Pubdate: Mon, 31 Mar 2008 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2008 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Allison Hanes, with files from Kelly Grant Cited: Vancouver Coastal Health Insite http://www.vch.ca/sis/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hr.htm (Harm Reduction) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?137 (Needle Exchange) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Insite (Insite) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Downtown+Eastside Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) NEEDLES AND THE DAMAGE DONE As the Conservatives Pursue a Drug Policy Eschewing Harm Reduction, Provinces Are Moving the Other Way Long before Edmonton got its first needle-exchange program in the 1980s, a group called the Non-Beverage Alcohol Coalition lobbied for inner-city liquor stores to open longer hours and against merchants who knowingly sold cans of Listerine and Chinese cooking oil for the purpose of intoxication. The idea behind their efforts was part of a movement dubbed harm reduction that has been part of the fight against addiction and substance abuse for decades, spawning such controversial phenomena as free crack paraphernalia in Ottawa, wine for the homeless in Toronto and, most notably, supervised drug-injection sites in Vancouver's notorious Downtown Eastside. "We had store owners in the city of Edmonton who were selling Lysol to aboriginal people with a nail so they could puncture the can and get the alcohol and making a lot of money doing it," recalled Hope Hunter, the executive director of the Boyle Street Community Health Services, which for 37 years has operated programs for sex trade workers and drug addicts in a low-income swath of the Alberta capital. "A harm-reduction approach says, 'I'm not trying to stop you from drinking. I'm trying to make sure what you're drinking is safe.' " This philosophy has become the orthodoxy among front-line outreach workers who say it saves lives and prevents the spread of disease, but is decried by critics, including a drug-enforcement agency connected to the United Nations, as enabling addicts to continue their dangerous lifestyles in violation of the law. Harm reduction plays no part in the Conservative government's new $64-million National Anti-Drug Strategy, which sets aside money for prevention campaigns, law enforcement and treatment, and would institute mandatory minimum sentences for traffickers, producers and dealers who sell to young people. But even as the federal government pursues a get-tough approach, some of Canada's biggest cities and many provinces are moving to the opposite extreme. This week in Toronto, Mayor David Miller gave the opening address at a conference of social-service agencies, community groups and even some addicts, where the consensus was that prohibiting drugs makes the trade more lucrative, stiffer sentences punish the sick and the best way to reduce crime around substance abuse is to give junkies a safe place to smoke and shoot up. "We know from research around the world that harm-reduction programs work," Mr. Miller said at the event in council chambers. The City of Toronto offers three harm-reduction programs. Since 1989 it has distributed clean needles to intravenous-drug users and since 2006, it has handed out "safer crack kits" to crack-cocaine smokers - -- which include glass stems, mouthpieces and metal screens to keep users from burning or cutting their lips. Wine is also provided to the homeless at Seaton House, a city-run men's shelter. Such programs continue to run despite the federal government's opposition, funded by various other levels of government where they find sympathy. The City of Ottawa began distributing "safer inhalation kits" for crack users in 2005, but when council revoked its support last year, the province rescued the program, which continues through the Centretown Community Health Centre. If there is a showdown looming between those who view harm reduction as non-judgmental realism and those who see it as condoning crime, it is likely to be over Insite, the supervised injection site in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. Run by the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority as a pilot project since 2003, the program is funded by the city and the province, but the federal government holds the licence. Insite has more than 7,000 registered users and an average of 600 individuals a day stop in to get high -- 12% on morphine, 27% on cocaine and a staggering 40% on heroine -- under the watchful eye of public health nurses. As of 2006, there were 453 overdoses but no fatalities and more than 4,000 junkies were referred for counselling. The UN's International Narcotics Control Board disapproves of Insite for violating anti-drug conventions. A leaked report in 2006 from the RCMP's Drugs and Organized Crime Awareness program criticized the project for encouraging injection-drug use. The Conservative government threatened to pull Insite's licence and, after a battle last year, it extended the permit, but only until June. Supporters, such as Senator Larry Campbell, a former Vancouver mayor, have personally vowed to keep Insite open if the federal government tries to shut it down -- "even if they arrest me," he said in a phone interview this week. "I'm not going to stand by and watch citizens die and our disease rates go up because we have a bunch of dinosaurs for a prime minister and a government," he said. Despite the support of front-line experts, residents in most communities remain unconvinced of the merits of programs that provide addicts with the tools and space to feed their high-risk habits. The distribution of crack-pipe supplies had to be suspended in Nanaimo, B.C., recently after a public outcry to allow for proper consultation with the local community, including the mayor and city council. A needle exchange in Victoria will have to go mobile after complaints that a brand new downtown facility where it was to be housed with other programs was too close to a private school. Richard Stanwick, the chief medical officer for the Vancouver Island Health Authority, said that harm-reduction strategies don't just protect the drug-users from HIV, Hepatitis C and abscesses, they also prevent the outbreak of diseases that can spread to the rest of the population, like tuberculosis and drug-resistant bacteria, as well as reduce costly hospital stays for infected heart valves and complications that come from contaminated or makeshift supplies. "The real art of public health now," he said, "is going to be finding ways to ensure that these programs are implemented in a fashion that benefit the population we're targeting but at the same time addresses the concerns of the broad population about where and how these programs are going to be delivered." At the Toronto symposium, Anna Costa said she wants to be compassionate, but she witnesses drug deals from her balcony in a neighbourhood east of downtown and has repeatedly had to eject people who use her store bathroom to smoke rock. "I'm 30 years old. Education and harm prevention has existed since I was born and it doesn't feel like anything more than lip service," said the frustrated business owner. "I hear about problem after problem. One thing I didn't hear here are solutions." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake