Pubdate: Wed, 10 Aug 2016 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Margret Kopala Page: A12 INJECTION SITES WON'T CUT IT Preventing, treating are our only hopes to stem drug abuse, says Margret Kopala. The deadline for the City of Ottawa's supervised injection site consultations was Monday, but Ottawans may be forgiven for finding the whole exercise moot. With drug abuse reaching epidemic proportions in our cities, injection facilities, whatever their merits, are a drop in the bucket compared to what is needed. Even British Columbia, devoted to harm reduction protocols and, since 2003, the home of Canada's first injection site, Insite, is worried. According to the Coroners Service of British Columbia, illicit-drug overdose deaths have increased from 200 in 2007 to a projected 800 in 2016. The introduction of the designer drug fentanyl isn't solely to blame. Heroin overdoses - on their own or laced with fentanyl - are a major factor. Perhaps not surprisingly, Vancouver, with its large drug user presence, has one of the highest rates of property crime on the continent. According to the latest Vancouver Police Department crime incident statistics report, this also increased in 2016 by 24 per cent over the same period in 2015. Adding insult to legal injury, the addict typically takes his ill-gotten gains (women typically prostitute themselves) and, because of an exemption from the provisions of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act extended to Insite by the Supreme Court in 2011, police officers stand aside as he purchases his illegal substance from the local crime syndicate. In turn, the syndicate uses its proceeds to buy guns and even more exotic drugs for addicts to use in the city's supervised injection site. Into this Clockwork Orange world, the addition of fentanyl is just the latest twist. As the morally ambiguous TV series Breaking Bad demonstrated, geniuses willing to cook up lethal concoctions abound. How can the law and our expanding medical-industrial drug complex possibly stem a tide that degrades and kills users, puts public health and safety at risk, compromises the moral authority of our laws and turns our inner cities into micro-narco states? Well, at this rate they can't, and we can be sure that once marijuana is legalized, it will get worse. Marijuana is a complex substance comprising over 100 chemicals and many cannabinoids. Some components will certainly have pharmaceutical benefits but, for the remainder, the growing list of harms includes not only the potential to trigger psychosis in genetically susceptible youths but also to disrupt various functions of the brain in all users. It's long past time for one-off initiatives such as drug injection sites. The only hope for mitigating the impending tidal wave of drug abuse is to establish comprehensive prevention and treatment programs. In the same way Vancouver was able to experiment with a drug injection site, the City of Ottawa should seek dispensation to implement the best-practice models available in Europe. In zero-tolerance Sweden, where the lowest rates of use in the western world prevail, prevention is part of the early school curriculum. In Portugal's health-centred approach to addiction, drug use is also prohibited while possession of small amounts results in fines and/or referrals for appropriate treatment. In the United Kingdom, education has reduced marijuana use. From the unrestricted use of hashish in 15th-century Islamic societies to the opium dens of China that disabled one-quarter of the population, we know that if you build it, they will come. Legalization or facilitation of any psychoactive substance means more use, more addiction and more crime. If we will not prosecute a war against drugs that, like the war against death and disease, cannot be won but at least do some good, let us as a society at least preserve the moral and legal coherence of our laws and the integrity of our medical and pharmaceutical communities. For the community of Ottawa, a once-in-a-generation opportunity is available. We must not fail to seize it. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt