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Bid to Shutter Insite Goes to Court in Canada
May 5, 2009

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News Summary

The British Columbia Court of Appeal is considering the Canadian government's bid to shut down the Insite supervised-injection program for opiate addicts, the Vancouver Courier reported April 29.

The Conservative government is appealing a 2008 B.C. Supreme Court ruling that sustained a waiver of federal drug laws that has allowed Insite to remain in operation since 2003. Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government has attempted to strip the Vancouver-based program of its exemption and shut it down.

Insite allows opiate addicts to inject their drugs in a supervised setting using clean needles and with access to addiction specialists and other healthcare services. "[Prime Minister] Stephen Harper is in essence bringing back the death penalty for the drug addicted," said Jenny Kwan, an opposition politician from Vancouver at a rally outside the courthouse. "He's condemning them to a life of death and diseases."

Studies have shown that Insite has cut the spread of disease among addicts and resulted in some referrals to treatment, but opponents say the program enables addiction. Insite is the only legal supervised-injection site in North America.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Mike Gimbel on 05 May 09 02:06 PM EDT
Good for them. We all know Harm Reduction programs do not change behavior and probably reinforces the addicts belief that they will live forever. It also doesn't get addicts into treatment, since they don't experience the"level of pain" most addicts need to feel in order to change. I noticed in your story you said "the program resulted in some referrals" to treatment. We need to do better and get more addicts into treatment. Harm Reduction does not do that and we all know it.

Posted by stopthehate on 06 May 09 09:28 AM EDT
What motivates this is their sick need to hurt anyone different from themselves. If addicts won't do what they want, then hurt and punish them. Showing compassion never even enters their mind. It's called empathy, and if you don't feel any for these folks, you are not a good person. Why reduce harm for people you don't like, right Mike?

Posted by stopthehate on 06 May 09 09:36 AM EDT
I suppose the fact that the program will save $20 million dollars in a decade isn't enough to satisfy the haters.

Posted by Me - Not a hater on 06 May 09 11:16 AM EDT
Where do they get the drugs they are injecting? Are they provided to them by the organization? Isn't this the same as legalizing drugs or legalizing possession? Or are they bringing their own drugs to shoot up...that seems unlikely. If its there own drugs, the experience I have had with drug addicts is that they will do whatever it takes to get the drugs, quite often robbing people...whatever it takes. I have tried empathy, and while I still do feel badly for people who are addicted, I am much more guarded. I don't know that they think they will live forever, I think its more like they don't care and want to do anything to numb the pain of living.

Posted by Brinna on 06 May 09 11:07 PM EDT
Did someone just say harm reduction doesn't work. Don't know how many times I have to say this: look at the successes in Switzerland with regard to harm reduction, and Portugal with regard to decriminalization. Are we stupider than rats? They seem to be able to figure out where the cheese is.

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