Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

HIV-AIDS Patients Exempt From Drug Laws As Canada Grants Licence To Clinic

The Canadian Press, 16 Jan, 2016 01:18 PM
    VANCOUVER — Health Canada has granted approval for a second safe-injection site in Vancouver — 14 years after the HIV-AIDS treatment facility began allowing patients to shoot up their own illicit drugs.
     
    The Dr. Peter AIDS Foundation has run a safe-injection program since 2002, and for several years mistakenly believed its patients were exempt from Canada's drug laws.
     
    The approval of an application on Friday grants the Dr. Peter Centre a two-year licence, meaning patients can continue injecting their own drugs under the supervision of a nurse without anyone being charged under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act.
     
    "This decision by Health Canada experts was arrived at after a rigorous, evidence-based review that included an assessment of the centre's application, an inspection of the facility, and the establishment of terms and conditions to protect public health and safety," Health Minister Jane Philpott said in a statement.
     
    She said international and Canadian evidence shows that safe-injection sites have the potential to save lives and improve health without increasing drug use and crime in surrounding areas.
     
    The centre's executive director Maxine Davis said the exemption is a significant step forward for health care in Canada because supervised injection reduces the harms of drug use for addicts and prevents the spread of diseases such as hepatitis C from shared needles.
     
    Several cities, including Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa and Thunder Bay, Ont., have contacted the centre for its expertise, Davis said.
     
    "We've had visits from all of those cities and many other cities across the country that are moving along the path of conversation with their local municipalities on this matter," she said. "They're interested in that integrated approach, not only for an opportunity for people to be supervised for injecting the drugs, but for a broad range of health care right there in the environment."
     
    Davis said the centre has 350 patients in its day program and 63 per cent of the injection-drug users have had counselling.
     
    Three patients at a time are allowed into a room where a nurse observes them injecting drugs and is ready to intervene in case of any overdoses, she said.
     
     
    The centre's current application for exemption, filed in January 2014, had broad support, including from the provincial government, the Vancouver Police Department and 150 local businesses that were grateful not to have HIV-AIDS patients injecting themselves on the streets, Davis said.
     
    Insite, another safe-injection facility in Vancouver, allows any injection drug users to shoot up as a nurse observes. Its current one-year exemption licence will expire in March. 
     
    As North America's only such clinic, it opened in 2003 as part of a harm-reduction plan to tackle an epidemic of HIV-AIDS and drug overdose deaths. But its existence remained tenuous under the previous federal government.
     
    The Conservatives waged a long legal battle against the site but the Supreme Court of Canada ruled the facility could stay open because it provided addicts with needed health care.
     
    Tiffany Atkins, a spokeswoman for Vancouver Coastal Health, which provides $4 million in funding for the Dr. Peter Centre, said the health authority submitted an application to Health Canada for both safe-injection sites in 2003.
     
    "Both parties and Health Canada were under the impression that the exemption had been granted," she said.
     
    "In 2006, when (Vancouver Coastal) applied for an exemption extension, it was determined that the initial Dr. Peter Centre exemption had never been fully processed. Some paperwork had been misplaced (by the health authority) and not processed."
     
    British Columbia's Health Minister Terry Lake said the licence is "excellent news" for public health and safety because they prevent overdose deaths and have become a valued part of health services for HIV patients.
     
    The Dr. Peter Centre is named after physician Dr. Peter Jepson-Jones, who was diagnosed with HIV-AIDS in 1985 and later shared his story on a weekly TV news segment that was nominated for an Academy Award.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Girl Drops Into Net After Dangling By Helmet From Ski Hill's Chair Lift

    Girl Drops Into Net After Dangling By Helmet From Ski Hill's Chair Lift
    A mishap on a chair lift at a Saskatchewan ski hill left a seven-year-old dangling from the restraining bar by her helmet.

    Girl Drops Into Net After Dangling By Helmet From Ski Hill's Chair Lift

    Saad Gaya, Member Of The So-called 'Toronto 18,' Granted Day Parole

    Saad Gaya, Member Of The So-called 'Toronto 18,' Granted Day Parole
    Saad Gaya, now 28, is serving time after pleading guilty to participating in a plot to bomb three Toronto targets, including the Toronto Stock Exchange, in protest of Canada's military involvement in Afghanistan.

    Saad Gaya, Member Of The So-called 'Toronto 18,' Granted Day Parole

    Two-Year Twins: Babies Born To San Diego Couple Minutes Apart, But In 2015 And 2016

    Two-Year Twins: Babies Born To San Diego Couple Minutes Apart, But In 2015 And 2016
    Jaelyn Valenica was born New Year's Eve at 11:59 p.m. Her twin brother, Luis Valencia Jr., arrived at 12:01 a.m. on New Year's Day.

    Two-Year Twins: Babies Born To San Diego Couple Minutes Apart, But In 2015 And 2016

    Rating Agency Says Alberta Tax Increases Give More Leeway To Other Provinces

    Rating Agency Says Alberta Tax Increases Give More Leeway To Other Provinces
    WINNIPEG — A bond-rating agency says recent tax increases in Alberta give more leeway to other western provinces to raise their own levies.

    Rating Agency Says Alberta Tax Increases Give More Leeway To Other Provinces

    ISI May Have Joined Hands With Jaish-e-Mohammed, Say Intelligence Officials

    ISI May Have Joined Hands With Jaish-e-Mohammed, Say Intelligence Officials
    Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) spy agency has reportedly joined hands with banned Islamic militant group Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) to "revive" the latter's base, according to intelligence sources.

    ISI May Have Joined Hands With Jaish-e-Mohammed, Say Intelligence Officials

    RCMP Diver Recovers Body Of Man From Icy River In B.C.'s Southeast

    RCMP Diver Recovers Body Of Man From Icy River In B.C.'s Southeast
    RCMP responded to reports Wednesday afternoon of a man partly submerged in the Kettle River, just east of Grand Forks.

    RCMP Diver Recovers Body Of Man From Icy River In B.C.'s Southeast