Rave Radio: Offline (0/0)
Email: Password:
News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Mountie Says Giving Out Crack Pipes Not Helping
Title:Canada: Mountie Says Giving Out Crack Pipes Not Helping
Published On:2008-04-25
Source:Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB)
Fetched On:2008-04-26 14:39:12
MOUNTIE SAYS GIVING OUT CRACK PIPES NOT HELPING

OTTAWA - Distributing crack pipes to addicts in Canadian cities to
halt the spread of disease is actually doing more harm than good by
tacitly encouraging substance abuse, says a senior RCMP officer
fighting the illicit drug trade.

"I just don't think it's helping," said Chief Supt. Derek Ogden,
director general for drugs and organized crime with the Mounties.

"If you're just experimenting with cocaine and people are handing out
crack pipes at will, really I think it sends the wrong message, and
could actually encourage the rate of crack cocaine use in the
community," he said in an interview.

Ogden's comments add fresh fuel to the raging debate over the best
means of controlling the hard-drug problem plaguing downtown streets.

Cities across the country are grappling with the safety and health
issues associated with strung-out junkies, dirty pipes and needles,
and the spread of hepatitis C and HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.

Advocates say distributing clean glass pipes, tiny screens and
mouthpieces helps halt the transmission of disease.

"The reality is, people are injecting drugs whether you, I or the next
guy like it or not," said Jack McCarthy, director of the Somerset West
Community Health Centre in Ottawa.

McCarthy stresses a four-pillared approach to tackling illicit drug
use: enforcement, harm reduction, treatment and prevention.

Without sanitary paraphernalia, he said, addicts use more dangerous
implements such as needles, to inject the drugs, or pieces of metal
pop cans to heat up crack and inhale it, then pass on blood-borne
pathogens through sharing the makeshift pipes.

"I think we've got to meet the addicts where they're at, encourage
them to engage in less risky behaviour, and make some healthy choices.
And one of those hopefully healthy choices is to get off drugs,"
McCarthy said.

"But until they do that, if they're going to continue a pattern of use
of drugs, then do it in a way that you're going to minimize the spread
of infection to themselves and to others. To me it's common sense."

The RCMP doesn't agree. Ogden said while community agencies are
well-intentioned, the reality is much less rosy. He contends that
addicts still share the handout pipes and engage in drug binging that
leads to risky sexual behaviour.

Ogden also takes issue with community agencies liberally handing out
needles to addicts.

"Originally they were truly needle exchanges, so that when a clean
needle went out a dirty one came back in. But it's certainly not the
case now. The market is just absolutely flooded with needles."
Member Comments
No member comments available...