The Impact of Supervised Drug Injection Sites on Public Safety

The Impact of Supervised Drug Injection Sites on Public Safety

Over 70,000 people died as a result of a drug overdose in the United States in 2017.  Drug overdose deaths now exceed those caused by firearms, car accidents, homicides, or HIV/AIDS (SCS, n.d.).  As drug-related deaths continue to rise, many cities find themselves seeking alternative methods to address the problem.  Proposals to open supervised (or safe) injection sites are being introduced in many state legislatures. 

A supervised injection site is a place where drug users can use illegal substances with trained professionals on hand to respond in the case of an overdose.  Typically, drug users come in with their own drugs and are given clean needles and a clean, safe space to consume them.  Trained professionals are available to provide breathing masks, naloxone, and to provide safer injection advice and information about drug treatment and other health services (Gordon, 2018).  Staff members do not directly assist in consumption or handle any drugs brought in by users. 

There are currently over 100 supervised injections sites operating throughout the world with the majority of them located in Europe.  There are currently no safe injection sites legally operating in the United States.  Several American cities, such as New York City, Philadelphia, Seattle, and San Francisco, are leading the way in advocating for supervised injection sites as a response to the opioid epidemic.  Such a unique and extreme proposal has stirred up a controversy entangling existing laws with varying public opinions on the matter.  The controversy of whether or not to sanction and fund such programs is currently being debated in many state legislatures with hopes to begin opening facilities as soon as 2019. 

The concept of supervised injection sites is highly controversial due to the stigma attached to substance abuse issues and its conflict with current state and federal laws.  The public and political concerns are clear:  supervised injection sites promote drug use, they will bring drug users to the neighborhoods they are located in, it is morally and legally wrong to encourage drug use, and so on (Cohen, 2018).  Conflict ensues when this perceived enabling of illegal drug use is weighed against the potential positive impact of reducing overdose deaths.  State legislatures are now attempting to navigate the murky waters surrounding the establishment of safe injection sites while considering the legality, potential harms to society and the potential benefits to addicts. 

 

References

Cohen, J.  (2018).  Supervised injection facilities face obstacles, but that shouldn’t stop them.  Retrieved from https://www.healthaffairs.org/do/10.1377/hblog20181127.121405/full/

Gordon, E.  (2018).  What’s the evidence that supervised drug injection sites saves lives.  Retrieved from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/09/07/645609248/whats-the-evidence-that-supervised-drug-injection-sites-save-lives

Supervised Consumption Sites. (n.d.).  Retrieved from http://www.drugpolicy.org/issues/supervised-consumption-services

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