New York Approves Bill Legalizing Overdose Prevention Center

bnew

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New York Approves Bill Legalizing Overdose Prevention Center​

It’s a significant win for the harm reduction movement in New York and beyond.


BY
SOPHIE SAINT THOMAS
MAY 25, 2023
shutterstock_1847927941-scaled.jpg



A New York Senate committee passed a bill authorizing the establishment of a state-sanctioned overdose prevention center (or OPC, also referred to as supervised consumption sites or safer consumption spaces). Safer consumption spaces are supervised places to use illegal drugs under medical supervision. The legislation, Senate Bill S399A (the enactment of the Safer Consumption Services Act, or SCSA), would require the New York State Department of Health to authorize at least one supervised consumption site. While OPCs already exist, this bill will make it easier for harm reduction workers to do their jobs and solidify the work that is already happening.

New York City opened the first city-authorized safe consumption sites in late 2021. The advancing legislation will provide a sterile environment for people to use pre-obtained substances (they won’t provide you with any), giving them a safe alternative to bathrooms or other sites frequented. In addition, the prevention center will also keep medical workers on site to ensure folks are administering the drug more safely. Such sites also offer protection that’s not available when using the drug in a non-monitored establishment, as medical workers will be there to treat any overdoses properly. Naloxone to reverse opioid overdoses will be at the safer consumption site. On-site workers will also educate participants on safer consumption practices and information on treatment. While the site can collect aggregate data on its participants and their experiences, participants and the staff at the safer consumption site will have immunity from prosecution for the sanctioned activities.

For some history, in 2015, IDUHA (the Injection Drug Users Health Alliance) released a memo essentially directing Harm Reduction agencies to act on the assumption that people using their bathrooms would likely be using opioids and therefore be at risk of overdose, a New York City harm reduction worker explains to High Times. However, most agencies have a policy wherein anyone using the bathroom gets a knock on the door every few minutes, and staff can access the bathroom and provide overdose support (including naloxone and rescue breaths and contacting EMS) when the occupant is unresponsive. “On average, my team responds to one overdose a month in our bathroom, with several utilizations a day not resulting in overdose. We have to wait for someone to stop breathing and stop responding to a knock at the door, at which point they may have been not breathing for several minutes,” our source says. “The SCSA is an important bill because it acknowledges work that is already happening—harm reduction workers and people who use drugs and their peers are already on the front lines of the overdose crisis.”

The Senate Health Committee passed the harm reduction legislation from Sen. Gustavo Rivera (D) in a voice vote on Tuesday, and it will now go to the Finance Committee for consideration. The Assembly companion version of SCSA, sponsored by Assemblymember Linda Rosenthal (D), cleared the chamber’s Health Committee in March.

“Harm reduction works. Harm reduction is a modality—a way to approach dealing with an issue which assumes, first, that a person who uses drugs is a person, and that they have to be met where they are,” Rivera said at the hearing. “Fact number two, criminalization has not worked.”

“Over decades of the drug war, it is pretty clear that we have lost said war,” he continues. “The notion that we could arrest our way out of addiction—that we could arrest our way out of overdoses and deaths—has been proven to be a lie based on all of these years of experience. Criminalization does not work.”


It marks a milestone in harm reduction history. “Today, the Senate recognized the dire situation New York is in because of the overdose crisis and failed War on Drugs era policies,” the advocacy group VOCAL-NY said in a press release on Tuesday. “New York is one step closer to seeing Overdose Prevention Centers authorized across the state,” the group’s Users Union leaders elaborated. “The legislature needs to keep the momentum and pass the Safe Consumption Services Act out of both houses by the end of session.”

However, the New York City harm reduction worker High Times spoke with explains that this bill may be simply securing what already exists, thanks to the hard work of passionate harm reduction groups. “Every OPC will be placed in already existing harm reduction agencies. In a very real way, the bill will not change much. Last week I went to Albany with a cohort of workers and participants at VOCAL-NY, Housing Works, and OnPoint to speak to legislators who had not signed on yet. When we met with [New York State Senator] Tim Kennedy’s legislative director, I told her: we are already doing this, but because we can’t acknowledge it, we have to keep the bathroom door closed. Let us leave the door open—that’s all we’re asking.”
 

bnew

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what good is harm reduction doing, honestly?

a google bard summary.....
  • Reduces the spread of infectious diseases: Harm reduction programs that provide clean needles and syringes can help to reduce the spread of HIV, hepatitis C, and other infectious diseases.
  • Reduces the risk of overdose: Harm reduction programs that provide naloxone kits can help to reduce the risk of overdose death.
  • Improves access to healthcare: Harm reduction programs can help people to access healthcare services, such as mental health and addiction treatment.
  • Reduces the stigma associated with drug use: Harm reduction programs can help to reduce the stigma associated with drug use, which can make it easier for people to seek help.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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a google bard summary.....
  • Reduces the spread of infectious diseases: Harm reduction programs that provide clean needles and syringes can help to reduce the spread of HIV, hepatitis C, and other infectious diseases.
  • Reduces the risk of overdose: Harm reduction programs that provide naloxone kits can help to reduce the risk of overdose death.
  • Improves access to healthcare: Harm reduction programs can help people to access healthcare services, such as mental health and addiction treatment.
  • Reduces the stigma associated with drug use: Harm reduction programs can help to reduce the stigma associated with drug use, which can make it easier for people to seek help.

Theres nothing about getting people off drugs here
 

Spatial Paradox

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a google bard summary.....
  • Reduces the spread of infectious diseases: Harm reduction programs that provide clean needles and syringes can help to reduce the spread of HIV, hepatitis C, and other infectious diseases.
  • Reduces the risk of overdose: Harm reduction programs that provide naloxone kits can help to reduce the risk of overdose death.
  • Improves access to healthcare: Harm reduction programs can help people to access healthcare services, such as mental health and addiction treatment.
  • Reduces the stigma associated with drug use: Harm reduction programs can help to reduce the stigma associated with drug use, which can make it easier for people to seek help.

There was bad HIV outbreak in Indiana in 2015 that's I think is a perfect example of what the 1st point would help prevent. I have to read up on it again to refresh my memory, but I'm pretty sure that outbreak was driven in part by needle sharing.
 

88m3

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which drugs?

government needs to legalize drugs so that they're safe but in the meantime anything that curbs unnecessary deaths and prevents the spread of diseases is a good thing


it's not terribly complicated
 

Meta Reign

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government needs to legalize drugs so that they're safe but in the meantime anything that curbs unnecessary deaths and prevents the spread of diseases is a good thing


it's not terribly complicated
Except that's not what the agenda really is. . .

Here's the truth.

Leftists who run the state of New York are seeking to create an environment which normalizes drug use. Being that they are Leftists, their "god" is Satan and they seek to harm humanity as much as possible. This space will serve as nothing more than another safe space to do drugs. They will promote "safe" drug use as oppose to not doing drugs at all. They will go to young teens and tell them they shouldn't feel ashamed that they use drugs, as long as it is done safely.

Stop falling for it, everyone. I will continue to spread the hardest truth on this forum as I know it btw. No amount of, negging, ad hom attacks, mis interpretation etc against me will stop me from doing so. I wear all my criticism in this forum as a badge of honor.

All Praise to the Most High. Love you all.
 
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