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Nurses Prevent Overdoses

By Juliana Luecking/MOLI

A city-funded center where nurses can supervise IV drug users

Who doesn't know someone with a drug problem? And what intravenous drug user has never dipped into surreality using a dirty needle or risking an overdose? In San Francisco, drug reform advocates and public health officials met last week to discuss an idea: They want to create a city-funded center where nurses can supervise IV drug users as they shoot up and then monitor them to prevent complications from potential overdose.

According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the meeting drew about 150 people, including folks from the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, the Harm Reduction Coalition, and San Francisco General Hospital's Opiate Treatment Outpatient Program. Public health officials and private foundations are openly discussing the establishment of an injection center, but not one San Francisco politician has stepped up to support the cause.

That's odd, because the Associated Press reports that drug overdoses accounted for about 15 percent of emergency calls for city paramedics last year, and public health officials estimate there are 11,000 to 15,000 IV drug users in San Francisco. Most of these folks are men who live on the streets and, of course, have no health insurance. Mayor Gavin Newsom's spokesman told AP that Newsom "is not inclined to support this program because, quite frankly, it may create more problems than it supposedly addresses."

Starting up an injection center is a radical idea, or is it? Sixty-five facilities exist in 27 cities in eight countries, but no other U.S. cities have considered creating one. One such center is way north of San Francisco in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. Insite is North America's first legal supervised injection site. It began as a scientific pilot program in 2003 and is a safe place where people can go to inject drugs and connect with health care professionals and addiction services.
The Chronicle describes the three rules at Insite: no violence, no dealing, and no injecting anybody but yourself. Nurses and counselors are on duty, and clean needles are available to prevent HIV and hepatitis C transmission.
That all sounds fair and good, but the question is (and this is always the big question when it comes to housing drug addiction services): Who will vote to open an injection center in their neighborhood? San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom is not convinced a new social services center would be welcome in the Tenderloin, a neighborhood heavily populated by IV drug users.

My question to you, Reader, is this: Would you vote to open an injection center on your block? Really, would you?

Juliana Luecking
, aka Queen Juliana, is the
MOLI View's contributing editor for Life & Love.


» Read Queen Juliana's blog

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What People Are Saying…

Leave a Comment

  • QueenJuliana

    10:55 EDT, 25.Oct.07

    I read that the injection center in Vancouver gets 800 people every 24 hours. So, yeah. Though in the states, with so much electronic surveillance, and tricky policing, I'd wonder. xo QJ
  • Wendy Case

    12:46 EDT, 22.Oct.07

    I guess my big question is, if you build it -- will they come? My experience is that addicts aren't interested in anything that gets between them and their dose. Are the other centers effective?

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