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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: Safe-Injection-Site Supporters Demand Answers From
Title:CN BC: Safe-Injection-Site Supporters Demand Answers From
Published On:2006-08-31
Source:Globe and Mail (Canada)
Fetched On:2008-01-13 04:36:43
SAFE-INJECTION-SITE SUPPORTERS DEMAND ANSWERS FROM OTTAWA

With Deadline Looming, Ottawa Says Fate Of Insite Facility To Be
Announced 'Shortly'

VANCOUVER - The federal government was urged yesterday to stop
delaying its decision about whether to permit a safe-injection
facility in Vancouver to continue operating after Sept. 12.

"It is getting kind of late in the game," said Thomas Kerr, a
scientist at the B.C. Centre of Excellence in HIV/AIDS, who has
conducted a number of scientific studies about the impact and
effectiveness of the Insite facility.

"We have a community that is waiting to find out what is going to
happen. We have a large research staff that is wondering whether they
are going to continue gathering data in two weeks," Dr. Kerr said.
"What we need is an answer."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper was a few blocks from the news
conference held by supporters of Insite and declined to provide that
answer, even though the facility's exemption from the country's drug
laws expires in less than two weeks.

"The safe-injection site decision is the Health Minister's decision,"
Mr. Harper said after announcing a federal funding commitment for the
2010 Winter Olympics.

"I won't be announcing anything myself on that, on this trip. I
anticipate he [Health Minister Tony Clement] will be making an
announcement on that very shortly."

The Health Minister travelled to Sweden last week and is believed to
have spoken to drug policy officials in that country about the merits
of safe-injection sites.

"It is kind of a curious choice because Sweden has no experience with
these facilities," Dr. Kerr said. "We don't need to go to Sweden to
look for these answers. We have the Vancouver Police Department,
Vancouver Coastal Health and many community organizations doing some
of the most innovative work in the world."

The pilot project, which has operated for the past three years,
permits addicts to inject their drugs in clean surroundings,
supervised by trained staff.

The continued operation of the Insite facility has been endorsed by
the chief of police in Vancouver, Mayor Sam Sullivan, community
leaders and four former mayors.

With the deadline looming for the federal government to make a
decision about the site, the RCMP issued a news release this week that
said it had concerns and called for more scientific research.

Dr. Kerr explained that there have been 15 scientific studies about
the impact of the site and many have been published in prestigious
journals such as The Lancet and the New England Journal of Medicine.

"My great disappointment is that the RCMP has failed to acknowledge
scientific evidence that the international scientific community has
endorsed and accepted," he said.

He noted that the RCMP commissioned two reports from criminologists
about the community impact of the safe-injection facility, which were
favourable. "Yet we are not hearing about those reports," Dr. Kerr
said. "I think it's time to acknowledge that this is a simple medical
intervention. A sterile injection is better than an unsterile injection."

Susie Ruttan, a teacher whose son is recovering from drug addiction,
also praised the Insite facility. "It just comes down to saving lives.
What can possibly be argued against that?"
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