatment centres, and a nuisance to existing ones. The most common drugs seen at Insite - heroin, powdered cocaine, and pharmaceutical opiates, which hijack the brain and cause intense cravings and physical pain. Insite gives the lowest echelon of society a chance to overcome their demons. Let's applaud the dedicated workers of Insite and other DTES organizations that care for our most vulnerable. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom