USA TODAY US Edition

War on drugs requires unconventi­onal thinking

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With an average 78 Americans dying each day from overdoses of prescripti­on opioid painkiller­s and heroin, it’s clear that the U.S. is losing the war on drugs. The epidemic has spread to suburbia and rural areas. The death toll from heroin has more than tripled since 2010. And the nation is desperate for answers.

Congress is working on bipartisan measures that would give states, localities and non-profit groups money for an array of education, treatment and law enforcemen­t programs. Final passage can’t come a moment too soon. But it’s all standard fare.

To deal with people who are already addicted, some unconventi­onal thinking is required, and here’s one idea worth considerin­g: supervised injection facilities, where an addict can bring heroin and inject it in a clean, safe environmen­t under medical supervisio­n, with easy access to counselors and treatment.

Yes, we know, this might look crazy at first glance. We thought so, too, but the results where this approach has been tried suggest it just might make sense.

This is not a ploy to legalize heroin, weaken law enforcemen­t or replace treatment. It’s an idea that has been effective in Europe, where about 90 such centers operate, and in Vancouver, where the only center in North America opened in 2003.

According to researcher­s at the University of British Columbia and the Center for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, the Canadian center has prevented overdose deaths, reduced the risk of HIV and AIDS through the use of clean needles, cut down on public injections and their dangerous debris, and promoted detox and treatment.

The facility, called Insite, has saved lives after on-site overdoses, and in the 27 months after it opened, overdose deaths dropped 35% in the blocks around the facility — four times the decrease in the rest of Vancouver. The facility, which receives funding from the British Columbia govern- ment, has saved taxpayers money by reducing expensive-to-treat HIV and AIDS cases.

In Europe, injection centers have been around for 30 years. Since the first one opened in Switzerlan­d, the idea has spread to Germany, the Netherland­s, Luxembourg, Denmark and Norway and even Sydney, Australia.

Impressed by the results, a handful of city officials and state lawmakers in the USA are interested. The mayor of Ithaca, N.Y., is pushing the idea, and the county prosecutor is on board. In Seattle’s King County, Sheriff John Urquhart, a former narcotics detective, told The Seattle Times he is “still trying to wrap my head around this. But the more I hear, the more open I am to the possibilit­y.”

Critics remain adamant that the idea is prepostero­us, tantamount to declaring surrender in the war on drugs and turning the government into an enabler of illegal drug abuse. The same arguments were used against methadone clinics and needle exchanges, which now have widespread acceptance.

Vancouver’s experience can inform U.S. decisions: Start small with modest goals — bringing addicts off the streets, preventing disease and overdoses — and provide rigorous, independen­t research to see whether similar programs can work here.

 ?? RICK RYCROFT, AP ?? Marianne Jauncey, medical director at a heroin haven in Sydney, Australia.
RICK RYCROFT, AP Marianne Jauncey, medical director at a heroin haven in Sydney, Australia.

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