Cory Morgan Applauds Alberta’s Involuntary Drug Addiction Treatment Initiative
Commentary
Spectres are being raised of a government snatching people from the streets and incarcerating them if they have been caught using drugs. Alberta has thousands of addicts, and these centres will only offer 300 beds. It’s unlikely anybody will be committed to them on a whim. Mandatory treatment is considered a last resort when every other approach has been tried. The process will involve professional guidance, and just as it is with mental health-care centres, steps are taken to ensure that the patient is at risk of harm if they are left to their own devices.
Anybody who has travelled to urban centres has seen the decimation of the addiction epidemic. Late-stage addicts are stooped over and passed out on the streets. They are sickly, thin, often covered in sores, and in mental distress. It’s ridiculous to think that an addict who has reached such a stage in their disease could or would suddenly willingly embrace the concept of entering rehab. Once an addict has hit the street stage, the destination is often the morgue. It is truly inhumane to leave somebody on the streets in that condition, yet this is exactly what harm reduction advocates say we must do.
People say an addict must “hit bottom” before choosing rehab. What the bottom may be is different for different people. For some it’s a divorce, for some it’s bankruptcy or an impaired driving conviction. For opioid addicts on the street, they have progressed beyond any of those measures, and bottom for them is usually a fatal overdose.
Getting an addict off the street, detoxed under supervision, cleaned up, and fed for a couple of weeks could offer them the mental clarity they need to choose to go further with rehabilitation. They can’t make that choice when fogged under the influence.
The cost is high, but what is the cost of leaving an addict on the streets?
How many times will they end up in the hospital before a fatal overdose? How many arrests for stealing to support their addiction? Social services are overwhelmed. We are already paying to support them on a dead-end path.
Imagine having a loved one addicted and living on the streets. Thousands of families are dealing with this and are out of options. Even if the odds are long with a mandatory treatment program, such a program offers infinitely more hope than doing nothing.
True harm reduction advocates should be applauding the Alberta initiative. Instead, many are blinded by enablement ideology.
As long as an addict is still drawing breath there is hope for them, and compulsory treatment centres can provide that hope.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.