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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: Crystal Meth In Ottawa's Gay Community
Title:CN ON: Crystal Meth In Ottawa's Gay Community
Published On:2006-05-18
Source:Capital Xtra! (CN ON)
Fetched On:2008-01-14 04:28:08
CRYSTAL METH IN OTTAWA'S GAY COMMUNITY

At The Ready / So Far It's Not Showing Up In The Data Being Collected

Perhaps it is as the old saying goes -- no news is good news. It has
been nine months since Capital Xtra looked at the occurrence of
crystal meth in Ottawa's gay community, and in that time, the
explosion hasn't happened yet.

Most service agencies in the city still don't have concrete numbers
on the use of crystal meth in the area. Drug-of-choice statistics
with the city's safe injection program (SITE) haven't shown an
appreciable increase in meth usage by the city's injection drug-using
population, but these figures also are reliant upon self-reporting
and there is no way to tell if the crack that most users inject is
also laced with meth. As well, there hasn't been time enough to
gather proper feedback from the Safer Inhalation Equipment Program,
which would have a better chance of tracking meth users as more users
prefer to smoke than inject the drug according to anecdotal evidence.

Similarly, the Gay Men's Wellness Initiative has had nothing
significant come up since the literature review done last summer. Not
that the GMWI isn't concerned, and the issue is still on the radar in
their partnership with the City Of Ottawa Public Health Unit. But so
far no new numbers have presented themselves.

But the problem is out there, and it's getting closer. Not just in
Toronto and Montreal, where many Ottawa gay men go to party on the
weekend, but in closer smaller centres as well.

The AIDS Committee Of Ottawa's outreach worker Mike Hickey is no
stranger to substance use in the sex scene in this city. After
comparing notes with his colleagues in the area, Hickey says it looks
like meth use is following a demographic curve.

"I have seen people over 25 using other drugs like crack, GHB, K,
ecstasy and coke," Hickey says. "Whereas I've been told by
[colleagues] in Eastern Ontario that crystal seems to be more of the
drug of choice among the under-25 set, and that is a group that I
don't necessarily come as close into contact with in commercial sex
settings where I see and hear about the other drugs more openly."

Cities like Kingston have worker-collected data from gay-identified
users under 25, and anecdotal evidence is now coming from places like
Peterborough.

But not Ottawa -- yet. "I'm not seeing crystal the way that I've seen
it when I've been to bathhouses in Montreal or Toronto," Hickey says.
"I have still seen as much crack in bathhouses in other cities as I
have seen crystal. But I just haven't seen crystal hit commercial sex
culture in Ottawa, which I guess is a good thing."

Crystal may already be present among some young gay men in Ottawa,
but so far it's not showing up in the data being collected. Paul
Lavigne, the SITE coordinator, concurs with the feeling that the
under-25 crowd may not be getting counted, as most of the SITE
program users are older. But he's starting to hear anecdotal evidence.
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