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Supervised Drug-Injection Facilities in New York? Yes We Should (and Can)!

By Tony Newman, AlterNet. Posted May 23, 2009.


If we're serious about real drug reform, let's create a space where users can take their drugs in a sterile, safe environment.
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What should be done about the millions of people in the United States and around the world who inject heroin and other drugs?

For 30-plus years, the U.S. has waged a "war on drugs" that is, more accurately, a war on drug users. This war on drugs has not delivered on its promise to keep drugs off our streets or to prevent people from using, but it has successfully filled our prisons beyond capacity and led to far too many cases of HIV/AIDS related to sharing contaminated needles.

Vancouver, British Columbia, adopted a different approach to deal with the city's problems associated with injection-drug use. In 2003, the city established a supervised injection facility where users can take their drugs in a sterile environment and in the presence of clinical staff. The rationale is that as much as we don't want people injecting drugs, some -- often society's most marginalized -- inevitably will.

There are three main areas where injection-drug use occurs outside of the home: 1) public places, like parks and street corners; 2) "shooting galleries" that are often dirty, violent and conducive to the sharing of dirty needles; and 3) a safe, clean facility under the supervision of nurses and public health officials.

In addition to making sure people are using clean needles and are not overdosing, health professionals can use the opportunity to provide treatment options designed to curb and eventually eliminate the use of drugs.

So what are the results of Vancouver's strategy? A study released in 2007 in the esteemed British peer-reviewed scientific journal Addiction found that not only is the Vancouver injection site accomplishing the goals of reducing public drug use, cutting down on the spread of HIV/AIDS and overdose deaths, but is also a bridge to help people get into treatment.

The study found that the city's supervised injection facility increased the rate of injection-drug users entering detox by 30 percent. The study confirmed that all of these concrete benefits are happening without increased drug use. Similar findings were reported in studies of safer injection rooms in Germany, Switzerland, Spain and Australia.

And now the idea of supervised injection facilities are being discussed in cities like New York and San Francisco. Today in New York, the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the Injection Drug Users Health Alliance convened a one-day conference on the topic.

The conference provided attendees with information on the effectiveness of SIFs, especially their impact on public health and safety. International experiences with SIFs, including a major review of Vancouver’s success, were reviewed. The conference also started initial plans for the development of an SIF in New York.

While there needs to be significant research and planning, there also needs to be movement and action. There is an overdose epidemic around the country. Last year, an estimated 22,000 Americans died from overdoses, second only to motor-vehicle accidents when it comes to accidental deaths. More people died of accidental overdoses in New York last year than from homicide. It is in this context that we need to move to establish SIFs in New York. This will save lives.

While some may hope and pray for a "drug free society," the reality is that there will always be some who will find their way to drugs. We need to do everything we can to make treatment available to heroin users and everyone trying to quit drugs. But we should also study what Vancouver and other countries are exploring. We need to find ways to reduce the death, disease, crime and suffering of people who are unwilling or unable to stop.

Editor’s Note: For more on Vancouver’s brave and innovative supervised injection facility, read Vince Beiser’s feature article, "Vancouver's Radical Approach to Drugs: Let Junkies Be Junkies."


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See more stories tagged with: drug reform, new york, vancouver, supervised injection faci, drug injection

Tony Newman is the director of media relations at the Drug Policy Alliance.

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JUST THE FACTS MAAM
Posted by: phatpooch on May 23, 2009 11:35 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
THE OLYMPIC CITY HAS DRUGS I must say some of the research seems to be skewed re the safe injection site in vancouver's dtes.First off with out a doubt lives are being saved yes, some people who have od as many as three to ten times, only to continue the self abuse, unaware they have died. Seems weird that you could die more than once only to possibly die again.Next the quote about public drug use must be a few years old, the police here announced that they will no longer charge people for simple possesion so open iv usage is now commonly accepted in this neighbourhood, at the expense of parents having to explain to there children why is that person doing that to themselves.The addiction population in vancouver's dtes has grown enormously over the last few years to ten thousand in a twelve block square area you would not beleive how high this concentration is, we also have the reputation as the largest per capital in all of north america.On the issue of the availability of detox, this facility has seventy five hundred registered users on file as of 2008 the facility only has ten to twelve beds the whole city only has some 200 or so beds for more than 20.000 addicts it would be awesome if they were able to achieve a thirty percent transition to detox.This i know is wrong most of the people myself included have on average had to wait anywhere from three to seven days to get a bed.Beleive it or not the safe injection site is the only support service available in this neighbourhood from midnight to six in the morning, this to me is a real shame i think that any facility that might be of a benifit to make the transition to recovery should be separate you may have a greater success rate go figure.Just so you know i am currently lobbing for more detox bed's minimum one hundred ,as well an outreach in this neighbourhood that offers counseling transition to recovery support groups and any thing that might give the junkie hope for a better life.I myself was addicted for over twenty five years today i have seven years clean i have been very active in changing many people's lives. I started a website to show the world what liberal drug policies can result in and i'm afraid it's non to pretty the site is http://www.2010homelesschampions.ca Here's a small sample of out of control as well as a common occurence, you be the judge http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OuNWCPDrJsM

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Some day
Posted by: MaxThrax on May 23, 2009 6:43 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When I was in New Jersey recently I was surprised to see a syringe disposal bin on the wall in a rest area bathroom. I can only hope that someday this country is in fact rational enough to recognize that there's a problem in this country, and instead of pretending that we have the ability to make it go away, we need to deal with it. Prohibition is not working. Containment is the way to go. www.inebriateddiscourse.com (anti-prohibition site)

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» RE: Some day Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Some day Posted by: MaxThrax
War on Drugs Success Story
Posted by: aahpat on May 24, 2009 4:42 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Last year, an estimated 22,000 Americans died from overdoses, second only to motor-vehicle accidents when it comes to accidental deaths. More people died of accidental overdoses in New York last year than from homicide."

The objective of the war on drugs is to make drug use so uncomfortable and dangerous to users that people will avoid it. All of the incarceration, disease and depravity are the environment that the prohibition policy mandates and imposes on society.

Just as any drug warrior will tell you that increased violence in the community is a natural outcome of increased drug enforcement, so too more crime, disease and destroyed lives are how the war on drugs measures its success.

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Uh no.
Posted by: EinMD on May 24, 2009 7:16 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm for the legalization of drugs. As far as I'm concerned anything you put in your own body is your own business. If it kills you that's your problem. There only thing that should be prosecuted as far as the Drug War goes is the people who take drugs and then commit some other already illegal act like running someone over or killing someone.

But I'm not putting up my money to create an environment where drug addicts can shoot up on my dime. No, not happening. I don't give a damn what the justification is. I'm not gonna tell 'em they can't do it, but if they're going to do it they need to pay for it themselves.

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» RE: Uh no. (Uh, YES!) Posted by: Jayzer
» RE: No, not happening Posted by: Sister_Lauren
Can't we just dig a big hole and let the drug party begin?
Posted by: Daito on May 26, 2009 9:12 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
These people are trying to kill themselves anyway. Let them do it together and save us some space which regular people can rent.

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Terrytom an alternative plan
Posted by: Terrytom on May 30, 2009 5:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The drug war is mindless and cannot be won. The conservatives like it that way as they thrive on conflict and profit from it. They are neither compassionate nor insightful.
My plan is to trade violence and criminality for education and treatment. There will remain some traditional legal issues.
First is the educational component: classes for each mood-altering chemical the person wishes to use and that includes one of the most harmful yet now legal ones, alcohol. Upon successful completion of the course a license will be issued for that person to obtain the drug at a properly licensed pharmacy or store.
Second, certain amounts considered reasonable recreational amounts would be allowed. If the licensee exceeds that amount a psychologist or other trained professional will contact him/her for consultation. Most often drug abuse is a symptom of a person self-medicating for unexplored or denied issues.
Third, we substitute counseling and hospitalization for imprisonment. Legalization will diminish greatly much property crime committed to obtain money for expensive black market drugs. Legalization will remove the cause of much violence in turf wars and vengeance. This will ease our prison population. It will reduce family violence because many people in need of treatment will now get counseling rather than prison. Little needed rehabilitation or counseling is available in prison. Most convicts just get worse.
Fourth; and by no means least it will lesson police criminal behavior and aid to restore respect for the law and our justice system.
Today our computer power and linking make all this easy to implement and track.
I speak as a thoughtful, grateful, recovering addict and alcoholic with over 13 years of blessed recovery. It has not been easy yet my spiritual journey, self-discovery and growth continue because I stay active in those pursuits. My life today is in many ways the best it has ever been.

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