Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Expand Supervised Sites Beyond Overseeing Only Injection Drugs, Advocates Say

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Oct, 2016 03:48 PM
    VANCOUVER — Harm reduction advocates are calling on the government of British Columbia to expand the scope of its safe-injection facilities beyond supervising only intravenous drug use, but medical officials say the focus should remain on needles because they pose the biggest health risk.
     
    B.C. has been wracked by an overdose crisis that has claimed more than 550 lives since the beginning of 2016. About 60 per cent of those deaths have been linked to the opioid fentanyl, which has been detected in virtually every type of street drug, regardless of how the substance is consumed.
     
    Ann Livingston, a harm-reduction worker in Vancouver, said people with addictions should have a place to go where they can feel safe using, whether they snort, smoke or inject their drugs.
     
    "Anyone who's doing anything needs to do it safely," she said.
     
    Livingston helped create what has become known as a pop-up supervised consumption facility, located in an alley in the city's Downtown Eastside and around the corner from Insite, Canada's first supervised-injection facility.
     
    The rudimentary station, which consists of little more than a white tarp set up over several fold-out tables, welcomes drug users regardless of how they use.
     
    Sarah Blyth, who collaborated with Livingston on the pop-up facility, said the situation on the streets has become far more dangerous since the arrival of fentanyl.
     
    "If anybody is overlooked and at risk of an overdose then we will do what we can to make sure ... that person is safe and doesn't lose their life," Blyth said.
     
     
    "We're there to make sure that people don't die in the alley, in the streets if they don't need to."
     
    In Alberta, where opioids have also taken a lethal toll, the government announced last Thursday it would invest $230,000 to explore opening a safe-consumption site.
     
    Nova Scotia's top doctor sounded the alarm earlier this month after learning 70 people died of opioid overdoses in the first eight months of this year.
     
    Dr. Patricia Daly, chief medical health officer with the Vancouver Coastal Health authority, said injection drugs remain her primary concern.
     
    "It's not just about monitoring for overdose and overdose deaths," Daly said. "It's because we know injection poses a risk of severe infections like HIV and hepatitis C."
     
    Injection drugs have "far and away" caused the most severe overdoses and deaths in Vancouver, she added.
     
    Mark Tyndall, executive medical director with the B.C. Centre for Disease Control, said a supervised-smoking room would also pose ventilation challenges.
     
    "If the main role of these sites is to engage people and connect with them, provide social services and medical care, then that would be relevant for any drug use," Tyndall said.
     
     
    "But if we're actually interested in reducing hepatitis C and HIV and preventing overdose deaths, then the focus clearly has to be on people who are injecting drugs."
     
    B.C. provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall declared the original public health emergency earlier this year after a spike in overdose deaths, and said work is being done to encourage the supervision of non-injection drug use.
     
    He spoke about reaching out to residences where people are known to be using drugs and ask them to let people know, keep their door unlocked and have someone with naloxone check on them.
     
    "Essentially, we're already trying to build what you might call low-level, supervised consumption into buildings that may already be at risk," Kendall said.
     
    That brings the supervision to where people live instead of creating a facility where people bring their drugs, which requires an exemption under federal drug laws, he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lions Stolen From Classical Chinese Garden Returned To Vancouver's Chinatown

    Lions Stolen From Classical Chinese Garden Returned To Vancouver's Chinatown
    Police say officers recovered the lions and they have been returned to their original spots in front of the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden.

    Lions Stolen From Classical Chinese Garden Returned To Vancouver's Chinatown

    Legal Push For Private Health Care Prioritizes Profit Over Patients: Lawyer

    Legal Push For Private Health Care Prioritizes Profit Over Patients: Lawyer
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer for a group of patients who support Canada's public health-care system says a private surgery clinic's legal crusade to change British Columbia's medicare laws puts profit over people.

    Legal Push For Private Health Care Prioritizes Profit Over Patients: Lawyer

    Complicated, Dangerous Rescue Frees Young Humpback On B.C.'s Central Coast

    Complicated, Dangerous Rescue Frees Young Humpback On B.C.'s Central Coast
    The juvenile humpback was freed from several ropes at the Marine Harvest aquaculture site in Klemtu, B.C. by Fisheries and Oceans Canada, with help from the company and the Kitasoo First Nation

    Complicated, Dangerous Rescue Frees Young Humpback On B.C.'s Central Coast

    Man Charged With Impaired Driving In Death Of RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett

    Man Charged With Impaired Driving In Death Of RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett
    Mounties say Kenneth Fenton faces five charges related to the crash that took the life of Const. Sarah Beckett on April 5 in Langford, B.C.

    Man Charged With Impaired Driving In Death Of RCMP Const. Sarah Beckett

    Nine Canadian Soldiers Hurt During Training Accident In New Brunswick

    Nine Canadian Soldiers Hurt During Training Accident In New Brunswick
    Five soldiers with minor injuries were being treated on the base Wednesday, while four others were taken to hospital in Fredericton with serious injuries.

    Nine Canadian Soldiers Hurt During Training Accident In New Brunswick

    Delta, B.C. Police Investigating 2 Suspicious Early Morning House Fires

    Delta, B.C. Police Investigating 2 Suspicious Early Morning House Fires
    On September 13th, 2016 at 0412 hours, at the request of the Delta Fire Department, Delta Police responded to a house fire in the 7500 block of 120th street. 

    Delta, B.C. Police Investigating 2 Suspicious Early Morning House Fires