Time for safer injecting spaces in Britain?

Claude Truong-Ngoc, Wikimedia Commons, CC-BY-SA-3.0

News

Time for safer injecting spaces in Britain?

9 October 2019

By Drug & Alcohol Findings

Drug consumption rooms provide hygienic and supervised spaces for people to inject or otherwise consume illicit drugs. When counted at the end of 2018, there were 117 sanctioned drug consumption rooms in 11 countries around the world, generating an evidence base of ‘real world’ trials for scrutinising their biggest appeals and detractors’ greatest fears.

Evidence of their effectiveness is one motivation for introducing drug consumption rooms; another is that they provide a common sense solution to the suffering and risks associated with public injecting.

The Scottish Government has recognised mounting harms to the health, wellbeing, and dignity of people who use drugs, and supports trialling drug consumption rooms as part of an approach to substance use based on public health objectives and human rights principles. However, the UK Government based in Westminster (London) has repeatedly blocked any such action. This stalemate provides the backdrop for a hot topic exploring the following questions:

  • In communities dealing with the consequences of public injecting, could drug consumption rooms be part of the solution?
  • Knowing the human cost of unsafe public injecting practices, would it be negligent for governments not to consider them at this point?