Windsor Star

Decriminal­ize all drugs: Toronto health official

Medical officer urges the city to lobby Ottawa

- LiAm cAsey

TORONTO • Toronto’s top public health official believes the time has come to decriminal­ize all drugs for personal use and will be asking the city’s board of health this week to push the federal government for action on the issue.

Dr. Eileen de Villa, the city’s medical officer of health, said she wouldn’t be doing her job if she didn’t advocate for what she thinks is the right way to tackle drug addiction, a problem that is getting worse due to the opioid crisis that has left thousands of Canadians dead.

Over the past year, de Villa and her team have been examining scientific literature, talking to other jurisdicti­ons about their approaches to drug use and speaking to drug users and citizens about the issue. That culminated in a report de Villa will present to the city’s board of health on Monday that recommends pushing the federal government to take a public health approach, rather than a criminal one, to drug use. De Villa said she asked herself a simple, rhetorical question, about the health of 2.9 million Torontonia­ns. “If what we’re doing isn’t delivering on the shared goals of optimal community health and reduced harms associated with drugs, and somebody else’s approach, which is more health focused, is actually getting those outcomes we seek, don’t the residents of Toronto deserve the opportunit­y to explore that different approach?” de Villa said. The other jurisdicti­ons she examined included Portugal, Switzerlan­d and Germany.

“They are getting reduced drug use rates. They are getting minimized harm associated with drug use and ultimately better community health as a whole,” she said. The report de Villa will present Monday recommends the city’s board of health call on the federal government to “decriminal­ize the possession of all drugs for personal use, and scale up prevention, harm reduction, and treatment services.”

It further recommends the board ask the federal government to convene a task force “to explore options for the legal regulation of all drugs in Canada, based on a public health approach.”

De Villa said the board will likely approve the recommenda­tions, which will then trigger a letter to the federal government. Health Canada said the government is not currently looking at decriminal­izing or legalizing all drugs.

“We are committed to a compassion­ate and evidence-based approach to drug policy, which requires a public health approach when considerin­g and addressing drug issues,” said Health Canada spokeswoma­n Maryse Durette. “We are aware that decriminal­ization, as part of a comprehens­ive approach to substance use, seems to be working in places like Portugal, but more study would be required as the circumstan­ces are very different in Canada.”

 ??  ?? Dr. Eileen de Villa
Dr. Eileen de Villa

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