—Masha has talked about and concerns about diversion, and for a lot of people on harder stuff, Dilaudid doesn't cut it anyhow, because they go on to use harder stuff. I'm also, for the record, not a big fan of decriminalization. I think the police need to have the legal means to control people who are publicly using and selling drugs.
What you have said, though, Masha, is that you think it's a totally different thing when you're actually witnessing safe supply, where someone gets the drugs there and don't bring it home, but possibly sell it. That is certainly what Dr. de Villa has talked about in this one clinic.
We've heard a lot about the evidence of safe supply. In fact, from my reading of the literature, a lot of the evidence comes from places like Europe, where they've done a lot of heroin-assisted treatment, which is exactly that: witnessed treatment. And this is a Swiss model, where people can come in two to three times per day and get a witnessed dose of intravenous drugs. For the most part, they don't go home with drugs. Someone described our safe supply and getting a whole bunch of Dilaudid as the poor man's version of that because it's more expensive to have a witness program. You, I think, have already said something, but again, for the record, if you had the option of bringing your son to the clinic that Toronto Public Health has where he would get witnessed doses of intravenous medications, would you think that that would be better than the treatment you currently receive?