Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - Australia: Wire: Sydney Heroin Injecting Room Ready for
Title:Australia: Wire: Sydney Heroin Injecting Room Ready for
Published On:2001-03-16
Source:Reuters
Fetched On:2008-01-26 21:23:41
SYDNEY HEROIN INJECTING ROOM READY FOR BUSINESS

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia's first official heroin injecting room is
ready for business, but its doors remain closed as a legal battle over its
fate rages, leaving drug addicts to shoot up in a street around the corner.

Money confiscated from criminals has transformed the former amusement
centre in Sydney's Kings Cross, the country's notorious red light and drug
district, into a state-of-the-art clinic.

Medical director Ingrid Van Beek hopes to open the centre within a month if
the local chamber of commerce fails in a legal bid next Wednesday to have
the centre's license rejected.

But Van Beek fears the longer the doors remain closed the more lives will
be lost, especially as 20% of overdoses in the state of New South Wales
occur on the streets of Kings Cross.

In fact, 90% of ambulance call-outs for overdoses in ``the Cross'' are
within 300 metres (985 feet) of the centre.

``I can't say that lives have been lost or that we will save lives, but
that is our expectation or hope,'' Van Beek told Reuters in an interview at
a needle exchange centre in Kings Cross.

``The longer we delay, the longer people continue to use in current
circumstances, which we know results in probably around 100 deaths a year
and for every death there are 10 to 20 non-fatal overdoses,'' she said.

One Way Traffic

The centre has been designed in three stages, unlike many European
injecting centres which are open and communal.

Drug users will be greeted by a receptionist, then move to eight injecting
booths and finally a recovery room. The injecting rooms can accommodate
two, allowing people to shoot-up together.

``We know people tend to inject in pairs and we don't want to discourage
that because we know that drug overdose deaths are associated with
injecting on your own,'' said Van Beek.

The centre will be staffed by three nurses, five counsellors and a security
guard. ``They (nurses) will be advising vein care, rotating sites, but they
will not be able to inject the person because that is illegal,'' Van Beek said.

Traffic through the centre will be one way. This will avoid congestion,
drug users mingling on the street and separate those arriving with drugs
and those who have already had their hit.

``We didn't think mixing those people up would be a good idea, they would
be in a different head space,'' Van Beek said, adding a survey of drug
users also found they did not want to mix.

``They didn't want to open up their drugs in public with people they didn't
know because they were worried about leaving the premises and being
subjected to stand-over tactics.''

Bitter Opposition

Opposition to a heroin injecting centre in Australia has been long and
bitter. Opponents have ranged from Australian Prime Minister John Howard
and Pope John Paul II to the United Nations.

In 1999, the Pope sent a letter to the Sisters of Charity ordering them not
to get involved in an injecting centre at the Cross. An illegal injecting
room in a Uniting Church in the Cross in 1999 lasted only few days before
police closed it down.

Today, illegal ``shooting galleries'' litter the main street of Kings Cross
charging A$10 (US$5) to hit up in filthy conditions. But most addicts
simply shoot-up in lanes, alleys and parks.

Van Beek said the centre would target street users, who have become more
violent as they use cocaine and other drugs to combat a heroin drought, and
who are most at risk of overdosing.

She estimates 150 to 200 drug users will pass through the centre in an
eight-hour period. ``That should make a significant impact on public
injecting,'' Van Beek said, adding she hoped the centre would eventually
turn the tide against public injecting.
Member Comments
No member comments available...