---FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE---
Today, the federal Health Minister has re-introduced a bill whose sole purpose and intent is to block access to health services that save lives and protect public health and safety.
Bill C-2, tabled in Parliament this morning, is identical to Bill C-65 that was tabled in June in the last session of Parliament, before it was prorogued. The bill is aimed at impeding the operation of supervised consumption sites, such as Insite in Vancouver -- which the Supreme Court of Canada already declared, two years ago, saves lives and protects health.
Below and linked here is the statement our organizations released regarding Bill C-65. As today's Bill C-2 is identical, we maintain all the same concerns as previously expressed. We note as well that numerous health professionals have also condemned the government's proposed changes as ill-founded and poor health policy. These include the Canadian Medical Association, the Canadian Nurses Association, the Canadian Association of Nurses in AIDS Care, the Public Health Physicians of Canada, Toronto's Medical Officer of Health and others.
Just two weeks ago, more than 50 community organizations from across the country issued an open letter to Health Minister Rona Ambrose calling on her to heed the years' worth of scientific evidence showing the benefits of supervised consumption sites for our community members struggling with addiction and for the public health and safety at large.
Instead, today the government has chosen to continue its years-long efforts at obstructing and undermining the health and safety of Canadians.
--30--
Media Contacts:
Gilleen Witkowski Communications and Media Relations Officer Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network [email protected] 416 595-1666 ext. 236 / 416 906-5554 (cell)
Donald MacPherson Director Canadian Drug Policy Coalition [email protected] Tel: 778-782-9355
Previous Release: July 5, 2013
GOVERNMENT BILL WILL IMPEDE LIFE-SAVING HEALTH SERVICES,
CAUSE MORE DEATH AND DISEASE
Flouting the Supreme Court of Canada, today the federal government has introduced in Parliament a bill that aims to make it even more difficult for health authorities and community agencies to offer supervised drug consumption services, such as Vancouver’s Insite, to Canadians who are among those most at risk of HIV infection and fatal overdose.
Bill C-65 introduces numerous conditions that the government says must be met before the Minister of Health will issue an exemption under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA) to allow a supervised consumption service to operate. Without such an exemption, people using the service risk being criminally charged for drug possession, effectively undermining the ability of health services to reach those at greatest risk.
The bill is an irresponsible initiative that ignores both the extensive evidence that such health services are needed and effective, and the human rights of Canadians with addictions. In essence, the bill seeks to create multiple additional hurdles that providers of health services must overcome. The bill declares that the Health Minister should issue an exemption only in “exceptional circumstances.” In addition, numerous provisions of the bill create opportunities for community opponents, local police and others to voice their opposition — even if ill-informed — to such health services, and for the federal Health Minister to then use such opposition as an excuse for denying exemptions.
The exemption first issued to Vancouver’s Insite facility in 2003 is the only exemption issued to date in Canada under the CDSA for a supervised injection service. In September 2011, the Supreme Court of Canada finally ruled against the federal government’s decision to withhold further extensions of that exemption. The Court declared the Health Minister had violated the Charter rights of people who need access to such a health facility to reduce the risk of blood-borne infections such as HIV and hepatitis C
and the risk of dying from overdose. As the Court succinctly declared: “Insite saves lives. Its benefits have been proven.” It ordered the Minister to grant an exemption to Insite immediately.
In its judgment, the Supreme Court said the Health Minister has discretion in deciding whether to approve any particular request for an exemption to run a supervised consumption service, but that discretion must be exercised in a way that respects the Charter. The Court set out five factors and said the Minister must consider any evidence there is about those factors in making a decision. This includes any evidence about community support or opposition to the proposed health service.
However, the Court did not say that these are preconditions that must all be satisfied. Yet the government’s bill would make people’s access to supervised consumption services dependent on whether police or other members of the community feel they are warranted. People who use drugs are entitled to needed health care services just like all other Canadians. It is unethical, unconstitutional and damaging to both public health and the public purse to block access to supervised consumption services which save lives and prevent the spread of infections.
Additional information:
“Insight into Insite” provides a plain-language summary of the research into Vancouver’s
supervised injection site (Urban Health Research Initiative, 2010): http://www.cfenet.ubc.ca/sites/default/files/uploads/publications/insight_into_insite.pdf
“Drug consumption rooms: evidence and practice” (IDPC, 2012) provides an overview of such services and their legal status in numerous countries around the world: http://aidslaw.ca/publications/publicationsdocEN.php?ref=1310
-30-
Contacts:
Gilleen Witkowski
Communications and Media Relations Officer
Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
[email protected]
416 595-1666 ext. 236 / 416 906-5554 (cell)
Connie Carter
Senior Policy Analyst
Canadian Drug Policy Coalition
[email protected]
250 598-7969
Background In the last 20 years, supervised injection services (SIS) have been integrated into drug treatment and
harm reduction programs in Western Europe, Australia and Canada. These services grew out of the
recognition that low threshold, easily accessible programs to reduce the incidence of blood borne
pathogens were effective and cost efficient.
Objectives of Supervised Injection Services
The objectives of SIS include: preventing the transmission of blood borne infections such as HIV and
hepatitis C; improving access to healthcare services for the most marginalized groups of people who
use drugs; improving basic health and well-being; contributing to the safety and quality of communities;
and reducing the impact on communities of open drug scenes.
Services in Canada
To shield clients and staff from criminal convictions, these services must hold an exemption from
certain provisions in the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA). Section 56 of this Act allows
the federal Minister of Health to exempt a service or practice from the provisions of the CDSA in the
interests of scientific research or in the public interest.
Opposition from the current federal government has stalled the implementation of these beneficial
services. In 2007, the Health Minister refused to grant a continuation of the legal exemption previously
issued to Insite. Proponents of the site, including the Portland Hotel Society (which operates Insite
under contract with the Vancouver Coastal Health Authority), the Vancouver Area Network of Drug
Users (VANDU) and two individuals using Insite to protect their health, challenged this refusal all the
way to Canada’s Supreme Court. In 2011, that Court ruled in favour of the exemption and ordered the
federal Minister of Health to grant a continuation of the exemption.
Research on these services in Canada
Since 2003, the city of Vancouver has been the location of a rigorously evaluated and highly successful
stand-alone supervised injection site (SIS). More than 30 peer-reviewed studies describing the impacts
of Insite indicate that it has several beneficial outcomes. The service is used by the people it was
intended to serve, which includes over 10,000 clients. It is being used by people who would otherwise
inject drugs in public spaces. Insite has reduced the sharing of needles and provided education on
safer injecting practices. Insite has promoted entry into treatment for drug dependence and has
improved public order. It has also been found to reduce overdose deaths and provide safety for women
who inject drugs.(1)
Studies seeking to identify potential harms of the facility found no evidence of negative impacts. In
particular, studies found that such a service does not lead to increased drug use or increased crime.
Studies were independently peer-reviewed and published in top scientific periodicals, including the New
England Journal of Medicine, The Lancet and the British Medical Journal.(2) These findings are echoed
by evaluations of other similar services in Australia and Europe.
1. Urban Health Research Institute (2010). Insight into Insite. Vancouver: BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS. For more information about
the research into Insite visit: http://uhri.cfenet.ubc.ca/content/view/57/92/.
2. T. Kerr, E. Wood, E., J. Montaner (2009). Vancouver’s Pilot Medically Supervised Safer Injection Facility — Insite. See:
http://www.cfenet.ubc.ca/publications/findings-evaluation-vancouvers-pilot-medically-supervised-safer-injection-facility-insi
|