Pubdate: Monday 8 February 1999 Source: Vancouver Province (Canada) Copyright: The Province, Vancouver 1999 Contact: http://www.vancouverprovince.com/ Author: Canadian Press IN A COURSE FOR DRUG USERS, EMPHASIS IS ON SAVING LIVES Andrew Parker is primed to act if he encounters a drug addict overdosing on heroin or cocaine. Parker, 31, is not a paramedic. He's not a social worker. He is an addict. The tall, friendly man with a gap-toothed grin is also a graduate of a course teaching addicts how to survive their addictions and what to do to revive an overdosed friend. The former fisherman has a taste for cocaine and marijuana that's sharpened over the 10 years he has been living in Vancouver's downtown east side. Parker is part of the Peer Support Training offered by the Vancouver-Richmond health board, a program that isn't trying to talk users out of their drugs. Instead, it offers blunt sessions on such procedures as cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Within weeks, more than a dozen drug users will be in classes at a drop-in centre in the east side. Parker is one of 19 graduates of the first session, held late last year at a cost of $17,000 to the board. He talks easily about clearing airways, checking pulses and the proper number of thrusts to the chest in CPR. Last year, more than 370 people died in Vancouver after overdosing, continuing an upward trend blamed on a glut of street drugs, especially cocaine. Parker's PST classes began in November. Twenty people went through the 14-day course, which cost the health board about $17,000. Participants paid nothing. "If it saves one person . . . I will think it was worthwhile," says Sharon Ritmiller, an emergency-room nurse now employed with the board. Students are told they should buy from trustworthy dealers so they know what they're using. They're also taught about the signs of overdose, and warned not to shoot up alone so a friend can be around to help if they overdose. - --- MAP posted-by: Patrick Henry