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Safe injection site set to open in Surrey

The inside of the newly-opened Fraser Health supervised consumption site is pictured in Surrey, B.C. Tuesday, June 6, 2017.
The inside of the newly-opened Fraser Health supervised consumption site is pictured in Surrey, B.C. Tuesday, June 6, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

SURREY, B.C. – Drug users will start injecting their own heroin or other illicit substances at a new supervised injection site opening this week in Surrey in an effort to curb a crisis in overdose deaths.

SafePoint will be British Columbia’s first such site outside of Vancouver that allows people to shoot up drugs under medical supervision while they are linked up with other health and social services.

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READ MORE: Drug overdose deaths in B.C. rise to 488 for 2017 

A similar service will be incorporated into an existing clinic later this month in Surrey, which has had the second-highest number of overdose fatalities in the province after Vancouver.

SafePoint comes 14 years after the groundbreaking start of Insite, the safe injection site in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, which was launched to prevent the spread of HIV.

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READ MORE: Photo of pigeon’s nest in bed of needles shows ‘sad reality’ of Vancouver’s opioid crisis

Fraser Health chief medical health officer Dr. Victoria Lee says she’s disappointed that Health Canada did not approve the site to allow people to also snort drugs or take them orally.

She says Health Canada is still considering that possibility.

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