Dayton Daily News

Why do we continue

- Ideas & Voices Editor

not connect these dots?

to resist syringe exchange programs when study after study has shown that they reduce the spread of HIV, hepatitis and other infectious diseases without increasing drug use?

Why do we block access

to the highly effective anti-addiction drugs methadone and suboxone through unnecessar­ily onerous restrictio­ns and lack of funding?

Why don’t we use

the kind of heroin-assisted treatment programs that have worked so well in Switzerlan­d, Germany, the Netherland­s, Denmark and the United Kingdom?

Why do we shun

the safe, supervised drug injection sites that other countries use to prevent overdose deaths, minimize public drug use and reduce the dangers of discarded syringes? Why can’t we see, as other countries have, how these sites can serve as gateways to treatment and a better, sober life for even the most hard-to-reach opioid users?

Why aren’t we expanding

our successful use of the anti-overdose drug Naloxone by making it less expensive and more widely available to at-risk individual­s, their families and friends?

Why don’t we offer

free, community-based drug checking services that would not only save lives, but also would provide health authoritie­s with real-time informatio­n on local drug trends?

Why do we persist

in thinking that we can reduce opioid drug use by imposing harsh criminal penalties? When and where has this ever worked? Why are we so afraid of decriminal­izing drug use when Portugal has shown so clearly how decriminal­ization improves health, restores lives, reduces drug-related crime, saves money, and allows law enforcemen­t to focus on preventing and solving real crimes?

us Why do so many of

continue to believe that doing these things would somehow “send the wrong message” about drug use? Do we really think it’s better to continue letting drug users spread disease and die when we have the proven means to prevent it? What sort of message does that send? Is this really who we want to be? Really?

Why isn’t the news media

asking these questions? Why isn’t there more news coverage of how these practical, health-centered strategies are successful­ly combating the many harms associated with opioid addiction?

Why do nearly all

of our leaders, and even many of our so-called experts, refuse even to consider these questions?

Most importantl­y,

why aren’t we – all of us – asking these questions? How many more people have to suffer and die before we start demanding answers?

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