Pubdate: Thu, 05 Jun 2008
Source: Peterborough Examiner, The (CN ON)
Copyright: 2008 Osprey Media Group Inc.
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/4VLGnvUl
Website: http://www.thepeterboroughexaminer.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2616
Author: W. Gifford-Jones, M. D.
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?142 (Supervised Injection Sites)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/insite (Insite)

SOMETHING TERRIBLY WRONG

Should the injection site for addicts in Vancouver be closed? 
Proponents argue that one million injections in Vancouver have saved 
lives and decreased the risk of HIV infection. Others contend 
injection sites send the wrong message and should be closed. But in 
this heated debate, why don't both sides and our government attack 
the root cause of this cancerous problem.

First, how sick are these heroin addicts? I've no idea, as I've never 
treated addicts. But Dr. Theodore Dalrymple, a British prison doctor 
and psychiatrist, has treated addicts for years. In his book 
"Romancing Opiates," he writes that heroin is not as highly addictive 
as is claimed and withdrawal is not medically serious. He contends 
that a useless medical bureaucracy has been established to deal with addicts.

Dalrymple has observed addicts laughing in his waiting room. But once 
inside his consultation room they appear to be "in extremis." And 
when taken to task for this change of demeanor they admit they were 
"blagging." What Dalrymple says makes some sense. I have seen cancer 
patients in London, England, being prescribed huge doses of heroin 
for pain. They could be weaned off these massive doses in a few weeks 
once their pain subsided. But let's assume Dalrymple is wrong and 
addicts need lp.

Those in favour of the Vancouver site argue that the Canadian Charter 
of Rights and Freedoms guarantees treatment for addicts. I'm not a 
legal expert. But surely, if addicts have this right, what about 
other patients? Today, many rights are not be being addressed by the 
Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Years ago I fought for the 
legalization of heroin to ease the suffering of terminal cancer 
patients. I was labeled "a headline-seeking journalist" and 
criticized by The Cancer Society, the RCMP and hospital pharmacists 
who claimed morphine is just as effective. This is a lie and 
hypocrisy at its worst.

It's ludicrous that year after year thousands of people still see 
loved ones dying in agony from cancer without the benefit of heroin 
as a painkiller. Yet for heroin addicts, it is imported and readily 
available in Vancouver. There's something terribly wrong with this discrepancy.

Contacts tell me that many residents of half-way houses routinely 
spend their monthly government cheques on crack cocaine. Some also 
become pregnant and deliver children with brain damage from drugs 
that cannot be repaired. Surely the Charter of Rights and Freedoms 
should also protects children from this life-long misfortune.

What about those who through no fault of their own suffer from 
debilitating arthritis or Crohn's disease, an inflammation of the 
bowel? Both require drugs that cost thousands of dollars to decrease 
the risk of recurrence. Yet all too often patients cannot afford the 
cost, and help from provincial health plans is denied or inadequate.

Now there's talk that Toronto intends to study the feasibility of a 
safe injection site for heroin addicts. But another safe site will 
not solve the medical, social and economic problems resulting from 
the use of illegal drugs.

Lee Kuan Yew, former Prime Minister of Singapore, knew the answer to 
this problem. I received his blunt message on a plane before landing 
in Singapore. A card was handed to me that read, "Death for drug 
traffickers under Singapore law." Since 1991 it's reported that 420 
people have been executed, mostly due to drug trafficking.

I'm sure many people find this law repulsive. But if we were not 
required to spend so much money on addicts and crime associated with 
illegal drugs, patients with other diseases could be protected by the 
Charter of Rights and Freedoms. What do you think?
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom