Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Sell Regulated Heroin To Drug Users To Reduce Overdose Deaths: B.C. Group

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Feb, 2019 09:20 PM

    VANCOUVER — The BC Centre on Substance Use is proposing a policy to sell legally regulated heroin as part of an urgent response to reduce opioid overdose deaths from a toxic drug supply that is profiting organized crime groups.


    It is recommending the use of so-called heroin compassion clubs and buyers clubs, similar to those that emerged in the 1980s and 90s to allow access to medical cannabis in response to the AIDS epidemic.


    "Then as now, compassion clubs functioned to provide a safe place for people to access medical cannabis and connect with a range of health services, while buyers clubs procured life-saving treatment for people living with HIV and AIDS when government inaction limited access to these medicines," a report from the centre says.


    It also highlights independent reports that say organized crime groups have used Vancouver-area casinos to launder billions of dollars in cash from their proceeds of crime, including fentanyl trafficking, which Attorney General David Eby has said is troubling.


    Dr. Evan Wood, executive director of the centre, said an innovative approach to the overdose crisis is needed during a public health emergency declared in British Columbia nearly three years ago and to wage "economic war" on organized criminals benefiting from drug prohibition.


    The compassion clubs would involve a co-operative model through which powdered heroin would be restricted to members who have been assessed by a health-care provider as having an opioid addiction, provided education about not using alone and connected to treatment as part of a program involving rigorous evaluation, Wood said.


    "One of the big benefits of this model is that there's just a massive chasm between where people buy their drugs and public health and treatment services and that's the gap that so far in the opioid response has been very, very difficult to bridge with people using at home alone and dying of fentanyl overdoses."


    The BC Coroners Service has said nearly 3,000 people fatally overdosed in the province in 2017 and 2018 alone, with illicit fentanyl detected in 85 per cent of the deaths last year.


    The heroin compassion-club model would require the approval of Health Canada, which could either provide an exemption to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act for research or public health reasons or through another regulation that has allowed B.C. to import injectable pharmaceutical-grade heroin from Switzerland.


    That heroin has been in use since 2014 for a limited number of drug users being treated at the Crosstown Clinic in Vancouver.


    Wood said the idea for the compassion clubs came from a small group of people who banded together to buy heroin from dealers and test it to determine if it had been contaminated with fentanyl.


    "I've seen and talked to these individuals," he said. "I've had a patient who had a transformative experience with using heroin instead of fentanyl and so it's led us to sit around a room and say, 'OK, maybe we need to have this conversation on regulating the heroin market.' "


    Providing users with a regulated and legal supply of heroin would also ensure they get other supports including public health experts, treatment and pharmacy services, Wood said.


    Dean Wilson, a former heroin addict and peer-support worker for the BC Centre on Substance Use, said he started using heroin at age 13.


    "Not a day goes by that I don't wish I hadn't touched the stuff," said Wilson, who's been on treatment using the opioid methadone for over a decade.


    Wilson, 63, an author of the centre's report, said he sold drugs and spent time in jail, including for property crimes, to feed his drug habit.


    A gram of heroin on the street costs between $140 to $200 and can last a couple of days, versus about $3.80 that users would pay for powdered heroin imported from Switzerland, he said.


    "That's the thing people don't realize, that if you had the same gram of heroin from the street you're looking at about $6,000 a month. But everybody has to steal or generate almost $50,000 of stolen property to get that $6,000."


    Erica Thomson, a peer support worker for Fraser Health who also contributed to the report, said she began using heroin at age 15 while growing up as a national competitive swimmer.


    She went through several treatment programs but repeatedly relapsed before starting her recovery eight years ago.


    "I think this is another way that we're starting to stay alive because we're not getting anything practical that reflects our realities available to us," she said.


    Thomson said drug users don't want to navigate organized crime groups to find a safe supply of heroin that compassion clubs would provide.


    "You can upscale addiction treatment all you want but addiction treatment isn't the answer to a poisoned, unregulated, illicit drug market. Right now it's really about stopping the bleed."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Forces To Name Those Charged With Impaired Driving As Deterrent

    High numbers of impaired drivers on local roads have prompted two southern Ontario police forces to resort to public shaming as a potential deterrent.

    Ontario Forces To Name Those Charged With Impaired Driving As Deterrent

    Andrew Scheer Opposes Canada Signing Nn Compact On Migrants, Liberals Cry Foul

    OTTAWA — As Canada prepares to sign on to a United Nations agreement on migration, Conservative politicians are pushing back, saying signing it would be tantamount to erasing Canada's borders.

    Andrew Scheer Opposes Canada Signing Nn Compact On Migrants, Liberals Cry Foul

    Ethics Watchdog Concerned That Scheer's Office Advised MP To Contravene Code

    OTTAWA — The federal ethics watchdog says he's concerned that Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer's office encouraged a Tory MP to violate the conflict-of-interest code for members of the House of Commons.

    Ethics Watchdog Concerned That Scheer's Office Advised MP To Contravene Code

    Justin Trudeau Wants New Relationship With Indigenous People To Be His Legacy As PM

    Justin Trudeau Wants New Relationship With Indigenous People To Be His Legacy As PM
    OTTAWA — Rebuilding Canada's relationship with Indigenous people is part of the legacy Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wants to leave, he told chiefs gathered at a major Assembly of First Nations meeting in Ottawa Tuesday afternoon.

    Justin Trudeau Wants New Relationship With Indigenous People To Be His Legacy As PM

    'He Was Trying To Run:' Calgary Stamps Player Recounts Shooting Of Teammate

    'He Was Trying To Run:' Calgary Stamps Player Recounts Shooting Of Teammate
    Calgary Stampeder's receiver DaVaris Daniels described Tuesday how a confrontation outside a bar escalated to a glass being thrown and then the fatal shooting of his friend and teammate Mylan Hicks.

    'He Was Trying To Run:' Calgary Stamps Player Recounts Shooting Of Teammate

    Canadian Panel Raps RCMP For Ignoring Jaspal Atwal As Security Threat

    Findings regarding foreign interference are largely stripped from the report for security. But it recommends that all parliamentarians be briefed upon being sworn in and regularly thereafter on the risks of foreign interference and extremism in Canada.

    Canadian Panel Raps RCMP For Ignoring Jaspal Atwal As Security Threat