Pubdate: Sat, 20 Jan 2018 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2018 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/letters Website: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Megan Stacey Page: A2 ANTI-OD SITE WILL 'SAVE LIVES' Temporary facility overdue 'because with every tick of the clock, someone else's life could end,' says ex-addict In a city where drug overdose deaths in the first three weeks of 2018 have nearly matched the entire 2017 death toll, there's finally an answer. Or at least a good start. Advocates say London's newly unveiled overdose prevention site at 186 King St. - the first of its kind in Ontario - is key to stemming the tide of overdose deaths in the city. The local picture is so dire that Chris Mackie, the area's medical officer of health, described London's challenges as a "big-city drug problem in a mid-size city." Already in 2018, five people have died from suspected overdoses - three of them in a span of 48 hours. London police statistics from last year show four overdose deaths - and another four awaiting confirmation. But deputy chief Daryl Longworth warned the true numbers are likely much higher when unreported cases are included. "We don't have time to wait, because with every tick of the clock, someone else's life could end," Andy MacLean, a harm-reduction support worker, said at Friday's announcement. He took on that role after kicking his own addiction. During the week between Christmas and New Year's, London had more emergency room visits as a result of opioid overdoses than any region in the province. The temporary overdose-prevention site, which has provincial approval to operate for at least six months, will offer a safe place to do drugs under medical supervision, with clean equipment and easily accessible naloxone, an opioid antidote, nearby. It's set to open Feb. 12. Brian Lester, executive director of the Regional HIV/AIDS Connection in London, described the temporary facility as a "dress rehearsal" for full-fledged supervised injection sites the city hopes to open later this year. Like those more permanent facilities, London's temporary site will offer community supports - including treatment information - and a safe room for users to come down off a high. Despite a vocal minority who oppose the harm-reduction measure, community consultation done by the Middle sex London Health Unit showed that only one per cent of people believe the overdose-prevention site won't offer any benefits to the city. "We know that the health impacts of supervised consumption are positive. In general, the impact on the neighbourhood is positive as well - less public injecting behaviour, less needle waste. We want to see that happening in our community," Mackie said. "This temporary site will really help us define what the more permanent sites will look like." Mayor Matt Brown said some kind of supervised facility is past due. "So many people have died before we got here," he said. "This temporary overdose-prevention site is going to save lives." And it's a perfect fit for the Regional HIV/AIDS Connection in London, which already works closely with many Londoners who use drugs through a busy needle exchange program and other services. "I don't imagine there'll be a new flood of folks, it'll be the people who already know us and trust us. They'll say 'I want to opt in, I want the support, because I don't want to die when I inject,' " Lester said. Until now, staff at the downtown agency have had to tell clients that they can't inject drugs on the property, basically shooing people away in order to follow the law. "It's hard for caring support workers to not have an option to help. We can finally say yes," Lester said. Once open, the temporary OD-prevention site will run Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and on weekends from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt