Service Uptake and Characteristics of Injection Drug Users Utilizing North America’s First Medically Supervised Safer Injecting Facility
- 1 May 2006
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 96 (5) , 770-773
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2004.057828
Abstract
In 2003, the city of Vancouver, British Columbia, opened North America’s first government-sanctioned safer injecting facility, where injection drug users (IDUs) can inject preobtained illicit drugs under the supervision of nurses. Use of the service by IDUs was followed by measurable reductions in public drug use and syringe sharing. IDUs who are frequently using the program tend to be high-intensity cocaine and heroin injectors and homeless individuals. The facility has provided high-risk IDUs a hygienic space where syringe sharing can be eliminated and the risk of fatal overdose reduced. Ongoing evaluation will be required to assess its impact on overdose rates and HIV infection levels, as well as its ability to improve IDU contact with medical care and addiction treatmentKeywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Unstable housing, associated risk behaviour, and increased risk for HIV infection among injection drug usersHealth & Place, 2006
- Safer injection facility use and syringe sharing in injection drug usersThe Lancet, 2005
- Sociodemographic Disparities in Access to Addiction Treatment Among a Cohort of Vancouver Injection Drug UsersSubstance Use & Misuse, 2005
- Changes in public order after the opening of a medically supervised safer injecting facility for illicit injection drug usersCMAJ : Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2004
- Drug consumption facilities: an update since 2000Drug and Alcohol Review, 2003
- Intensive injection cocaine use as the primary risk factor in the Vancouver HIV-1 epidemicAIDS, 2003
- Fatal Overdose Trends in Major us Cities: 1990–1997Addiction Research & Theory, 2001
- Drug consumption facilities in Europe and the establishment of supervised injecting centres in AustraliaDrug and Alcohol Review, 2000
- Needle exchange is not enoughAIDS, 1997
- Maintaining low HIV seroprevalence in populations of injecting drug usersPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1995