News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Fix: PUB LTE: Safe Injection Sites |
Title: | CN BC: Fix: PUB LTE: Safe Injection Sites |
Published On: | 2000-12-01 |
Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 00:15:08 |
SAFE INJECTION SITES
Do they perpetuate misery or offer relief and hope?
Michael Theil is right that providing heroin and safe injection sites
"makes about as much sense as providing free booze to alcoholics"
(Drug-plan pessimism, Letters, Nov. 23).
Alcoholics, like those addicted to other drugs, have been known to
forego all else to satisfy their body's unbearable cravings. Imagine
(or remember) the chaos if alcohol were no longer cheaply and safely
provided by the state.
Sadly, you do not have to imagine. In the Downtown Eastside, the
conventional strategies aimed at combatting illicit drugs are a
well-documented failure with horrific consequences.
Among addicts, epidemics of hepatitis C and HIV have raged. I hope
those who are ignorant enough to oppose harm reduction will consider
the plight of these people, and the successful implementation of this
approach in Europe.
For those who remain unmoved, I urge them to investigate the tax
burden created by our current approach. The costs of enforcement are
astronomical. The same is true of the health care costs. For instance,
the per-person costs of anti-HIV medications are more than $10,000
annually. Congratulations to Mayor Philip Owen and others who have
the courage to advocate these urgently needed alternative approaches.
Evan Wood, B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS
Do they perpetuate misery or offer relief and hope?
Michael Theil is right that providing heroin and safe injection sites
"makes about as much sense as providing free booze to alcoholics"
(Drug-plan pessimism, Letters, Nov. 23).
Alcoholics, like those addicted to other drugs, have been known to
forego all else to satisfy their body's unbearable cravings. Imagine
(or remember) the chaos if alcohol were no longer cheaply and safely
provided by the state.
Sadly, you do not have to imagine. In the Downtown Eastside, the
conventional strategies aimed at combatting illicit drugs are a
well-documented failure with horrific consequences.
Among addicts, epidemics of hepatitis C and HIV have raged. I hope
those who are ignorant enough to oppose harm reduction will consider
the plight of these people, and the successful implementation of this
approach in Europe.
For those who remain unmoved, I urge them to investigate the tax
burden created by our current approach. The costs of enforcement are
astronomical. The same is true of the health care costs. For instance,
the per-person costs of anti-HIV medications are more than $10,000
annually. Congratulations to Mayor Philip Owen and others who have
the courage to advocate these urgently needed alternative approaches.
Evan Wood, B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS
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