News (Media Awareness Project) - CN QU: Editorial: No Crack Pipes |
Title: | CN QU: Editorial: No Crack Pipes |
Published On: | 2004-09-07 |
Source: | Montreal Gazette (CN QU) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-21 23:54:51 |
NO CRACK PIPES
Making it easier for vulnerable people to use damaging addictive drugs is
not often a campaign plank for politicians; nor does it turn up as a
pronounced goal for health officials.
Yet that's precisely the effect of the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority
scheme to give out free "safer-use crack kits" to crack cocaine users. This
is the taxpayer as enabler.
Opinions vary greatly about the idea of needle exchanges and "shooting
galleries" for heroin users; these too enable addicts. They are defended by
some on the grounds that a re-used injection needle is a superhighway for
HIV and other dangerous viruses.
The Winnipeg medical officer of health, Dr. Margaret Fast, claims the same
virtue for her crack kits - glass pipe, screens, alcohol swabs, matches,
even a pipe cleaner - saying shared pipes, like shared needles, can spread
disease. "If you're sharing pipes or if you're having oral sex with
someone, that could lead to transmission of these agents."
Maybe. But crack can also lead to death by overdose, suicide, accident, or
confrontation with police.
And what a slippery slope! Should government also provide the drugs, so
that addicts don't have to meet dangerous and rapacious dealers?
Helping people to ruin their lives "safely" is not a suitable object of
government policy.
Making it easier for vulnerable people to use damaging addictive drugs is
not often a campaign plank for politicians; nor does it turn up as a
pronounced goal for health officials.
Yet that's precisely the effect of the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority
scheme to give out free "safer-use crack kits" to crack cocaine users. This
is the taxpayer as enabler.
Opinions vary greatly about the idea of needle exchanges and "shooting
galleries" for heroin users; these too enable addicts. They are defended by
some on the grounds that a re-used injection needle is a superhighway for
HIV and other dangerous viruses.
The Winnipeg medical officer of health, Dr. Margaret Fast, claims the same
virtue for her crack kits - glass pipe, screens, alcohol swabs, matches,
even a pipe cleaner - saying shared pipes, like shared needles, can spread
disease. "If you're sharing pipes or if you're having oral sex with
someone, that could lead to transmission of these agents."
Maybe. But crack can also lead to death by overdose, suicide, accident, or
confrontation with police.
And what a slippery slope! Should government also provide the drugs, so
that addicts don't have to meet dangerous and rapacious dealers?
Helping people to ruin their lives "safely" is not a suitable object of
government policy.
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