Ottawa Citizen

Supervised outdoor drug consumptio­n site opens

Somerset West health centre granted permission while worker illnesses probed

- ELIZABETH PAYNE

Two weeks after it and another Ottawa community health centre suspended their supervised consumptio­n sites due to health-and-safety concerns, Somerset West Community Health Centre has opened a temporary site in an enclosed courtyard outside the building.

During a media conference Friday, Somerset West executive director Suzanne Obiorah said the community health centre received an exemption under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act allowing it to temporaril­y open an outdoor supervised consumptio­n site.

The site will remain open while investigat­ions into the source of health issues experience­d by workers continue, she said. She said she expected it, like the temporaril­y closed indoor site, would serve about 40 people a day.

Obiorah said the Ontario Ministry of Labour had visited Somerset West and was working with officials there to find a solution.

During the week of Feb. 26, there were two instances in which staff reported nausea, dizziness and headaches while working in the consumptio­n site, something that had not happened previously.

“The symptoms were short-lived and we are thankful that everyone has recovered and is fine,” Obiorah said. “In the five years that we have been open, we have not received reports of staff illness while working in our consumptio­n and treatment service. The health and safety of our staff and clients are absolutely our top priority.”

She said the investigat­ions at Somerset West and Sandy Hill Community Health Centre, which was also shut down after staff there reported illnesses, were separate, but the two centres were in continuous discussion­s.

Obiorah noted that supervised consumptio­n sites were highly regulated and procedures were being correctly followed when the instances of staff feeling ill occurred. The regulation­s allow people to heat drugs before injecting them.

She would not speculate on what role the current toxic drug supply might have played, saying the investigat­ion was ongoing.

“I want to separate the current drug supply from the symptoms that our staff have experience­d," Obiorah said. “We don't yet understand what contribute­d to the symptoms. That will come out of the investigat­ion.”

Somerset West Community Health Centre, which offers a variety of health and social services in addition to consumptio­n treatment, has given up its parking for the outdoor space, she said, noting the shift to outdoors would likely mean more people around the building.

Obiorah said the centre is grateful it can offer the service again, though temporaril­y outdoors.

 ?? TONY CALDWELL ?? The Somerset West Community Health Centre's Suzanne Obiorah says staff is working with the province to address health concerns.
TONY CALDWELL The Somerset West Community Health Centre's Suzanne Obiorah says staff is working with the province to address health concerns.

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