Harm-reduction activism: a case study of an unsanctioned user-run safe injection site.

Thomas Kerr, Megan Oleson, Evan Wood
Author Information
  1. Thomas Kerr: Department of Health Care and Epidemiology, University of British Columbia, Canada. tkerr@aidslaw.ca

Abstract

Due to the ongoing health crisis among injection drug users in Vancouver, Canada, there have been repeated calls for the establishment of safe injection sites (SISs) since the early 1990s. In April 2003, in response to a large-scale police crackdown and government inaction, a group of activists opened an unsanctioned SIS in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside (DTES). The 327 Carrall Street SIS operated for 181 days despite considerable police harassment and limited financial support. During the operation of the SIS, volunteers supervised over 3000 injections and demonstrated the feasibility of a user-run low-threshold SIS. The experience of the SIS provides valuable lessons for those seeking to advance the interests of injection drug users through community mobilization and direct action approaches. In this article, Thomas Kerr, Megan Oleson, and Evan Wood describe the events surrounding the establishment, operation, and closing of the unsanctioned SIS, and outline the lessons learned.

MeSH Term

British Columbia
Feasibility Studies
Humans
Needle-Exchange Programs
Organizational Case Studies
Police
Substance Abuse, Intravenous

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