Drug consumption rooms (DCR)

Drug Consumption Rooms are also known as 'medically supervised injecting centres', ‘safe injecting facilities’, ‘safe injecting sites’ or 'drug injection rooms', or ‘drug fixing rooms’.  Some provide space for safe injection only, while majority of DCRs also provide places to smoke or snort drugs. There are even 'smoking only' consumption rooms.


Research on Supervised Injection Facilities: A Review of the Literature

What is a supervised injection facility? SIFs can… What is Harm Reduction? What does public injection drug use look like in New York City? Implications of Public Injection Drug Use.

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Safe and unsafe spaces: Non-fatal overdose, arrest, and receptive syringe sharing among people who inject drugs in public and semi-public spaces in Baltimore City

The spaces in which drug use occurs constitutes a key aspect of the “risk environment” of people who inject drugs (PWID). We aimed to add nuance to the characterization of “safe” and “unsafe” spaces in PWID’s environments to further understand how these spaces amplify the risk of morbidities associated with injection drug use. PWID were recruited through the Baltimore City syringe service program and through peer referral. Participants completed a socio-behavioral survey. Multivariable logistic regression was used to identify associations between utilization of public, semi-public and private spaces with arrest, non-fatal overdose, and receptive syringe sharing. The sample of PWID (N = 283) was mostly 45 years and older (54%), male (69%), Black (55%), and heroin users (96%). Compared to PWID who primarily used private settings, the adjusted odds of recent overdose were greater among PWID who mostly used semi-public and public locations to inject drugs. We also found independent associations between arrest and semi-public spaces, and between receptive syringe sharing and public spaces (all p < 0.05). This study highlights the need for safe spaces where PWID can reduce their risk of overdose, likelihood of arrest and blood-borne diseases, and the dual potential of the environment in promoting health and risk.

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Safe Drug Consumption Spaces - Implications for Baltimore City

This Abell Report, written by Dr. Susan Sherman, a professor in the Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Department of Health Behavior and Society, explains what safe consumption spaces are, the research behind them, and the challenges they face. It calls for creating two safe consumption spaces, one on the east side of the city and one on the west side.

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Safer Consumption Spaces in the United States: Uniting for a national Movement

The following report provides a summary of a think tank that Project Inform held in Baltimore on September 27-28, 2016 with 49 advocates to discuss issues related to safer consumption advocacy.
The report reviews key issues related to safe consumption sites, and lists some of the best practices and lessons learned for advocacy and educating people around SCSs to teach the value and benefits these sites provide to people who use drugs and the communities where they live.

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Supervised Consumption Facilities - Review of the Evidence

The intent of this document is to:
- Describe literature related to supervised consumption facilities as harm-reduction strategies in addressing overdose deaths, infections and community harms from heroin and other opioid use.
- Apply estimates of outcomes from other communities to the City of Philadelphia’s data, where data are available, to approximate the possible impact of a supervised consumption facility located where deaths from overdose have been most likely to occur.

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Supervised Injection Facilities: Recommendations for action

America’s opioid epidemic continues to cause unprecedented overdose deaths and fuel increases in new cases of hepatitis B and C, and HIV. According to the CDC, in 2016 over 64,000 people died of accidental overdose and over 60% of new hepatitis C cases and approximately 10% of new HIV cases were related to injection drug use. From 2004-2014 there was a 400% increase in acute hepatitis C among 18-29-year olds that is correlated with dramatic increases in heroin and prescription opioid injection. Overall, among people who inject drugs, prevalence of HCV is estimated to be as high as 80%. Hepatitis B is also increasing as a result of the opioid epidemic. From 2006-2013 the number of new hepatitis B infections in three states (Kentucky, Tennessee, and West Virginia) increased among young PWID by 114%. In terms of scale of the opioid crisis, recent numbers from SAMHSA indicate that in 2015, 11.8 million people misused prescription opiates or heroin and 2.4 million, or 20%, of those met diagnostic criteria for an opioid use disorder. This leaves millions of people actively using opioids and at risk of overdose and HIV and HCV transmission while not yet engaged in or ready for treatment.
As the nation grapples with how to effectively respond to these epidemics, NASTAD urges policymakers, public health and safety leaders, and impacted communities to embrace a comprehensive approach to end these intersecting epidemics. As one element of a comprehensive strategy, NASTAD supports Supervised Injection Facilities (SIFs) as an important, evidence-based, intervention. These programs operate with legal sanction in 11 countries and number well over 100 worldwide. SIFs have been shown to reduce HCV/HIV transmission risks and link participants to testing, infectious disease treatment, medication-assisted treatment, and physical and behavioral health services. Studies of SIFs have shown that they do not lead to increases in drug use, frequency of injection, or levels of drug-related crime while effectively reducing overdose death and occurrence.
We recognize that stakeholders may have differing roles in these efforts. Herein, we outline potential avenues to support these lifesaving programs and opportunities for engagement and education among various stakeholder groups.

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Supervised Injection Facilities. Legal and Policy Reforms

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that more than 70 000 deaths from drug overdoses occurred in 2017, including prescription and illicit opioids, representing a 6-fold increase since 1999.1 Innovative harm-reduction solutions are imperative. Supervised injection facilities (SIFs) create safe places for drug injection, including overdose prevention, counseling, and treatment referral services. Supervised injection facilities neither provide illicit drugs nor do their personnel inject users. Supervised injection facilities are effective in reducing drug-related mortality, morbidity, and needle-borne infections. Yet their lawfulness remains uncertain. The Department of Justice (DOJ) recently threatened criminal prosecution for SIF operators, medical personnel, and patrons.

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The Case for Supervised Consumption Services

In the United States, people who use drugs (PWUD) continue to be at elevated risk for HIV, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At the same time, a surging epidemic of overdoses from heroin and prescription painkillers (i.e., opioids) claimed nearly 50,000 lives in 2014 alone. To save lives, there is a pronounced need to implement scientifically validated harm reduction programs, which reduce the risks associated with drug use and facilitate access to addiction treatment and medical care. Among the newest and most innovative interventions to reduce overdoses are supervised consumption services.

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The Controlled Substances Act and safe consumption facilities

Safe consumption facilities (SCFs) are effective at preventing overdose fatalities and reducing transmission of infectious diseases, like HIV and Hepatitis C. The city of Philadelphia is moving forward with plans to open the first SCF in the United States; however, the U.S. Attorneys’ Office has filed a lawsuit to stop these plans from moving forward. Estimates predict that >24 overdose deaths per year will be prevented in Philadelphia if the proposed SCF is opened while also connecting drug users to treatment and social services. It is also expected to save the city millions of dollars in hospitalizations, ambulance rides, and emergency room visits. SCFs reduce public nuisances like public injecting and littered syringes, and do not increase local crime or the number of people who are addicted to drugs. Despite these benefits, SCFs are illegal under 21 U.S.C. §856 of the Controlled Substances Act according to the Department of Justice. We propose that Congress amend the Controlled Substances Act such that federal law cannot be interpreted to prohibit localities from opening and operating Safe Consumption Facilities.

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The Costs and Benefits of a Supervised Use Site in Denver, Colorado

In recent years, Colorado has made strides in establishing and improving vital harm reduction services like sterile syringe access programs and naloxone distribution, but our communities still experience far too many needless overdose deaths. Multiple counties in Colorado, including Denver, have had overdose rates among the
highest in the nation. Public injecting is also an ongoing concern. Just in Denver in 2018 alone, at least 25 people passed away from overdose in public locations such as parks, alleys, parking lots, and business restrooms. These deaths were unnecessary and preventable.
Along with the risk of overdose, unsafe injection practices are associated with blood-borne disease transmission and skin and soft tissue infection (SSTI)—also extremely costly, yet preventable, concerns. Injection drug use is the primary cause of new hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections in Colorado, with half of all reported cases occurring among people who inject drugs (PWID). In the past year, more than half of all PWID in the city of Denver experienced a skin or soft tissue infection, requiring them to utilize emergency rooms and hospital beds.
Prevention and treatment are important aspects of our public health infrastructure, but they are not enough. By enhancing harm reduction services that directly address the risks associated with continued drug use, we can better mitigate some of the most costly problems and improve access to effective public health resources that would better protect our communities.

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In partnership with:
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Correlation Network