News (Media Awareness Project) - CN BC: PUB LTE: Build All Four Drug Pillars |
Title: | CN BC: PUB LTE: Build All Four Drug Pillars |
Published On: | 2002-05-06 |
Source: | Vancouver Sun (CN BC) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-23 10:37:19 |
BUILD ALL FOUR DRUG PILLARS
Like my colleagues on council, I continue to support the much talked about
"four-pillar approach" which provides an integrated framework for dealing
with the tragedy of drug addiction and its debilitating impact on people
and neighbourhoods.
I've had the chance to take a firsthand look at a similar approach in
Frankfurt and Amsterdam which pioneered the notion that drug addiction is,
first and foremost, a health issue. In both cities, their supervised
injection sites are part of an integrated plan that combines law
enforcement with treatment and harm reduction and they work very well as a
first point of entry into a continuum of medical care. It certainly doesn't
amount to supervised injection sites without coordinated implementation
connected to treatment services and the strictest law enforcement. The
integrated plan helps ensure their programs work, and that's what I want to
see here in Vancouver.
The controversy over the possibility of a piloted supervised injection site
here has arisen because there has been no discussion yet with the affected
communities and responsible agencies about how it would be implemented and
how it would integrate into the other three pillars --treatment,
enforcement and prevention. Addicts using the site will still be buying an
illegal street drug they must finance through theft and prostitution.
Clearly, this discussion should include measurable and accountable goals
for success. It is that integration that the four-pillar approach is all
about and I continue to support it.
Jennifer Clarke
Vancouver City Council
Like my colleagues on council, I continue to support the much talked about
"four-pillar approach" which provides an integrated framework for dealing
with the tragedy of drug addiction and its debilitating impact on people
and neighbourhoods.
I've had the chance to take a firsthand look at a similar approach in
Frankfurt and Amsterdam which pioneered the notion that drug addiction is,
first and foremost, a health issue. In both cities, their supervised
injection sites are part of an integrated plan that combines law
enforcement with treatment and harm reduction and they work very well as a
first point of entry into a continuum of medical care. It certainly doesn't
amount to supervised injection sites without coordinated implementation
connected to treatment services and the strictest law enforcement. The
integrated plan helps ensure their programs work, and that's what I want to
see here in Vancouver.
The controversy over the possibility of a piloted supervised injection site
here has arisen because there has been no discussion yet with the affected
communities and responsible agencies about how it would be implemented and
how it would integrate into the other three pillars --treatment,
enforcement and prevention. Addicts using the site will still be buying an
illegal street drug they must finance through theft and prostitution.
Clearly, this discussion should include measurable and accountable goals
for success. It is that integration that the four-pillar approach is all
about and I continue to support it.
Jennifer Clarke
Vancouver City Council
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