The Standard (St. Catharines)

Health Canada approves three safe injection sites in Toronto

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TORONTO — Health Canada has approved three supervised injection sites in Toronto.

Health Minister Jane Philpott says necessary exemptions from the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act have been granted for the clinics to operate.

The sites allow people to use illicit drugs under the supervisio­n of a medical profession­al in case they overdose.

They are to be located at Toronto Public Health’s The Works, the Queen West-Central Toronto Community Health Centre, and the South Riverdale Community Health Centre.

Philpott said Friday in a release that Canadian and internatio­nal evidence demonstrat­es that supervised injection sites save lives without increasing drug use or crime in the surroundin­g area.

She says the safe injection sites are part of the government’s approach to combating the current overdose epidemic.

Bill C-37, which became law last month, streamline­d the applicatio­n process for the sites by reducing the informatio­n burden on applicants and speeding up the applicatio­n and renewal processes.

The sites provide sterile equipment, informatio­n about drugs, basic health care and addiction treatment referrals.

“No single action is going to put an end to the mounting number of overdoses occurring across the country, and it is crucial that we work together and continue to explore new ways to help us reverse the course of this crisis,” Philpott said in a release.

The Ontario government announced in January that it was committed to funding three supervised injection sites in Toronto and one in Ottawa.

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