Pubdate: Tue, 15 Mar 2016 Source: Ottawa Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.ottawasun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://www.ottawasun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/329 Author: Jerry Agar Page: 13 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) DRUG INJECTION SITES NO CURE-ALL Government Policies Need to Be Based on Facts in Order to Be Effective. On Monday, Toronto city hall announced it will consider establishing services to allow users of such drugs as heroin and fentanyl to inject them in a supervised, "safe" environment, to mitigate overdoses and to help prevent the spread of disease. Nowhere in the city's press release, announcing the intention to consider setting up the sites, is there any emphasis on an effort to get people off drugs. Shouldn't that be the goal? You will no doubt read and hear this issue is once again being debated, that the evidence is in and that it is overwhelming that safe injection sites (SIS) provide a benefit to society overall in their harm reduction capabilities. Is that true, beyond a reasonable doubt? Toronto's Medical Officer of Health, Dr. David McKeown, says, "Research shows that supervised injection sites save lives, reduce drug overdoses and limit the spread of blood-born diseases." Are those statements accurate? Will it save lives? If there are overdoses at the site it is unlikely anyone will die. At Vancouver's Insite legal drug injection clinic there have been many overdoses but no deaths due to intervention by medical staff. A report by Health Canada's Expert Advisory Committee (EAC) in 2008, studying Canada's only SIS, determined it saved about one life a year. Will legal injection clinics reduce overdoses in general? The EAC determined, "There is no direct evidence that SIS influence overdose death rates ... Mathematical modeling is based on assumptions that may not be valid." What of McKeown's argument about, "limiting the spread of blood-born diseases?" The Health Canada EAC reported, "There is no direct evidence that SIS reduce rates of HIV infection, and the mathematical models used are based on assumption that may not be valid." You will no doubt hear crime was reduced in Vancouver with the inception of Insite. As I reported in 2013 when this issue was last raised in Toronto, Mike McCormack, President of the Toronto Police Association, refuted claims Insite has reduced crime in the neighborhood where it operates. He told me in Vancouver, "They have had to deploy 90 additional police officers to the area surrounding the safe injection site to deal with the crime related to the drugs associated with the site." Tom Stamatakis, President of the Vancouver Police Union and the Canadian Police Association, said the police presence was, "disproportionate to how resources are allocated in the rest of the city, so it is disingenuous to suggest that it is only Insite that has had an impact on criminal activity in that neighborhood." The Health Canada EAC reported, "Though a private security company contracted by the Chinese Business Association reported reductions in crime in the Chinese business district in a surrounding area outside the DTE (downtown east side), our analysis of police data for the DTE and surrounding areas showed no changes in rates of crime recorded by police. The majority of local residents, service providers, business owners and police did not notice any increases." Perhaps public resources could be better utilized to deal with Toronto's drug problem. Will councillors look for answers to those questions and concerns and will answers be provided? Let's not get our feelings ahead of our facts. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom