Wednesday, December 10, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Safe injection sites may curb opioid deaths, report suggests

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jul, 2020 09:05 PM
  • Safe injection sites may curb opioid deaths, report suggests

A safe haven in the U.S. where people can give themselves heroin and other drugs has observed more than 10,500 injections over five years and treated 33 overdoses with none proving fatal, researchers reported Wednesday.

The injection site is unsanctioned and its location hasn’t been revealed. The researchers say the results, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, show the potential for such places to curb deaths from the opioid epidemic.

Every year in the United States, nearly 70,000 people die of a drug overdose. Quick treatment with the medicine naloxone can prevent death in many cases. Besides offering trained staff to administer it, these injection sites offer safe disposal of used needles and a chance to get users into counselling and help with other health problems.

At least a dozen countries including Canada and many in Europe offer such sites. U.S. cities including Seattle, Boston and Philadelphia have been debating allowing them.

The unofficial one described in the medical journal opened in September 2014. Alex Kral, a San Francisco-based researcher with the research organization RTI International, and Peter Davidson, a medical sociologist at the University of Southern California, San Diego, reported on its five-year results.

As a condition of doing research there, they agreed to keep secret the location of the site and the name of the social service agency that runs it.

They previously described it as having two rooms, one with stainless steel stations that are cleaned and another next door where staff can monitor users afterward. The users bring their own drugs.

MORE Health ARTICLES

ALS-Related Gene Found With Help From Ice Bucket Challenge

ALS-Related Gene Found With Help From Ice Bucket Challenge
The challenge became a viral sensation in 2014 and raised $115 million for the association.

ALS-Related Gene Found With Help From Ice Bucket Challenge

Take a Seat but Don’t Stay Long

Take a Seat but Don’t Stay Long

Are you sitting down right? Well, you might want to stand up.    Research has s...

Take a Seat but Don’t Stay Long

Watch For Behaviour Changes For Clues Of Dementia Onset

Watch For Behaviour Changes For Clues Of Dementia Onset
WASHINGTON — Memory loss may not always be the first warning sign that dementia is brewing — changes in behaviour or personality might be an early clue.

Watch For Behaviour Changes For Clues Of Dementia Onset

Keeping Newborns Cool: Special Blanket Offers Hope To Babies Deprived Of Oxygen

Keeping Newborns Cool: Special Blanket Offers Hope To Babies Deprived Of Oxygen
CALGARY — Newborns deprived of oxygen at birth will soon have improved chances of surviving without brain injuries thanks to a portable cooling blanket in southern Alberta. 

Keeping Newborns Cool: Special Blanket Offers Hope To Babies Deprived Of Oxygen

Drinking Alcohol May Cause 7 Types Of Cancer

Drinking Alcohol May Cause 7 Types Of Cancer
The highest risks are associated with the heaviest drinking, but a considerable burden is experienced by drinkers with low to moderate consumption.

Drinking Alcohol May Cause 7 Types Of Cancer

Shaking Baby Could Be Deadly, Say Physicians

Shaking Baby Could Be Deadly, Say Physicians
90 per cent of doctors believe shaking can flood infant's brain - but courts still question the diagnosis

Shaking Baby Could Be Deadly, Say Physicians