Edmonton Journal

Harm reduction cuts drug use, Vancouver study finds

- DENE MOORE

VANCOUVER — Harm reduction — not a war on drugs — has reduced illicit drug use and improved public safety in what was once Ground Zero for an HIV and overdose epidemic that cost many lives, says a 15-year study of drug use in Vancouver’s impoverish­ed Downtown Eastside.

The report by the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS found that from 1996 to 2011, fewer people were using drugs and, of those who were, fewer were injecting drugs, said Dr. Thomas Kerr, co-author of the report and co-director of the centre’s Urban Health Research Initiative.

“A public health emergency was declared here because we saw the highest rates of HIV infection ever seen outside of sub-Saharan Africa — in this community. At the same time, the community was being levelled by an overdose epidemic,” Kerr said after presenting his findings to members of the group affected at a community centre in the heart of the neighbourh­ood.

Vancouver took a public health approach to the crisis, opening the country’s first supervised injection site in 2003, and Kerr said the statistics show that approach was successful.

Fewer people were sharing needles in 2011, and there were fewer new infections of HIV and hepatitis C related to sharing needles, the study found.

In 1996, almost 40 per cent of drug users reported sharing needles, but by 2011, that had dropped to 1.7 per cent. About 25 per cent of Vancouver’s drug users are HIV positive, and about 90 per cent suffer from hepatitis C.

The overall health of drug users had improved and more people were accessing addiction treatment, jumping from 12 per cent on methadone treatment in 1996 to 54.5 per cent since 2008, statistics showed.

“This is probably the city with the most aggressive harm reduction approach, yet we’re seeing declining rates of drug use within this community,” Kerr said.

Still, the Conservati­ve government continues to fight programs such as supervised­injection sites, he said.

Earlier this month, the federal government introduced the Respect for Communitie­s Act, which will require applicants of drug injection sites to consult with the community, provincial and municipal authoritie­s and law enforcemen­t officials, before setting up new facilities.

Several policing associatio­ns have sided with the federal government on the issue, but in B.C. the provincial government is a supporter of Vancouver’s InSite.

The Supreme Court of Canada ordered the Conservati­ves to keep the Vancouver clinic open, despite their objections, but proponents of the site say the federal legislatio­n would make it almost impossible to open another.

 ?? RICHARD LAM/ POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Supervised injection sites have been a contentiou­s issue in Vancouver, where protests on both sides of the issue have flared up since the first site was opened in 2003.
RICHARD LAM/ POSTMEDIA NEWS Supervised injection sites have been a contentiou­s issue in Vancouver, where protests on both sides of the issue have flared up since the first site was opened in 2003.

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