Pubdate: Thu, 05 Aug 2004
Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC)
Copyright: 2007 Vancouver Courier
Contact:  http://www.vancourier.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474
Author: Mike Howell

COPS NOT ADHERING TO OVERDOSE POLICY

An advocate for drug users says she's heard from addicts that some 
police officers are continuing to attend drug overdose calls, despite 
a new policy to discontinue the practice.

Ann Livingston, project coordinator for the Vancouver Area Network of 
Drug Users (VANDU), said addicts are still afraid to call 911 if 
someone overdoses because they don't want to be hassled or taken to 
jail by police.

"When you get drug users together, they'll say things like this, 
'Don't just call 911, if you can revive the guy, do it, because he 
might have warrants for his arrest.' That's crazy, but I know why 
they're doing it."

Last November, police agreed to only respond to drug overdoses if 
they're fatal, or if public safety is endangered. Drug overdose 
deaths reportedly dropped by six per cent after police in South 
Australia implemented the same policy. The theory is that addicts are 
more likely to call 911 if they don't have to worry about facing a drug charge.

Vancouver police Insp. Ken Frail, a 10-year veteran of the Downtown 
Eastside, said one reason officers may still be turning up at 
overdoses is that the information is broadcast over police radios 
that an ambulance is en route. "Depending on the location of where 
the overdose is, there's nothing that prevents a police officer from 
stopping by to make sure the crew is OK, or we may be familiar with 
an area that's particularly dangerous, so we'll attend."

The goal is not to attend "routine" overdoses, which means ones that 
don't involve weapons, screaming or yelling or fights, said Frail, 
adding officers are still being educated about the new policy. "It 
will take a while-that we don't get rushing to every overdose call.

"It's a change in our culture, and it's a change in the culture on 
the street. Let's put it this way, everyone wants to point the finger 
at us, and say we attend overdose calls and lay charges. I have not 
found a police officer who has ever laid a charge at an overdose 
call. So who's got the misperception?"

Frail said it's too early to tell if the new policy is making a 
difference. "But I can tell you when this was discussed four years 
ago, this was kind of like a crazy notion. Now it's well accepted by 
seasoned police officers as a common sense thing to do."

Five more people died of drug overdoses in Vancouver last year than 
in 2002, but fatalities are nowhere near the rates they were during 
the epidemic in the 1990s. Last year's 54 deaths in the city were 
significantly down from the 191 recorded in 1998, according to 
statistics released by the B.C. Coroners' Service.

Across the province, 172 people died last year of illicit drug use, 
down from 417 in 1998. Of the 172 who died, 35 were female and 137 
were male. Frail credits the work done by a number of agencies for 
the decline in deaths, including street nurses, paramedics, community 
organizations and police cracking down on drug dealers, along with 
the opening of a supervised injection site.

"There's a whole mix down here, and it's very often difficult to 
separate one thing from another because a whole bunch of agencies are 
trying a whole bunch of initiatives at the same time."

Livingston said VANDU's ongoing campaign to educate addicts about 
dangerous habits like sharing needles and shooting up alone is 
another factor in keeping people alive.

"It was so bad down here for a while that numbers of deaths couldn't 
but go down."

Surrey and Victoria have also seen decreases. Surrey's drug deaths 
dropped to 14 last year from 31 in 1998, while Victoria recorded 15 
fatal overdoses in 2003, down from 26 in 1998. Overdose victims in 
B.C. were also more likely to die on a Saturday, followed by Monday 
and Wednesday. Of the 172 who overdosed last year, the largest 
number-25-died in August.