Vancouver and Victoria consider supervised injection in health centres
VANCOUVER — British Columbia health officials are considering offering supervised-injection services in community health clinics, triggered by a new federal government and a spike in fentanyl overdoses.
Health authorities in Vancouver and Victoria have begun discussions about providing the services in clinics that already help people with addictions, for example, through clean needle programs.
“The situation here is getting worse,” said Dr. Mark Lysyshyn of Vancouver Coastal Health in an interview Thursday. “We just see that offering supervised-injection services is a more viable way to prevent some of the harm that’s being caused right now.”
The discussions mark a shift for harm-reduction proponents who were long stymied by the previous Conservative government. A rise in overdose deaths from the dangerous opioid fentanyl has added to the urgency, officials say.