Skip to content

B.C. safe consumption site marks five years of ‘truly saving lives’

SafePoint in Surrey has seen 300,000 visits from 3,533 people, with 2,845 drug poisonings reversed
29391703_web1_220616-SUL-SafePointSurrey-Surrey_1
From left: SafePoint’s Hyeth Manlosa, Ian Fraser, and Megan White. After five years in operation, SafePoint staff have reversed 2,845 drug poisonings, according to Fraser Health. (Photo submitted)

A facility that offers people a safe and judgment-free place to use drugs is marking five years in B.C. on Wednesday (June 8) – without a single drug poisoning death to date.

Fraser Health’s first supervised consumption site, SafePoint, opened on Surrey’s 135A Street in June 2017. It has since had 300,000 visits from 3,533 people, and in that time, 2,845 drug poisonings have been reversed.

Curtis Carter accounted for a portion of those. He utilized the services at SafePoint 182 times and overdosed 24 times.

Now an outreach worker with the Surrey North Delta Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) Team, Carter said he is living proof that safe consumption sites like SafePoint save lives.

“Without SafePoint, I wouldn’t have had the opportunity to move on in my life,” he says. “My health care career started with SafePoint. I wouldn’t be alive today without it.”

Curtis Carter, who utilized the services at SafePoint 182 times and overdosed 24 times, is now an outreach worker with the Surrey North Delta Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) Team. (Photo submitted)

SafePoint, which offers harm reduction supplies and naloxone kits to all clients, also serves as a central place to connect people to services. Since opening, at least 3,688 clients received wound care, assessments or other health care services, according to Fraser Health. SafePoint’s harm reduction education sessions drew 1,345 people and 552 people accepted referrals to other health care providers or social services.

On average, SafePoint sees 196 visits per day. Clients can inject or consume substances orally or intra-nasally in an environment supervised by harm reduction workers and nurses trained to reverse drug poisonings. An outdoor inhalation tent is also available on-site.

VIDEO: A first look inside SafePoint, Surrey’s safe consumption site

SafePoint is operated by Lookout Housing and Health Society in partnership with Fraser Health.

The trust that clients have in staff is vital, says Fraser Health’s Sherif Amara.

“When people are ready, SafePoint staff are there to support them, whether it’s making a connection to health care services, housing or the creation of a safe and welcoming space that builds trust,” says Amara, director of clinical operations, overdose response and vulnerable populations.

SafePoint clients can inject or consume substances orally or intra-nasally in an environment supervised by harm reduction workers and nurses trained to reverse drug poisonings.

And as the drug supply becomes increasingly toxic, Fraser Health says its expansion of drug-checking services is further supporting people to make informed decisions about their substance use.

Two portable Fourier-Transform Infrared Spectrometer (FTIR) machines are in use at SafePoint and Starship Health Contact Centre Purpose Society in New Westminster.

FTIR testing can detect the chemical makeup of opioids, stimulants and other psychoactive drugs. To date, most of the drug samples checked test positive for fentanyl and about 65 per cent of ‘Down’ (mixed drugs) contain benzodiazepines as well, Fraser Health says.

A third FTIR machine is expected to operate in the region soon, once technicians complete their training.

It can’t come soon enough, says Lookout Housing and Health Society’s Terry Brock.

“Drug checking and witnessed consumption help people lead safer lives,” Brock says. “The fact that there hasn’t been a single drug poisonings death at SafePoint in five years is a testament to the people who provide overdose prevention services without judgment, every day of the year.

“They truly are saving lives in our community.”



beau.simpson@surreynowleader.com

Like us on Facebook Follow us on Instagram and follow us on Twitter



Beau Simpson

About the Author: Beau Simpson

As an editor who started his career in 2000 with the Nanaimo Daily News, I am finding there is still much to learn about community journalism, especially in our digital age
Read more