Canadá: ¿Puede salvarse la vida de personas usuarias de drogas dándoles heroína y cocaína no contaminadas?

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Canadá: ¿Puede salvarse la vida de personas usuarias de drogas dándoles heroína y cocaína no contaminadas?

27 octubre 2022
Jacques Gallant
Hamilton Spectator

El aumento de muertes y la inacción del gobierno han provocado que activistas creen clubes de compasión, distribuyendo drogas gratuitas y verificadas a los consumidores. Más información, en inglés, está disponible abajo.

These days, Eris Nyx is dressing up like she’s in the Vietnam War.

“I have a full tiger stripe war thing,” she says, referring to the camouflage patterns used during the conflict, “because it’s a war zone out there, and nobody is coming to help us.”

People continue to die around her — people she knows — of drug overdoses, as Canada remains in the grips of a deadly toxic drug crisis that has claimed the lives of tens of thousands.

It’s a crisis that has been blamed on a war — the war on drugs — fuelled by what policy experts and people who use drugs say is a mix of prohibition, criminalization, lack of supports and stigma.

In the face of what she calls government foot-dragging on providing the tools needed to stem the tide of death, Nyx and others are taking action, recently launching a fulfilment centre and compassion club in Vancouver, which procures, tests, repackages, and distributes drugs to people at high risk of overdose.