Saskatoon Tribal Council begins early discussions on supervised injection site for city - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 10:17 PM | Calgary | -17.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatoon

Saskatoon Tribal Council begins early discussions on supervised injection site for city

For health officials at the Saskatoon Tribal Council, there is no better time than now to open a supervised injection site in the Bridge City.

'It's a form of harm reduction,' says council member

Iva Lafond said she would like nothing more than to have a supervised injection site brought to Saskatoon. (Chanss Lagaden/CBC)

For health officials at the Saskatoon Tribal Council, there is no better time than now to open a supervised injection site in the Bridge City.

"It is something that we believe to be imperative to be able to look after individuals," said Iva Lafond, who works in program and community development at the Saskatoon Tribal Council.

A Saskatoon committee started looking into the feasibility of opening a supervised injection sitein the city late last year.

Lafondsaid preliminary discussions have now started regarding the proposed supervisedinjection site and she hopes Saskatoon Tribal Council can take the lead.

The council's health centre already operates a needle exchange program, whichLafondsaid has been successful since it first began in 2009. But she and others at the council are looking to do more.

"It's a form of harm reduction," she said especially in the age offentanylandcarfentanil:two deadlyopiodsthat have killed many across Canada in the last year.

"We've done a lot of research in this area and we would like nothing more than to have this brought forward into Saskatchewan," she said.

Lafondisn't sure when such a centre could open.

Sask. battling high HIV rates

The idea is being developed as Saskatchewan continues its battle with the highest rate of HIV in the country.

And Lafond said health officials don't know how bad the problem really is.

"We're not testing as much as we need to test," she said. "Without having universal testing at this point in time, we don't really know how many people are affected."

She believes it's step one in coming up with a solution.

"If ... each individual person knows their status then everyone knows how to look after themselves, how to protect themselves in order how to prevent further spread of the illness," said Lafond, one of the speakers and attendees at a First Nations HIV conference that started Monday in Saskatoon.

The United Nations has set a target called 90-90-90, meaning 90 per cent of people at risk would be tested, 90 per cent of those infected would be treated and 90 per cent of those who are infected would be stable.