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Queensland government may not release taxpayer-funded drug testing review after axing service
Queensland government may not release taxpayer-funded drug testing review after axing service

ABC News

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • ABC News

Queensland government may not release taxpayer-funded drug testing review after axing service

The Queensland government is refusing to say if it will publicly release an independent taxpayer-funded evaluation of the state's now-axed drug checking sites. The former Labor administration commissioned the University of Queensland (UQ) to assess the services, including whether they reduced harm and contributed to early warnings about the circulation of dangerous illicit substances. Documents show the evaluation, which was due to be handed to the government late last week, cost taxpayers $453,286. Drug checking services allow individuals to submit small samples of substances, meant for personal use, for testing by health professionals. In April this year the CheQpoint testing sites in Brisbane and on the Gold Coast closed their doors after the LNP opted not to provide ongoing government funding. Mobile drug checking at future schoolies celebrations on the Gold Coast has also been scrapped. Despite other states recently starting drug checking services, the Queensland premier and health minister have repeatedly said they do not support the measure. Last week a spokesperson for health minister Tim Nicholls said the UQ evaluation report "will be considered by Cabinet", which could mean it is kept confidential. When asked yesterday if the report would be released, Queensland Premier David Crisafulli said he had not seen it and the government's views on pill testing "haven't changed". "I should have a read of it for sure, but I make the point that our policy position won't change," Mr Crisafulli said. The Loop Australia is a not-for-profit group of chemists and health workers involved in delivering the services. Its chief executive Cameron Francis called on the government to release the report, and said a similar evaluation of Canberra's drug checking service was made public. He said the report would "show the community" the benefits of drug testing. "I know what some of the data in the report would contain, because it is the data that our service has provided to the evaluators," he said. "We know that around one in four people that come through the service will use less drugs after talking to one of our staff members, we know that we refer large numbers of people into ongoing support or treatment." Queensland Opposition Leader Steven Miles said Mr Crisafulli should listen to the health experts who say pill testing saves lives. "They're calling for this report to be released," Mr Miles said. "But he won't listen because he's caved into the far-right ideologies of his party — now Queenslanders are paying the price." Queensland's pill testing closures came as deadly synthetic opioids called nitazines continued to circulate in Australia causing overdoses and deaths. Mr Francis said evidence showed testing improved public safety. "Without drug checking we've got no way of warning the community about the dangerous drugs that are circulating until people have either overdosed, ended up in hospital or passed away," he said. Australia's first fixed-site drug checking service opened in Canberra in mid-2022. Victoria started pill testing at music festivals late last year and plans to open a clinic in mid-2025. New South Wales has also kicked off a 12-month drug checking trial at some music festivals. Medical groups and harm minimisation experts have slammed the Queensland government's closure of drug checking services. In April, Queensland Chair of the Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP), Dr Cathryn Hester, said the state did not have overdose monitoring or early warning systems. "I fear that once these drug testing services end, we will see more overdoses because the people taking them, including young people with their whole lives ahead of them, simply don't know what they're ingesting," Dr Hester said.

Drug checking machine reopens in Kitchener despite consumption site closures
Drug checking machine reopens in Kitchener despite consumption site closures

CBC

time7 days ago

  • Health
  • CBC

Drug checking machine reopens in Kitchener despite consumption site closures

A local health centre says their drug checking machine is back in action — despite the province passing legislation that banned similar harm reduction policies in certain areas of Ontario. Sanguen Health Centre said on social media that they received an exemption for their machine that tests illicit drugs for cross-contamination. They said a new drop-in location will be open on Mondays, Tuesdays and Fridays at 130 Victoria St. S. in Kitchener and testing started on Friday. The centre previously ran the region's consumption and treatment services (CTS) site on Duke Street W. It served Waterloo region residents, using harm reduction and safe supply techniques, from 2019 to 2024. They were closed in April due to the Progressive Conservative government's shift away from CTS sites that allowed drugs on the premises and were too close to schools or daycares. Leigh Wardlaw is the co-ordinator of the drug checking program and said that the exemption for their machine is outside the scope of provincial legislation. "We have our own exemption," she said, adding the drug checking program exemption was granted by Health Canada through the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. "It's been a very eye-opening experience in itself as we didn't know what was in the local drug supply," Wardlaw said. "We only used test strips before and now we're finding all these new things ... so we're able to educate the public on what we're seeing." CTS replaced by HART hubs Homelessness and Addictions Recovery Treatment (HART) hubs replaced CTS sites in Kitchener, Guelph, Hamilton, Thunder Bay, Ottawa and Toronto. Drugs or drug consumption are not permitted on site at the HART hubs. Waterloo region's HART Hub is operated by Community Healthcaring Kitchener-Waterloo and operates on Francis Street. In March, advocates took the province to court over the closure of CTS sites, saying closing the sites violates both the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Constitution, including the right to life, liberty and security of the person. Justice John Callaghan of the Superior Court of Justice granted an injunction until he could make a decision on the Charter challenge, which he said will take more time to decide. That meant the CTS sites could remain open; however, most organizations said they lacked the funding to keep operating. Despite lack of funding and strained resources, Sanguen Health Centre appealed for an exemption from Health Canada in order to continue operating their drug checking machine. Bill 223, the provincial legislation passed that made CTS sites illegal if they were within 200 metres of a school or daycare, does specify that any exemption requires the approval of the provincial Ministry of Health. But Wardlaw said she doesn't expect a legal battle to ensue as a result of the exemption and that the province holds much of the power regardless. "They're essentially the ones that hold the rug," she said. Ema Popovic, spokesperson for the Ontario Ministry of Health, told CBC News in an email that the provincial government's main priority is offering people who struggle with mental health and addiction treatment while "not giving them tools to use illicit drugs." "In the fall, we passed legislation that prohibits any local board of health from applying to participate in the federal governments so-called 'safer supply' programs and any request ... must receive approval from Ontario's Minister of Health," she said. "To be very clear, Sanguen has received no such approval." What is drug checking? In the name of safe supply, the Kitchener CTS site previously offered to check residents' drugs for cross-contamination with other substances that were more likely to facilitate an overdose. Sanguen Health Centre told CBC News that the drug checking machine was now able to operate at their new drop-in location and they received a mobile exemption and will try to create an outreach plan to get the machine on the road to other communities. Sanguen's drug checking program uses a Raman Spectroscopy to identify substances in minutes. Since 2023, Sanguen says they've been able to test thousands of substances including fentanyl, methamphetamines, crack/cocaine, MDMA and ketamine. Julie Kalbfleisch, director of Sanguen Health Centre, told CBC News in an email that funding for the drug checking program through Sanguen was part of a pilot project. Funding ran out at the end of last year but they "have enough funding to support the program until the fall." CBC News reached out to Health Canada about whether the drug-checking machine could receive federal funding but did not receive a comment. Kalbfleisch said Sanguen is currently seeking "other funding opportunities" and there are grant applications in the works. She added Sanguen is "grateful for the exemption from the federal government for this life-saving work" and that they "do not anticipate provincial backlash."

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