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petros

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Nov 21, 2008
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Forcing people into drug treatment is on the political agenda. Here's what the evidence says

Global review finds ‘lack of high-quality evidence to support or refute’ involuntary treatment

Mike Crawley - CBC News

Posted: November 10, 2024

As the toxic drug crisis continues to claim thousands of lives each year — fuelling perceptions that existing measures are failing — the notion of involuntary treatment is gaining political traction.

Across Canada, there's a growing number of political leaders proposing to force people into treatment for drug addiction, even though a recent research review found inconclusive evidence about whether it's effective.

Some experts in addiction medicine warn against seizing on forced treatment as an easy answer to a complex health and social problem.

"It's a response to seeing pain and suffering in front of you and saying, 'I don't want to have to see this, so let's just make sure that this is out of the way,'" said Dr. Anita Srivastava, medical director of addiction medicine for Unity Health in Toronto.

"I think it's a frustrated response to a problem that [people] perceive as having no real solution," said Srivastava in an interview. "I don't think it will work, but I can understand where it might be coming from."

Others think involuntary treatment needs to be one of the available options, given the urgency of the crisis. More than 47,000 Canadians have died from toxic opioids since 2016, according to the latest federal figures published in September.


There is another solution. Let them die.
 
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Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
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Forcing people into drug treatment is on the political agenda. Here's what the evidence says

Global review finds ‘lack of high-quality evidence to support or refute’ involuntary treatment

Mike Crawley - CBC News

Posted: November 10, 2024

As the toxic drug crisis continues to claim thousands of lives each year — fuelling perceptions that existing measures are failing — the notion of involuntary treatment is gaining political traction.

Across Canada, there's a growing number of political leaders proposing to force people into treatment for drug addiction, even though a recent research review found inconclusive evidence about whether it's effective.

Some experts in addiction medicine warn against seizing on forced treatment as an easy answer to a complex health and social problem.

"It's a response to seeing pain and suffering in front of you and saying, 'I don't want to have to see this, so let's just make sure that this is out of the way,'" said Dr. Anita Srivastava, medical director of addiction medicine for Unity Health in Toronto.

"I think it's a frustrated response to a problem that [people] perceive as having no real solution," said Srivastava in an interview. "I don't think it will work, but I can understand where it might be coming from."

Others think involuntary treatment needs to be one of the available options, given the urgency of the crisis. More than 47,000 Canadians have died from toxic opioids since 2016, according to the latest federal figures published in September.


There is another solution. Let them die.
Yep. Think of it as evolution in action.
 
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