Pubdate: Thu, 02 Apr 2015
Source: Vancouver 24hours (CN BC)
Copyright: 2015 Vancouver 24 hrs.
Contact: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/letters
Website: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3837
Author: Ada Slivinski
Page: 4

SUPERVISED INJECTION EXPANSION A 'MONSTROUS' STRATEGY: EXPERT

Vancouver Coastal Health's strategy to bring supervised injection
services to community health centres across the city has drawn
criticism from one of the most prominent recovery experts in Vancouver.

"This strategy is, in my opinion, monstrous," said David Berner, the
executive director of the Drug Prevention Network of Canada. "It's
based on a belief system that's completely false," he said, explaining
that harm reduction assumes "addicts are addicts for life and they
must be kept comfortable."

He said that treatment focused on recovery helps people overcome the
challenge of addiction and get back to living their life.

"I've helped thousands of addicts get clean and sober. I can't imagine
handing an addict a needle," said Berner.

A long-time critic of harm reduction, Berner said that helping addicts
use is "a confirmation of (their) world-view that (they) don't deserve
a good life."

He likened supervised injections to condoning other destructive
behaviours.

"If you knew that your daughter was cutting herself, would you spend
20 minutes sterilizing her razor blades?"

In their Downtown Eastside Second Generation Health Strategy, VCH
outlines a goal to "(pursue) the development of supervised injection
capacity in community health centres and other key service locations
across the DTES and Vancouver."

They also plan to increase the operating hours of Insite, opening
"earlier in the day for this high demand period."

Berner said governments need to put more money towards recovery to
help people overcome addictions.

"There's a common mantra in this business: the rich get treatment, the
poor get methadone," he said.

Proponents of harm reduction say their approach works.

"The purpose of harm reduction is to reduce harm while connecting you
to other health care," said Anna-Marie D'Angelo, VCH media
spokesperson.

Berner said the B.C. government can learn from the federal government
in Ottawa, which is funding recovery programs. Ottawa passed Bill C- 2
- - the Respect for Communities Act - which makes more stringent
regulations for the establishment of other stand-alone supervised
injection facilities like Insite.
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MAP posted-by: Matt