As Canadian drug deaths rise, programs to keep users safe face backlash
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[July 24, 2024]
By Anna Mehler Paperny
TORONTO (Reuters) - Years into a drug overdose crisis, Canada is facing
backlash against government-sanctioned programs such as legal injection
sites designed to keep users alive without curtailing drug use.
The British Columbia government has walked back a pilot project to
decriminalize small quantities of illicit drugs in public places in the
province. Police there also are prosecuting activists seeking to make
safe drugs available.
And the man who may become Canada's next prime minister, Conservative
Pierre Poilievre, has said he wants to shut down some sites where users
can legally consume illicit drugs under supervision, calling them "drug
dens."
The backlash reflects growing fears in Canada over the use of narcotics
in public spaces, encampments where drug use is seen as common, and the
specter of needles in playgrounds. Some critics of the so-called harm
reduction programs see a rising number of overdose deaths in Canada as
evidence that existing measures are not working.
But public health experts worry that dialing back the programs would
endanger the health and lives of drug users, contributing to even more
deaths.
"We have a potential to really lose ground on a lot of initiatives that
have been started that could really address the opioid overdose crisis
in meaningful ways," said Dr. Ahmed Bayoumi of St. Michael's Hospital in
Toronto, adding that the backlash was primarily driven by ideology.
A GROWING TOLL
Since 2016, more than 44,000 Canadians have died of opioid overdoses,
according to the federal government. Public health experts attribute the
toll to a volatile mix of drugs on the illicit market, including
fentanyl, which is 50 times more potent than heroin. Users often do not
know what's in the drugs they are taking.
Advocates say harm reduction programs lower the risks of drug use even
if they do not prevent the behavior. The approach includes needle
exchanges that prevent disease transmission and supervised consumption
sites that allow people to take drugs under the care of health workers.
For some, harm reduction includes decriminalizing small quantities of
some drugs or prescribing a "safe" supply to users.
In a 2011 ruling, Canada's Supreme Court quashed an attempt to shutter
the country's first supervised drug consumption site, in Vancouver. The
court found it "saved lives and improved health without increasing the
incidence of drug use and crime in the surrounding area."
As of September, there were 39 such sites across the country. Since
2017, they have reversed more than 55,000 overdoses, according to the
government. A study published in February found a decrease in overdose
deaths in Toronto neighborhoods that had supervised consumption sites.
Earlier this month, Poilievre, who has a wide lead over Liberal Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau in polls, said if elected, he "will close safe
injection sites next to schools, playgrounds, anywhere else that they
endanger the public and take lives."
Speaking at a Montreal playground near one such site, he said: "There
will not be a single taxpayer dollar from the Poilievre government going
to drug dens," adding that "they've made everything worse."
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A small kit of supplies containing syringes, band aids and
antiseptic pads waits to be used by a drug addict inside a safe
injection site on Vancouver, British Columbia's eastside August 23,
2006. REUTERS/Andy Clark/File Photo
Yuval Daniel, a spokesperson for
Canada's minister of mental health and addictions, said evidence
demonstrated the social and health benefits of the supervised
consumption sites.
Regarding public safety, she said, officials must remain engaged
with the communities where sites operate and take measures to
address concerns.
Thomas Kerr, director of research with the BC Centre on Substance
Use, who has studied the effects of supervised consumption sites,
understands the concern.
“I've got kids, too. I don’t want to go to the playground and see a
discarded needle,” Kerr said. But studies show supervised
consumption sites reduce public disorder, he added, including
reductions in discarded syringes.
The questions we should be asking, he said, are: "How do we optimize
those programs? How do we make them more effective?"
PROSECUTION AND RECRIMINALIZATION
Vancouver police in May charged two people with possession for the
purpose of trafficking for their alleged involvement with a group
that openly sold drugs pre-tested for safety to users at cost. The
so-called compassion club had sought Health Canada's permission but
was denied. Even so, police appeared to look the other way in its
first year.
Proponents of the "safer supply" strategy argue it saves lives by
giving users an alternative to the illicit market, in which deadly
fentanyl and other drugs are increasingly mixed. Detractors says the
drugs are often shared or sold to others.
In April, British Columbia walked back the pilot that decriminalized
small amounts of drugs such as heroin and methamphetamine, citing
public safety, though possession is still permitted in private and
in designated facilities. The U.S state of Oregon also
recriminalized possession of such drugs earlier this year.
Simon Fraser University criminologist Neil Boyd characterized the
backlash as “a growing awareness that the pendulum has swung a
little too far."
“I think there is a little bit of an understandable backlash about
the extremes,” he said.
But Tara Gomes, principal investigator at the Ontario Drug Policy
Research Network, says these initiatives save lives.
"If we take away harm reduction as one of the options available to
people, ultimately all I can see happen is we're going to see more
people losing their lives. And that terrifies me."
(Reporting by Anna Mehler Paperny; Editing by Frank McGurty and Bill
Berkrot)
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