Pubdate: Fri, 25 Nov 2016 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2016 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/send_a_letter Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Jen Zoratti Page: A4 KEEPING WATCH, SAVING LIVES Opioid crisis draws attention to supervised drug-use sites, but Manitoba's not interested - so far A DECADE ago, fentanyl, the killer synthetic opioid that can be 100 times more potent than morphine, was a relatively unknown drug. Today, it's everywhere - and it's at the heart of a national crisis claiming the lives of hundreds of Canadians. In Manitoba, at least two dozen people have died from opioid overdoses in 2016, nine confirmed to be caused by or related to fentanyl. It's a dangerous drug that many people don't even know they're taking: it's often showing up in other illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin. As Canada grapples with how to combat fentanyl's rapid spread, the debate about supervised drug-use sites has been renewed. The sites are safe places where users can inject drugs they've already obtained with clean supplies under the supervision of nurses and medical staff. They are also highly controversial. "For a lot of people, (illicit drug use) is a black-and-white issue - it's wrong," says Anna Marie D'Angelo, the senior media relations officer at Vancouver Coastal Health, which operates Insite, the pioneering supervised injection facility in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. Since Insite became North America's first supervised injection site in 2003, there have been more than three million injections at the facility - and no one has died. "We have a more pragmatic approach because we're looking at it through a health-care lens. When you're on the ground working with clients, you know that they've tried everything all their lives. "Quite often they have mental illness, they're disconnected from communities, they're homeless, they have all kinds of other heath issues. And we want them to just say no now? That's not going to work." There are only two legal supervised injection sites in Canada, and they are both in Vancouver. Still, activists in Vancouver have in recent days resorted to opening up illegal "pop-up" injection sites in back alleys to help keep people alive. From Nov. 15 to 22, Insite saw 104 overdoses, which would likely have been fatal if not for the intervention they are able to provide. Fourteen happened on Sunday alone. British Columbia has been one of the hardest-hit provinces in the fentanyl crisis. There have been 332 overdose deaths linked to fentanyl from Jan. 1 to Sept. 30 this year, almost triple the number in 2015. Manitoba Health Minister Kelvin Goertzen has said opening a supervised drug-use site is not part of Manitoba's plan to respond to the opioid crisis. But should it be? Manitoba is no stranger to harm reduction in health care. In Winnipeg, many places - from Klinic to the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority's Street Connections program, which distributes everything from clean needles to take-home kits of naloxone, an opioid antidote - operate under a harm-reduction model, meaning they aim to mitigate the harmful consequences of risky behaviour. Providing clean needles or condoms are basic examples of harm reduction. Insite operates under a harm reduction model. It's important to note its supervised injection, not "safe injection." Injecting illicit drugs is not, by nature, safe. But supervision means that if someone overdoses, a nurse is there. It also means the safe disposal of used needles. Harm-reduction work is a lot more than providing people with clean needles. It's about providing people an entry point into the health-care system. Drug users who choose to inject at Insite are able to build trust with health-care and social workers, which means they are more likely to pursue detox, counselling and other treatments. People who are ready to go into detox will be accommodated at Onsite, Insite's detox facility, immediately. "That's really important for this client," D'Angelo says. "Before, it'd be 'Come back at 10 a.m. and go into detox.' Well, they don't have watches. They don't make appointments. They don't know what day it is. And then they don't show up. This is one way to reach a very hard-to-reach client group." Insite also has the capability to test street drugs for fentanyl. About 90 per cent of drugs tested there have been positive for fentanyl. "We tell people to just assume that it's in there," D'Angelo says. She adds that workers are also able to pick up on whether or not, say, a bad batch of heroin is making the rounds. They are also able to attach numbers to the overdose crisis. "Some provinces don't even know what their OD stats are because there's no way to track it," she says. Supervised drug-use sites are not easy to establish, which may explain why there are so few in Canada. Insite operates under an exemption from the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. The former Conservative goverment attempted to shut down Insite, taking the fight to the Supreme Court of Canada, which ruled in 2011 that Insite could remain open. And so, in 2015, the Conservative government responded by introducing the Respect for Communities Act, an amendment to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act that essentially made the process for applying for a supervised injection site so hard and frustrating no one would want to go through it. This month, the Liberal government announced it is working to change the legislation. "I think there's a place for (supervised injection)," says Dr. Mike Dillon, medical director at Winnipeg's Klinic. "Certainly because of the size of the scope, we're not in the same league as Vancouver or Toronto. Everything could be better. It would be a good part of a larger harm-reduction program, but we haven't been jumping up and down begging for a supervised injection site. Right now, we're trying to keep up doing what we do." Dr. Cathy Cook, the vice-president of public and mental health at the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority, says there would be a considerable number of things to look into before embarking on the process. "At this point, we have not seen evidence that a safe-injection site would benefit those who use illicit drugs in Winnipeg. It is something we continue to discuss and monitor, but we would need to do a thorough evaluation of the needs of the population who use illicit drugs before undertaking such a process. That process would need to be undertaken with our partners at the province and with the City of Winnipeg." In addition to saving lives, Dillon says harm reduction saves money, pointing to the cost of treating hepatitis C versus preventing its spread via dirty needles. D'Angelo points out calling 911 in the event of an overdose is a huge draw on first-responder resources. "If you're at Insite and inject and overdose right there, there's a nurse right there who can do CPR, who can administer naloxone, etc. You'll be going to emergency, but you'll be going alert. There is a cost to doing nothing, and people need to acknowledge that." Supervised drug-use sites might be a long way off for Manitoba, but there are ways to save lives now. Dillon would like to see more compassionate care for those struggling with addiction, as well as more discussion about the complex root causes of addiction. "There's no one-size-fits-all," he says. "There's a whole spectrum of people who have different reasons for doing what they do." What doesn't work is punishing people for engaging in risky behaviour. "It saves money and it helps people if we can have the attitude that says 'we're not going to vilify you for using drugs.' We all use drugs. If I didn't have my coffee this morning, I'd have a headache and withdrawal," he says. "There are just some drugs that are socially accepted and encouraged and that's why we pay $5 for a latte. We shouldn't make people feel bad. It's not helpful. We need to show them we're on the same team." - --- MAP posted-by: Matt