Pubdate: Thu, 29 Dec 2016
Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC)
Copyright: 2016 Times Colonist
Contact:  http://www.timescolonist.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481
Author: Cindy E. Harnett
Page: A1

DRUG SITE USED BY 268 PEOPLE IN FIRST WEEK

Traffic 'higher than anticipated' for supervised facility

Victoria's first public overdose-prevention site was used by 268 people in
its first week.

The temporary drug-use site, in a bright orange shipping container in the
courtyard of Our Place Society, 919 Pandora Ave., opened Dec. 20.

Traffic has been "higher than we anticipated for starting off," said Don
Evans of Our Place.

"We thought it would take some time before people got comfortable going
in, because most people are finding a quiet, private place to use, so to
have them come into a public place is certainly new for people in this
city."

A second site, at 844 Johnson St., is open only to residents of the
building, former campers from Victoria's dismantled tent city.

A record number of people have died from illicit drug overdoses in B.C.
this year - 755 between January and the end of November, an increase of
more than 70 per cent from the same period last year, according to the
B.C. Coroners Service.

Sixty overdose deaths have been recorded in Victoria, trailing only
Vancouver at 164 and Surrey at 92. Nanaimo has had 25 deaths.

On Dec. 12, British Columbia enacted a ministerial order to support the
creation of temporary overdose-prevention sites - an emergency response
until official supervised-consumption sites, with attached health and
social services, are approved by Health Canada.

The sites offer a hygienic environment where people use their own drugs
under the supervision of medical staff. They aim to reduce the number of
overdose deaths, connect people with health-care services and reduce
public drug use and the number of discarded needles.

Having a paramedic on site has helped Our Place's outreach workers, who
were having to respond to overdoses, and has also allowed staff to build
relationships with people using drugs, Evans said. "We were so focused on
saving people's lives we hadn't realized … there's a real opportunity for
us to engage and help people, whatever their needs are."

The site also helps to reduce the shame and judgment some people feel
about their addiction, and ensures they don't use drugs alone, he said.

The Vancouver Island Health Authority has the highest drug overdose rate
among B.C.'s health regions, with 19.7 deaths per 100,000 people from
January to November - a 153 per cent increase over last year.

Island Health hopes to open three long-term supervised-consumption sites
with related health and social services at Our Place, at a residence at
844 Johnson St. and at 2920 Bridge St. near the Rock Bay Landing shelter.

It has committed to submitting applications for two of the three sites -
Johnson Street and Pandora Avenue - to Health Canada by the end of this
month.

The health authority also hopes to open a Health Canada approved site in
Nanaimo, and plans to open a temporary over-dose-prevention site are in
the works.

In the meantime, two Nanaimo city councillors have opened their own
temporary site in the middle of the municipal hall's main parking lot.

"Nanaimo has the highest percapita death rate [from overdose] in B.C.,"
said Coun. Gordon Fuller.

"It's a problem that needs to be dealt with. We're doing this to spur on
Island Health to do something more."

He and Coun. Jim Kipp set up the temporary site on Monday. It consists of
a canopy with tarp sides, a source of heat, tables and chairs, and has two
people trained to deliver the overdose antidote naloxone and to call
emergency services, Fuller said.

Island Health said it hopes to have an official overdose prevention site
up and running in Nanaimo next week. It is looking at a site that is
accessible to drug users where it already delivers services.

Fuller said he hopes the site will open on schedule.

"We need something better than what we have right now," he said. "We need
a stable location."
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