Slowly Dying: Medical heroin substitute exacerbating violence of fentanyl crisis in Nanaimo (THE BUREAU)
Over the summer, I visited Nanaimo, British Columbia, to investigate a local “safer supply” clinic which several contacts had warned me about. I discovered a hotbed of criminality and violence that starkly contradicted the narratives currently peddled by Canada’s harm reduction activists.
Safer supply programs claim to reduce overdoses and deaths by distributing free pharmaceutical alternatives to potentially-tainted illicit substances. In Canada, that typically means doling out large volumes of hydromorphone, an opioid as potent as heroin, to mitigate consumption of street fentanyl.
There is significant evidence that these programs are being widely abused and that recipients regularly sell (“divert”) most of their hydromorphone onto the black market. Yet the federal and B.C. governments, which are politically invested in safer supply’s success, have insisted that this is not a significant issue ...
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