News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Safe-Injection Site For City In Jeopardy |
Title: | CN BC: Safe-Injection Site For City In Jeopardy |
Published On: | 2006-08-30 |
Source: | Victoria News (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-13 04:32:37 |
SAFE-INJECTION SITE FOR CITY IN JEOPARDY
With the future of Vancouver's safe-injection site pilot project
hanging by a thread, officials on Vancouver Island are vowing to
forge ahead with an application for a similar experiment in Victoria.
The Vancouver facility, InSite, will be forced to close its doors
Sept. 12 if Health Canada declines to renew a three-year legal
exemption that paved the way for supervised injection drug use.
The closure of InSite could in turn cast doubt upon a $300,000
provincially funded study that local officials plan to submit next
spring with their application for a safe-injection site pilot project
in Victoria.
AIDS Vancouver Island spokesman Erik Ages said Monday, "I don't think
what happens in Vancouver is going to affect the study that's being
done in Victoria."
Last week, the Vancouver Province, quoting anonymous sources with the
Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, reported that Health Canada has
decided to extend InSite's exemption from Section 56 of the Canada
Health Act, which prohibits the use of illegal drugs in health-care
facilities. However, Health Canada officials say that no decision has
been made.
"The department has not committed to an extension," Health Canada
spokesperson Carol Saindon said Friday, adding that other pilot
projects will have to wait until the InSite experiment has been fully assessed.
"The government of Canada will not consider other similar projects
until the assessment of the research resulting from the existing
program in Vancouver has been completed."
Staff with the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority said Monday that
research has yet to prove conclusively that InSite has stopped the
spread of blood-borne disease such as AIDS and hepatitis, the
facility's primary goal.
However, so far the data indicates a decline in the number of
overdoses and an increase in the number of addicts injecting drugs in
a safe, hygienic setting.
Two former Vancouver mayors - ex B.C. Premier Mike Harcourt and
recently appointed Senator Larry Campbell gathered alongside current
Mayor Sam Sullivan to show their support for extending InSite's life.
Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe said all he's heard so far are rumours.
"My understanding is there are rumours out there that they will
approve a three-year exemption, but we can't bank on it until we hear
it from the minister's mouth," Lowe said.
Victoria's safe-injection site study, being carried out by the
University of Victoria's Centre for Addictions Research, will look at
evidence from safe-injection sites currently operating in 12
countries around the world, gather input from members of Victoria's
IV drug community and consider existing research on the subject.
Lowe said the study should be completed in the spring of 2007.
With the future of Vancouver's safe-injection site pilot project
hanging by a thread, officials on Vancouver Island are vowing to
forge ahead with an application for a similar experiment in Victoria.
The Vancouver facility, InSite, will be forced to close its doors
Sept. 12 if Health Canada declines to renew a three-year legal
exemption that paved the way for supervised injection drug use.
The closure of InSite could in turn cast doubt upon a $300,000
provincially funded study that local officials plan to submit next
spring with their application for a safe-injection site pilot project
in Victoria.
AIDS Vancouver Island spokesman Erik Ages said Monday, "I don't think
what happens in Vancouver is going to affect the study that's being
done in Victoria."
Last week, the Vancouver Province, quoting anonymous sources with the
Vancouver Coastal Health Authority, reported that Health Canada has
decided to extend InSite's exemption from Section 56 of the Canada
Health Act, which prohibits the use of illegal drugs in health-care
facilities. However, Health Canada officials say that no decision has
been made.
"The department has not committed to an extension," Health Canada
spokesperson Carol Saindon said Friday, adding that other pilot
projects will have to wait until the InSite experiment has been fully assessed.
"The government of Canada will not consider other similar projects
until the assessment of the research resulting from the existing
program in Vancouver has been completed."
Staff with the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority said Monday that
research has yet to prove conclusively that InSite has stopped the
spread of blood-borne disease such as AIDS and hepatitis, the
facility's primary goal.
However, so far the data indicates a decline in the number of
overdoses and an increase in the number of addicts injecting drugs in
a safe, hygienic setting.
Two former Vancouver mayors - ex B.C. Premier Mike Harcourt and
recently appointed Senator Larry Campbell gathered alongside current
Mayor Sam Sullivan to show their support for extending InSite's life.
Victoria Mayor Alan Lowe said all he's heard so far are rumours.
"My understanding is there are rumours out there that they will
approve a three-year exemption, but we can't bank on it until we hear
it from the minister's mouth," Lowe said.
Victoria's safe-injection site study, being carried out by the
University of Victoria's Centre for Addictions Research, will look at
evidence from safe-injection sites currently operating in 12
countries around the world, gather input from members of Victoria's
IV drug community and consider existing research on the subject.
Lowe said the study should be completed in the spring of 2007.
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