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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Feds Consider Injection Centres For Addicts
Title:Canada: Feds Consider Injection Centres For Addicts
Published On:2002-11-10
Source:London Free Press (CN ON)
Fetched On:2008-01-21 20:09:19
FEDS CONSIDER INJECTION CENTRES FOR ADDICTS

The First Federally Approved Injection Site Could Open As Early As Next Year.

MONTREAL -- Health Canada is reviewing criteria for safe-injection sites
for drug addicts and will be ready to accept proposals from interested
cities by the end of this year.

The Controlled Drugs and Substances Act has already been reviewed to ensure
there is no legal impediment to creating centres where intravenous drug
users could safely inject their drugs.

The ministry is shaping the guidelines under which cities could make
proposals to open a safe-injection centre, Farah Mohamed, a spokesperson
for Health Minister Anne McLellan, said yesterday.

"We're in the process," Mohamed said. "The minister, by the end of this
year, will be able to accept proposals (from individual cities)."

Mohamed said it would take 60 days for Health Canada to review each proposal.

Upon approval, the city would be free to establish a safe injection centre.
Since proposals will be welcomed by the end of this year, that opens the
door for Canada's first federally approved injection site sometime next year.

A report in Montreal's Le Devoir said Health Canada would not play a role
in funding the injection sites, but Mohamed said no decision has been made.

"There's been some people saying they think Health Canada should fund it,
but we're not at that stage yet to even determine the amounts of money it
would cost," she said, adding a decision on funding would come only when a
prospective site is identified.

One person who feels Ottawa needs to play a role in paying for the sites is
Ralf Jurgens, executive director of the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network.

"Health Canada needs to at least co-fund these safe-injection facilities,"
Jurgens said.

The legal network completed a report in April calling for the creation of
trial safe-injection sites and citing a Canadian Medical Association
Journal article from August 2001 that supports its position.

"Supervised injection rooms are a logical next step," the article stated,
"one that combines the merits of realism and compassion."

A safe-injection site differs from a needle-exchange centre in that it
would provide intravenous drug users with trained medical professionals to
monitor the injection of drugs.

There are 125,000 intravenous drug users in Canada, according to the
HIV/AIDS legal network, and Jurgens said these people are at a high risk of
exposure to hepatitis C, HIV and overdoses.

"Safe-injection facilities help address those issues," Jurgens said.
"Governments have not done enough to prevent the spread of these infections
among drug users."

The legal network report also quotes a 1998 study that estimated the direct
and indirect costs of HIV and AIDS attributed to intravenous drug use in
Canada would amount to $8.7 billion over six years if current trends continue.

Jurgens believes trial safe-injection sites should begin in Vancouver,
Montreal and Toronto, adding that other cities such as Edmonton and Quebec
City have shown interest.

Mohamed said cities will be welcome to submit a proposal to Health Canada.

The legal network report also found opponents to safe-injection sites.

In Montreal's Plateau Mont-Royal neighbourhood, a suggestion to establish
the sites was met with serious opposition from the Mount-Royal Avenue
Merchants Association.

The Vancouver Community Alliance accused an injection site advocacy group
of putting the safety of drug users ahead of the safety of the community at
large.
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