“folks are really isolated, really abandoned,” ko said, adding that drop-in and meal programs have been suspended for the most vulnerable people, who can no longer make their usual social connection with employees wearing personal protective equipment.
“a lot of the things that people come to the service for are the human services, the connection to the staff, the conversation and support but being in ppe (means) nobody can tell who is who.”
dr. rita shahin, associate medical health officer for toronto public health, said one supervised injection site was closed temporarily on march 18 because of lineups and large groups gathered outside the building.
she said in an email the number of booths where drug users inject their own substances has also been reduced to two from six to maintain physical distancing.
there have also been cases of covid-19 among staff, including those at the site, shahin said.
toronto had its highest number of overdose fatalities in a year last month, when 19 people died, she said.
“we want to encourage people not to use drugs alone, have a naloxone kit on hand and use a supervised consumption service if possible.”
dr. mark lysyshyn, deputy chief medical health officer for the vancouver coastal health authority, said some overdose prevention sites were temporarily closed due to concerns over physical distancing. but others, including the supervised injection facility insite, continued operating as essential services that don’t require such measures.