Toronto Escorts

Ontario keeping overdose-prevention sites, changing name, focus

Conil

Well-known member
Apr 12, 2013
3,435
558
113
I'm for them open they save lives.


A review of Ontario’s overdose-prevention sites has found that they help reduce drug-related deaths and lower the rate of public drug use, Health Minister Christine Elliott said Monday as she announced plans to enhance the program previously criticized by Premier Doug Ford.

Elliott said the Progressive Conservative government will spend just over $31 million a year to fund a maximum of 21 sites, which in addition to overdose prevention will offer drug users treatment and rehabilitation services.

“The evidence clearly demonstrated that these sites were necessary,” she told a news conference.

The existing overdose-prevention sites, originally launched by the previous Liberal government, can apply to continue to operate under the new model planned by the government, which will now be called “Consumption and Treatment” services sites, Elliott said.

“We felt the previous government took some of the steps but really didn’t have that focus on rehabilitation and treatment that we think is necessary for people to be able to get the help that they need,” she said. “It’s one thing to save lives through overdose prevention, that is very important, but it’s also really important to make sure that people can connect with the services they need.”

Data from Public Health Ontario shows that 1,261 people died from an opioid overdose in Ontario last year. That marked an increase from 2016, when 867 people died.

During the spring election campaign, Ford said he was opposed to safe-injection and overdose-prevention sites. The Tory government paused the planned openings of three overdose-prevention sites this the summer until it conducted the review, a move that drew strong criticism from harm-prevention workers and many in the medical community.
Elliott said those sites in Thunder Bay, St. Catharines and Toronto, will now be allowed to open.

She acknowledged that Ford’s views were well known but said after she presented the findings of her review to the premier they agreed that the services were important.

“The premier always indicated that he wanted a evidence-based review to be done to ensure that we were making the right decision,” she said. “We did present that evidence and the premier and I went through it in detail and we came to the same conclusions.”

Gillian Kolla, of the Toronto Overdose Prevention Society, said the minister has listened to the experts and called the continuation of the program a positive sign. But capping the number of sites in the province to just 21 is a problem, she said.

“We’re in the middle of a very large public health crisis,” Kolla said. “I think the unfortunate thing about the announcement today is that it seems like it’s a moratorium. It’s basically the existing sites that are currently open in the province plus the three sites that had been approved prior to her pause. Unfortunately, there’s a much greater need within the province.”

The CEO of the Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario praised the government for linking overdose prevention with treatment services but said funding will have to flow to back up that commitment because in some instances rehabilitation spaces are not publicly funded.

https://torontosun.com/news/provincial/ontario-keeping-overdose-prevention-sites-changing-name-focus
 

mandrill

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2001
70,646
69,642
113
Congratulations to the OPC for this decision.

If they continue to make common sense, humanitarian decisions like this, my respect for them will be much increased.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts