Ambulance callouts for heroin-related incidents in the City of Melbourne overtook those in the City of Yarra for the first time in 2021-22.
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The number of ambulance callouts in the City of Melbourne was 390,up from 305 the previous year but below the 2019-20 high of 423. In the City of Yarra,heroin-related ambulance callouts in 2021-22 were down to 317,from a high of 682 in 2018-19.
Statewide heroin-related deaths were also on the rise in the last two quarters,according to the Coroner’s Court.
The organisations behind the letter — including the Australian Medical Association,Australian Services Union,the Australian Nursing&Midwifery Federation,the Father Bob Maguire Foundation,Salvation Army,Anglicare,cohealth and Launch Housing — said the facility should be small and discreet with mental health,housing,legal,sexual health and oral health services.
“These deaths are unnecessary,” the organisations said in the letter led by the Victorian Alcohol and Drug Association.
Wayne Gatt,secretary of the Police Association,said police resources would have to be diverted to improve the local amenity if another safe-injecting room opened.
A report into the existing site at North Richmond,by John Ryan,encouraged Victoria Police to give “special consideration to tasking foot and mobile patrols in the North Richmond neighbourhood”.
Gatt said:“What I don’t want,is in three years time another report from the government that says,‘we’ve got a problem with amenity in the CBD,it’s killing off trade and what we need is more policing,more foot patrols to fix it’. We’re saying,don’t create it,don’t make it in the first place.”
He accepted it might reduce some pressure on ambulances and save some lives,but said it had the potential to cause more harm at the same time.
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Reverend Margaret Mayman from the St Michael’s Uniting Church on Collins Street,said people were often found sleeping on the church steps for shelter.
“We hope that the people that we are coming close to talk to are just asleep,and not unconscious because of an overdose,or worse,that they have died,” Mayman said.
“We’re not a health service. We can’t directly help people,but we can advocate.”
Katrina Korver,the mother of 38-year-old Danial who died on Rainbow Alley last June,said her son would be alive if a safe-injecting room was open in the city.
“He shouldn’t have died that day.”
Announcing on Tuesday the North Richmond facility would become permanent,Andrews acknowledged it was imperfect and said more would be done to improve the local amenity,by reaching out to users still injecting heroin and discarding needles in the residential streets.
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