News (Media Awareness Project) - Australia: Five Injecting Houses Soon |
Title: | Australia: Five Injecting Houses Soon |
Published On: | 2000-04-19 |
Source: | Herald Sun (Australia) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-04 21:26:55 |
FIVE INJECTING HOUSES SOON
FIVE injecting houses will open in Melbourne within months after drug
experts approved the Bracks Government's plan to tackle the heroin scourge.
The houses are planned for St Kilda, Collingwood, Footscray, Springvale and
the CBD. Local councils could be given the option of having more than one
injecting house, increasing the number to higher than five.
After getting the nod from a drugs inquiry headed by Professor David
Penington, the government is expected to move quickly to open the houses for
an 18-month trial.
Prof. Penington will today release the findings of his five-month
investigation into combating the state's heroin problem, which has already
claimed 95 lives this year.
The report is the first stage of the inquiry, with the seven-member
committee expected to release further recommendations this year.
"The issue of injecting houses will be conducted in full consultation with
the local communities and will only go ahead with the support of those local
communities," Prof. Penington told the Herald Sun last night.
Sources said the report backed a long experiment with injecting houses and
the trial of a life-saving plan for addicts who overdosed in them.
The houses will have oxygen cylinders and masks for trained nurses to use to
revive addicts.
The move, based on overseas experience, represents a switch from the
traditional anti-overdose drug Narcan, which can have deadly side effects.
Experts believe oxygen can be as effective in reviving addicts as Narcan,
which can reduce addicts' tolerance and increase the chances of a fatal
overdose.
Prof. Penington is expected to recommend the injecting houses not be placed
near schools, kindergartens or residential areas.
The houses could vary but are all likely to include:
DISCREET entrances leading to reception and waiting areas and space for
injecting.
LINKS to a wide range of treatment, support and rehabilitation services.
A BAN on anyone under 18 or intoxicated by alcohol or other drugs.
STRICT rules on behavior and measures to ensure users do not interfere with
anyone else.
The government expects to have the five houses operating within months but
is committed to talks with councils and residents.
It has promised to woo councils with up to $8million in extra funding to
cover the costs of the houses.
The success criteria are likely to be the number of lives saved, the ability
to direct users into rehabilitation and cutting street nuisance.
Prof. Penington's report is likely to lead to the Drugs, Poisons and
Controlled Substances Act being amended to pave the way for heroin injection
houses.
Changes could be passed by regulation or through negotiation between police,
the government and the Director of Public Prosecutions.
Premier Steve Bracks in February privately toured one of Switzerland's 13
injecting clinics.
He was impressed by the permanent police presence and by Swiss claims they
had solved the problem of dumped syringes.
The Zurich building had no signs to suggest it was a clinic and saw about
100 people a day, with cafe-style facilities.
Wesley Central Mission has set up facilities for users on church grounds in
Lonsdale St, but has denied it was running Melbourne's first injection
clinic.
Health workers staffing the portable building on Wesley's site did not help
users inject, the welfare agency said.
The de facto clinic has saved more than 40 users from dying after overdose
and was set up after three users died on or near the church last year.
FIVE injecting houses will open in Melbourne within months after drug
experts approved the Bracks Government's plan to tackle the heroin scourge.
The houses are planned for St Kilda, Collingwood, Footscray, Springvale and
the CBD. Local councils could be given the option of having more than one
injecting house, increasing the number to higher than five.
After getting the nod from a drugs inquiry headed by Professor David
Penington, the government is expected to move quickly to open the houses for
an 18-month trial.
Prof. Penington will today release the findings of his five-month
investigation into combating the state's heroin problem, which has already
claimed 95 lives this year.
The report is the first stage of the inquiry, with the seven-member
committee expected to release further recommendations this year.
"The issue of injecting houses will be conducted in full consultation with
the local communities and will only go ahead with the support of those local
communities," Prof. Penington told the Herald Sun last night.
Sources said the report backed a long experiment with injecting houses and
the trial of a life-saving plan for addicts who overdosed in them.
The houses will have oxygen cylinders and masks for trained nurses to use to
revive addicts.
The move, based on overseas experience, represents a switch from the
traditional anti-overdose drug Narcan, which can have deadly side effects.
Experts believe oxygen can be as effective in reviving addicts as Narcan,
which can reduce addicts' tolerance and increase the chances of a fatal
overdose.
Prof. Penington is expected to recommend the injecting houses not be placed
near schools, kindergartens or residential areas.
The houses could vary but are all likely to include:
DISCREET entrances leading to reception and waiting areas and space for
injecting.
LINKS to a wide range of treatment, support and rehabilitation services.
A BAN on anyone under 18 or intoxicated by alcohol or other drugs.
STRICT rules on behavior and measures to ensure users do not interfere with
anyone else.
The government expects to have the five houses operating within months but
is committed to talks with councils and residents.
It has promised to woo councils with up to $8million in extra funding to
cover the costs of the houses.
The success criteria are likely to be the number of lives saved, the ability
to direct users into rehabilitation and cutting street nuisance.
Prof. Penington's report is likely to lead to the Drugs, Poisons and
Controlled Substances Act being amended to pave the way for heroin injection
houses.
Changes could be passed by regulation or through negotiation between police,
the government and the Director of Public Prosecutions.
Premier Steve Bracks in February privately toured one of Switzerland's 13
injecting clinics.
He was impressed by the permanent police presence and by Swiss claims they
had solved the problem of dumped syringes.
The Zurich building had no signs to suggest it was a clinic and saw about
100 people a day, with cafe-style facilities.
Wesley Central Mission has set up facilities for users on church grounds in
Lonsdale St, but has denied it was running Melbourne's first injection
clinic.
Health workers staffing the portable building on Wesley's site did not help
users inject, the welfare agency said.
The de facto clinic has saved more than 40 users from dying after overdose
and was set up after three users died on or near the church last year.
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