14 July 2025

Canberra urgently needs supervised injecting services to help keep people safe

| By Alice Salomon
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nurse at medically supervised injecting centre

There are calls for Canberra to decide whether it will establish a medically supervised injecting centre. Photo: Emma Barber/Uniting.

As we wait on the ACT Government to consider various reports into establishing supervised injecting services in the Territory, we wanted to offer our input as the operator of the first such service in the southern hemisphere.

In 2001, Uniting’s Medically Supervised Injecting Centre (MSIC) was opened in King’s Cross – the first of its kind in the English-speaking world. We have learnt a great deal over the past quarter of a century operating this life-saving and life-changing health service.

The numbers don’t lie.

Over 24 plus years, 1.43 million injections on site, nearly 12,000 overdoses with not a single death, more than 25,000 referrals into various forms of treatment care and support. Ours is a welcoming, useful, pragmatic service that saves and changes lives for the better.

There are more than 150 supervised injecting facilities like our MSIC already operating around the world – in Switzerland, Germany, Spain, the Netherlands, Norway, Luxembourg, Denmark, Canada, Portugal, Iceland and France, among others.

The need in the ACT for such a service, or number of smaller co-located services, has never been greater.

READ ALSO Action taken to reduce harm from drugs saves money, helps ACT’s community

A recent report from the Pennington Institute revealed that nearly four times as many people died from unintentional drug-induced deaths in 2021 than died in road accidents in the ACT.

In the ACT we already give people clean needles and then just send them away, out of sight. Where do we think they go?

The health services that provided the injecting equipment are prevented from being able to supervise clients injecting and so can’t intervene to prevent an overdose death or intervene to ensure safe disposal of all needle equipment.

They are required to send people offsite, despite clear medical evidence that a person injecting alone is an independent risk factor for accidental overdose death.

The duty of care they have appears to end the moment a client leaves the service because to be present while they inject is currently illegal in the ACT.

Indeed, in NSW the provision of these life-saving support services can only exist at one address – 66 Darlinghurst Road, Kings Cross – under the current legislation.

We are hopeful that this will change when the NSW Government responds to the NSW Drug Summit Report. It was a clear recommendation of the report to amend this outdated clause in the legislation.

What if trained staff at existing needle syringe programs (NSPs) were able to continue to engage with their clients and give them the opportunity to inject their drugs in a safe and non-judgemental environment and under their supervision?

These needle syringe programs are already providing frontline support to a considerable number of people who inject drugs. They are coming through these NSPs doors and being handed clean injecting equipment.

Perversely, our current system says: “I’m not allowed to help and support you to be safe”.

READ ALSO Cobblestone pavers outside new Canberra Hospital ED a ‘diabolical nightmare’

This model of co-located, small supervised injecting services in the right places would benefit the surrounding community, as well as the individual. These services can and will save many lives in the ACT – all people we love. Someone’s brother, sister, mother, father, cousin, friend or partner.

Location matters, as we have seen clearly in other jurisdictions. Supervised injecting services need to be where public injecting drug use is already taking place and it needs to be accessible, discrete and feel safe for every client.

In Kings Cross, the local community, businesses, the Chamber of Commerce, Police and NSW Ambulance staff have all seen first-hand the positive impact on the area from the establishment of a MSIC over the past quarter of a century.

The most effective way to support people whose lives are affected by drug use or dependency is to invest in an evidence-based, whole of government response that appropriately resources harm reduction and treatment service and ensures we are creating an equitable service landscape across the ACT.

One simple, sensible, compassionate, and proven harm reduction measure is to get on with establishing appropriate safe injecting services in Canberra.

The government needs to invest in simple, evidence-based reform – recognising the reality that many people do take drugs, some inject them. Reform that helps people and supports communities.

Lives depend on it.

Uniting runs the Medically Supervised Injecting Centre and has spearheaded the Fair Treatment campaign for fairer drug laws for more than six years. Alice Salomon is the advocacy head for Uniting NSW.ACT.

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When I learnt about injecting rooms it was very different. The news report I watched was decades ago and from Holland. It was about injecting rooms being used as an experimental way to ween people off of Heroin. But from what I’ve read, I Australia it’s more about handling peoples drug addiction. I understand why we have them but I sometimes wonder….

People who attend injecting rooms in Australia are given access to support and counselling services.

Claims the police support it, but doesn’t sound like they do?

Police generally support it because they’re not having to deal with as many ODs.

there was a time in this country, not that long long ago, where hardly anybody did dugs, much less died from them.
Having a society with those kinds of standards might also be considered a goal, if saving people from drugs is desired.
But I understand that this would be difficult for uncaring, uncreative and lazy people to attempt

Are you saying you find it difficult to understand? Because your empathy free comments constantly show a berating, uncaring and lazy argument.

Alcohol is not a drug? The past was rife with public and private drunkenness, and domestic violence. Alcohol has a large range of ill-effects on health, leading to death. There is a high correlation between alcohol use and homicide. Roads are safer for the reduction in alcohol tolerance.

There are new drugs, and their social and health effects must be managed.

Vasily M is too densely enmeshed in his fantastical past to notice.

alcohol can also be good and so must be tolerated. It is therefore not analogous to the drugs in question here, which are wholly unacceptable and must be dealt with accordingly, starting with a look at what happened to society that such intolerables became common enough

still tone policing rather than looking at the essential content of what I say. You betray yourself JS9

Safely drugged to go and drive on our roads, thanks.

“alcohol can also be good and so must be tolerated”

A whole bunch of “unacceptable” drugs can be good for you, if you are thinking of escape or social lubrication. Alcohols can also be used for disinfection. Morphine’s practical uses are or have been significant in pain relief. There is nothing more virtuous about alcohol which is highly damaging, just as we realised nicotine was.

Illegal drugs have poor to non-existent quality control, like the homebrew alcohol that killed the backpackers in Thailand recently. This is why pill testing is so important. Supervised injecting helps to protect against overdoses, infection, and safe disposal.

From cannabis, nicotine, alcohol and onwards, this is a matter of what is produced and how it is managed, not selective morality.

“there was a time in this country, not that long long ago, where hardly anybody did dugs, much less died from them”…complete nonsense.

“Having a society with those kinds of standards might also be considered a goal, if saving people from drugs is desired.”

Criminalising drugs doesn’t stop drugs, it just creates other problems, including more crime. They only way to reduce drugs is through education and treating those with addiction problems for the health issue it is.

“But I understand that this would be difficult for uncaring, uncreative and lazy people to attempt”
What’s uncaring is ignoring the facts to push the failed war on drugs narrative.

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