Vancouver clinic set to open supervised inhalation rooms - Action News
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British Columbia

Vancouver clinic set to open supervised inhalation rooms

The B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS is set to opensmoking rooms designed for supervised drug use at itsHope to Health clinic in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

Indoor rooms to open at Hope to Health clinic as statistics show more overdose deaths occur from smoking drugs

An older man with white hair wearing glasses speaks.
Dr. Julio Montaner makes remarks during a tour of Vancouver's first supervised inhalation rooms, run by the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS is set to opensmoking rooms designed for supervised drug use at itsHope to Health clinic in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.

Kate Salters,a research scientist with thecentre, said the six new rooms, which will come into operation when a permit is granted by Health Canada,will offerusers a space to inhale drugs safely, indoors andwith staff equipped to prevent an overdose nearby.

"This is just another tool in our toolbox to make sure that we're offering life-saving services to those that are using drugs," Salters said.

Inhaled drugs account for the majority of toxic drugdeaths in B.C., but many overdose prevention sites in the province are instead geared toward users who inject substances.

"The majority of drug users are smokers," said Sarah Blyth, executive director of the Overdose Prevention Society. "So it's really important to have a service with doctors and nurses and wraparound care so that people can offer help."

She said some people choose to smoke substances because it's less invasivethan injecting them.

So far this year, more than 1,300 people have died of drug toxicity in B.C.

Data from the B.C. Coroners Service shows in the past two years,more than half of overdose deaths in the province happened after users smoked substances. In July, inhaled drugs accounted for 64 per cent of drug deaths.

"This is now a crisis of smoking and smoking-related fatalities," Salters said.

A row of cubicles with a digital counter above each door.
Vancouver's first supervised inhalation rooms run by the B.C. Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS are shown in the downtown Eastside neighbourhood of Vancouver on Thursday, Sept. 18, 2024. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Julio Montaner, the centre's lead physician and executive director, said supervised injection sites have been"extremely successful"in preventing overdoses.

"But we were failing to address smoking inhalation and drugs," he said.

Of the nine supervised consumption sites in Vancouver,six allow users to smoke, according to Vancouver Coastal Health.Often, the sites accommodate those users with tentsor outdoor spaces.

The new smoking rooms at the Hope to Health clinic will be indoors. The centre says each one has a table, chair, sharp object disposal and a communication system that allows occupants to speak to nurses outside, as well as an emergency call button.

Thedoors do not lock, and clocks above each door help staff monitor how long each room has been occupied.

The roomswill have a steady flow of fresh airand,in the event of an emergency, air inside the room can be quickly evacuatedto prevent staff or clients from breathing in second-hand smoke.

With files from Benoit Ferradini