The thing is that the end points are different. From an infectious disease and public health standpoint, that's why these things are getting started. We support a safe injection site in Ottawa. I do, and I'm involved. I started a hepatitis C clinic in Ottawa, so I'm all into public health.
I think everybody is getting confused with what you're saying about success, about what the end point of success is and how you define success. For these people, success might be having their own bed to sleep in and having a meal.
That's the problem. You have to define it properly. Again, in medicine, we take a lot of time to define what success is and what the gold standard treatment is, based on evidence. If the success of your daughter is that the best she can do is get off the street and have a clean bed and that's what you want.... I tell my patients that it's like they're on the C team for hockey, but then there's a B team, there's an A team, and there's a AAA team. They all have different expectations. Do you want to be a guy who has a job and a family and pays taxes and enjoys your life? Or do you want to be the guy who has to go and steal and assault people and rob pharmacies in order to use? I don't know which team you want to be on. Also, do you even know what the teams look like?
It's very hard to write out on paper that “this is a success and we save lives”. My position always is that you think you're saving a life, but the people are so unhappy and miserable and they're living in hell. Why do you say that we're saving their lives and therefore we should put this money into it? It should be more about what's important: should you change the whole system so that people have the opportunity to have housing, education, and treatment for their illness?
I agree that this argument.... I've listened to a lot of police. I've been involved with the police chiefs of Ontario. They're frustrated. Of course they are. Think about it. For these injection sites, when you go in, they're not giving you the drugs. You have to bring in your own drugs, so in Ottawa, let's say, you have to go and do all your criminal activity downtown in the market. You have to prostitute, steal, or sell drugs. You get your drugs, you walk over there, and then you inject. You're finally asleep and you feel good, and somebody wakes you up and asks if you're dead yet. You wake up and you have to leave, and then you have to go and get more. You need to get $300 more, so you have to do more crime. It's not really changing anything.
To me, the point is that you're enabling or encouraging a negative existence and at the same time saying, hey, they didn't die today, so that's a good statistic for this funding. I just think everybody's missing the point on it. If that's all you have, if you live in a war-torn zone and it's the best you can do, okay, great, but I think we'd all agree that on every other aspect, whether it's education, or other areas or portfolios that you all have.... In the military, for example, we want the best. We want the best in our military. We want the best in our education. Everybody wants to send their kid to private school.
Why is it different in this area? This is about people's lives. They're sick. They have a treatable illness. If you can treat it, why don't you? If you can't treat it and they're palliative and they're going to die, okay, that's fine, they die, but to Dr. Wood's point, for these hepatitis C guys, I have these guys, and it's almost $100,000 a month for the treatment of hepatitis C. Are you kidding me? They're homeless.
Hey, we didn't really talk about jails yet, but it's $120,000 a year to put one of these guys in jail. That's expensive treatment. Trust me, they look better when they come out of jail, simply because they haven't been exposed to drugs, they've been eating, and they have a safe place to live. That could be an end point, but that's an expensive way to treat somebody.
I don't know if that answers your question.