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Why 'love is a powerful tool' in fixing London's opioid crisis

'Love' and 'respect' will play an important role in southwestern Ontario's first supervised injection site, which was announced Friday by London's top doctor.

'This is going to save lives,' said London Mayor Matt Brown. 'People are dying'

'Love is a powerful tool'

7 years ago
Duration 0:24
'Love is a powerful tool'

London's top doctor told a room full of the city's top politicians, health andlaw enforcement officials that money alone can't solve the city's drug problem and that respect and love will go a long way to help change the stigma of addiction and get help to those caught in the middle of London's opioid crisis.

The statement came at the tail end of the hotly anticipatedannouncement of the location of London's first supervised injection site, which will be temporarily housed at 186 King St. and share space with London's Region HIV/AIDS Connection in the downtown core.

"Just that shift to treating people with respect and maybe even a bit of love, that is a powerful shift and it will change the perception of the using community and it will potentially change lives," Doctor Chris Mackie, the city's medical officer of health said Friday.

Mackie's words also seemed to set a tone for a city that wants find a new way to treat a drug problem that, at times,seems out of control.

Big city drug problem

From left to right: The city's chief medical officer Doctor Chris Mackie, London Mayor Matt Brown and Brian Lester, the executive director of the HIV/AIDS connection, listen in on the announcement of London's first supervised injection site. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

Last year,London hadthe third highest rate ofopioidoverdoses in the country, handedout free needles at a rate second only to Vancouver and is the only city in Ontario where new cases of blood borne illnesses such as HIV are on the rise, thanks to drug users sharing dirty needles.

"Thistemporaryoverdose prevention site is going to save lives," said London Mayor Matt Brown, who has pushed hard for the site for months. "People are dying. This is one way we can address that immediately."

The site, which opens in mid-February, comes with a one-time provincial grant of $130,000 for the first six months of its operations.

It will also bring together six different social agencies, including the London-Middlesex Health Unit, the Regional HIV/AIDS Connection, London Intercommunity Health Centre, Addiction Services of Thames Valley, London CARES and the Southwest Ontario Aboriginal Health Access Centre.

Six agencies to have hand in injection site

Miranda Campbell is the director of clinical services for the Southwest Ontario Aboriginal Health Access Centre. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

"We don't really have hard data on how many of our clients are affected, but we do know they use these services," said Miranda Campbell, the director of clinical services for the Southwest Ontario Aboriginal Health Access Centre.

Campbell said her agency has recently secured funding for two harm reduction outreach workers to check on people within the London and Owen Sound region's Indigenous population who might be dealing with addiction.

One of them will operate out of the new safe injection site in London once a week in order to make sure Indigenous clients get services tailored to their specific needs.

"One of our top diagnoses is substance addiction," she said. "A lot of our clients suffer from the impacts of colonization and intergenerational trauma and there's a lot of stigma and racism when they go place for support.

"It's really important that our clients have a safe environment to go to that's culturally safe and trauma informed so we're hoping to provide a part of that aspect," she said.

While the new site will be tailored to specific cultural needs, it will also provide multi-faceted support to all people, something that's welcome news to former addict turned outreach worker Andrew MacLean.

He saidprospect of a medically-supervised site where addicts can find not only a safe place to use drugs, but also to find help with multiple social agencies is important.

"There's a lot of people out there on the street that are so worthwhile and they deserve to have the gift that I was given to be cared about and being given the dignity we all deserve in life," he said.

Andrew MacLean is a former addict who now hands out clean needles as an outreach worker. He believes addicts need to be treated with dignity in order to have any chance to break the habit. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

MacLean said that when he was using, it was one of the darkest times of his life and it didn't matter what he took.

"Anything, everything, whatever could numb my mind enough so I didn't have to be me because I couldn't stand to be my own skin," he said.

When asked if a safe injection site would have helped him when he was still struggling with his addictions, he answered:

"The nice answer would be 'Yes, it would change my life.," he said, noting that it's the people who run social agencies that make the difference.

"They're there because they care," he said."It's because of that passion is what's going to change lives."