Pubdate: Sat, 18 Dec 1999 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Author: Sue Scurry, Little River (Vic.) Note: Title supplied by MAP KNOWINGLY ALLOWING PEOPLE TO DIE As I read the headlines "PM acts on drug room" (Page 1, Herald, December 15) my heart sank and I almost wept. I am a health worker who works in an emergency department in a Melbourne hospital. I regularly assist in resuscitating drug addicts who are brought in unconscious. Several weeks ago I attended a lecture by the Victorian Ambulance Service on "best practice" of resuscitating drug overdoses. I was horrified when the ambulance officer told us that several years ago in Melbourne 300 people were resuscitated from heroin overdoses in three months. The figure is now 1,500 in three months. When I heard NSW was going to try out a safe-injecting room and Mr Bracks in Victoria was endeavouring to do so, I thought Australia was finally seeing the light. I attended a course by Professor Timothy O'Farrell, from Harvard University, on drug and alcohol dependence and he proved that by treating addiction, communities could save economically when police, hospitals, courts, prisons, insurance, security and crime were all evaluated. Injecting rooms are a way of keeping people alive and off the street. To allow people to die at a rate higher than car accident deaths and do nothing to prevent it is surely negligent if not criminal. It is an offence to drive away from an accident; surely to knowingly allow people to die from drug overdosage is the same. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart