Tuesday, May 29, 2007

AT LAST! AT LONG, BLOODY LAST!


'Harm reduction' doesn't work

Editorial: National Post
Tuesday, May 29, 2007


Last week, it was announced that the Conservative government will soon unveil a new national anti-drug strategy. The plan is said to feature a get-tough approach to illegal drugs, including a crackdown on grow-ops and drug gangs. And while it will also (wisely) include tens of millions for rehabilitation of addicts and for a national drug prevention campaign, it is said to retreat from safe-injection sites and other fashionable "harm-reduction" strategies introduced by the previous Liberal government.


To which we say: Good. This editorial column has long urged a softening of drug policy on marijuana and other non-addictive recreational substances. But heroin and similarly addictive drugs are a different story. Moreover, safe injection sites don't work. And they send the wrong message, too, promoting disrespect for the rule of law by having government facilitating the consumption of illegal substances.


Safe-injection sites (SIS)-- typically inner-city facilities where addicts may go to shoot up with clean needles under the watchful eye of medical specialists --are often said to work wonders. Benefits claimed on behalf of Insite, Canada's one and only SIS in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside since 2003, include reduced needle sharing, reduced spread of deadly diseases such as HIV and hepatitis, fewer needles discarded in surrounding neighbourhoods and fewer addicts overdosing in alleys. Lives have been saved, advocates claim, the "well-being of drug users improved," and all without increased street dealing around Insite.


Too bad most of the proof to back these positive claims come from SIS proponents or the academics who devise harm-reduction theories. Police here, and in Europe (where they have lots of experience with SISs) tell a very different tale.


When Insite applied to have its three-year licence renewed last fall, the RCMP told Health Canada it had "concerns regarding any initiative that lowers the perceived risks associated with drug use. There is considerable evidence to show that, when the perceived risks associated to drug use decreases, there is a corresponding increase in number of people using drugs."
That has certainly been the case in Europe. Currently there are more than three dozen major European cities on record against SISs. Most have had such facilities and closed them because they found that drug problems increased, not decreased.


After an injection site was opened in Rotterdam in the early 1990s, the municipal council reported a doubling of the number of 15- to 19-year-olds addicted to heroine or cocaine. Over the 1990s, the Dutch Criminal Intelligence Service reported a 25% increase in drug-related gun murders and robberies in neighbourhoods housing one of that country's 50 official methadone clinics or addict shelters. Zurich closed its infamous needle park in 1992, after the police and citizenry became fed up with public urination and defecation, prostitution, open sex, panhandling, drug peddling, loud fights and violent crimes.


Since word of the Tories' new strategy began to leak out of Ottawa, the well-meaning people who work at Insite have stepped up their campaign to save their facility, which Ottawa has said must close this fall. We sympathize with these supporters. No doubt, they have genuine concern for their charges, who are troubled souls caught in a downward spiral of abuse, crime, disease and pain.


But as much as we admire the good intentions behind SISs, drug consumption is the wrong business for government to be in. A government that funds safe havens for injecting illegal drugs on one hand will quickly find it is working against its efforts to reduce drug dealing on the other.


© National Post 2007

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Too bad most of the proof to back these positive claims come from SIS proponents or the academics who devise harm-reduction theories."

And too bad most of the anti-SIS rhetoric comes from detractors.

Robert W. said...

David,

I soooooooooooo wish you were on the air to dispel the nonsense put forth by the many DEPI advocates. It's gotten so bad that now if you even dare to disagree with them you're ridiculed as naive and uninformed.

Maybe a good article for the Sun?

Robert

Walter Schultz said...

David,

What we need, is more treatment not more drug use enabling. Treatment, treatment and more treatment, that's the answer. If the SIS, were so successful, why then is the DTES, such as mess today? SIS are obviously not working!

Why don't we try compulsory drug treatment?

It's been a success in Sweden.

Anonymous said...

I don't understand this support for drug users. They chose to use drugs knowing full well what it is they're taking. Nobody sat on them and forced them to take it. And because of this "mistake", society has to fork over millions of dollars (money these addicts didn't contribute to, by the way) so they can stay alive?

How come nobody asks these addicts how any people did they hurt or stole from or assaulted or killed to get money for their addiction? Is society a free source of money for them and it's ok? "Oh Doug, just had a quick question before we give you a free needle and a lovely! little booth to take those drugs in....did you maim Aunt Edna for your drug money or did you use your Visa today?" "Well, don't you worry, at least you'll live another day to hurt another person!" "Same time tomorrow?" "Lovely!" "See you then!"

Really? This is accepted just as long it's not MY Aunt Edna.

We all know these addicts aren't running to the local bank machine to access their own bank account.