Pubdate: Thu, 12 Nov 2015 Source: Etobicoke Guardian (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Etobicoke Guardian Contact: http://www.insidetoronto.com/community/etobicoke Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2218 TALK ALONE WON'T SOLVE TORONTO'S DRUG PROBLEM The war on drugs may be nearing an end, but the war of words on drugs is just getting started. At last week's Toronto Council meeting, a debate on banning hookahs in Toronto business establishments couldn't go for long before hand-wringing questions about the implications of legalized marijuana would have on such a ban. Toronto's chief medical officer of health Dr. David McKeown told councillors again and again that the fulfillment of the Justin Trudeau government's promise to legalize the drug wouldn't have much impact on this ban one way or another. But that didn't stop the rhetoric. It is an easy target for fear-mongering politicians, pot legalization. What terrible things might happen when Toronto residents are granted easier, consequence-free access to the long-unlawful, debatably unhealthy drug? Here's the thing: Torontonians are already ingesting substances illegal and legal that cause different degrees of harm. And Toronto has been dealing with that reality for a decade now, through the Toronto Drug Strategy. On Monday, Dr. McKeown provided an update on the city's attempts to deal with the problems that arise from addiction, experimentation and overdose in the city. Overdose right now is the big problem faced by public health officials. Over the past 10 years, death by drug overdose has increased by 41 per cent, and is now the second biggest cause of death for young people. (Vehicle collisions remain the first.) The culprit in the overdose spike is a resurgence in popularity for opiates like heroin - highly addictive and so difficult to discourage with the threat of arrest and long jail sentences. There is no easy way to deal with this, and the Drug Strategy's implementation board has come up with a partial solution: POINT, a Toronto Public Health program to prevent overdoses in Toronto. POINT distributes a kit for delivering Naxoline, a drug that can reverse the fatal effects of an overdose if administered immediately. So far, 2,000 kits have been distributed, and the drug has been used 300 times. More lives might be saved if the province and federal government passed a Good Samaritan law so that people present at an overdose can call 911 without fear of arrest themselves. That won't solve things either, but that is the reality: when it comes to drug use and abuse, there's no solution, just mitigation. And no amount of talk will change that. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt