NotANarc
@nobill53ab.bsky.social
78 followers 42 following 50 posts
Healthcare professionals against the Compassionate Intervention Act (Bill 53) in Alberta. Committed to providing education, support, and resources so we can better care for patients, each other, and community.
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nobill53ab.bsky.social
Share this material with colleagues, talk about the Act, wear a pin or sticker - let others know where you stand on the Compassionate Intervention Act! If you would like copies of the logo or educational brochures, please send us a message!
Together, we can champion care that is ethical, effective, and grounded in human rights.
Reposted by NotANarc
interruptcrim.bsky.social
🗓️ Oct. 15 at 3-4 PM ET online: Please join us for a discussion of how to advance narratives that undermine authoritarianism and increase solidarity, featuring @dreanyc123.bsky.social, @lewispants.bsky.social, and @deanspade.bsky.social!

Register: www.interruptingcriminalization.com/events/all/f...
Event graphic for "Fighting Copaganda Under Authoritarianism: How to Advance Narratives That Undermine Authoritarianism & Increase Solidarity," taking place place on October 15, 3-4 PM ET, virtual, with Andrea J. Ritchie, Lewis Raven Wallace, and Dean Spade. The event information is in black text on a background of a collage of a thick red pain mark, tape, cutouts of a hand writing, an eye with electricity coming out of it, and a crossed-out mouth, as well as yellow and black scribbles.
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Claim #5: "The Alberta model works." Does it, though?
Alberta EMS responses to opioid related events, demonstrating a gradual upward trend since 2018 with the exception of a partial decrease in 2024.
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Claim #4: Experiences of harm from involuntary care are "anecdotes". Fair, but these harms also appear in the literature. Involuntary treatment may increase the risk of post-tx overdose, and can also seriously damage trust in personal/professional relationships. www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
“Grasping at straws,” experiences of Canadian parents using involuntary stabilization for a youth's substance use
In Canada, involuntary stabilization programs are used to apprehend and confine youth who use drugs for the purpose of stabilization, assessment, and …
www.sciencedirect.com
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Claim #3: "SCS don't work." Supervised consumption services SAVE LIVES. Try as the Alberta government might to disinform us otherwise via bogus review panels and white papers, the evidence base demonstrating SCS benefits is more robust than available evidence for involuntary care. www.whyscs.ca
One-page-home - WHY SCS
WHY SCS: Information About Supervised Consumption Services in Canada
www.whyscs.ca
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Claim #2: "Housing First doesn't work." Housing First HOUSES PEOPLE. When the unhoused are as over-represented in our grim drug poisoning stats as they are, housing becomes a critical ingredient for health, recovery, and survival during a toxic drug crisis. mentalhealthcommission.ca/what-we-do/a...
At Home
At Home Learn More In 2008, the Government of Canada allocated $110 million to the MHCC to undertake a research demonstration project on mental health and
mentalhealthcommission.ca
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Claim #1: "Most people in active addiction don't want treatment." Many PWUD have accessed or tried to access treatment, and 49% of Alberta PWUD in a recent survey would accept it if offered tomorrow. Sadly, access barriers, judgment, and ineffective treatments are common along the way.
PWUD-reported unmet health and social service needs include housing (55%), income support (36%), medical care (25%), basic necessities (23%), mental health care (21%), and drug treatment (14%). 40% were hesitant to access medical care and 27% were denied medical care because they use drugs.
nobill53ab.bsky.social
A heavy conversation today about the "Compassionate Care" Act on @cbcradiocanada.bsky.social Cross Country Checkup. A couple of claims raised our eyebrows, and some fact checking is in order. www.cbc.ca/listen/live-....
© CBC/Radio-Canada 2025. All rights reserved.
www.cbc.ca
Reposted by NotANarc
stephen-murray.com
It’s absolute bullshit to say you can’t help people until they stop using. We can and do work on safety, housing, health, and dignity while people use.
Reposted by NotANarc
drugpolicy.org
The Drug war was built for control, not care. Now history is repeating itself. 🧵
nobill53ab.bsky.social
"Who is served by narratives that spread fear and even dehumanize people who are struggling, narratives that play on citizens’ deepest fears and desire for safety?" On 'Ruining Downtown' open.substack.com/pub/civicgoo...
On 'Ruining Downtown'
Safety, addictions and housing solutions
open.substack.com
Reposted by NotANarc
feistywaters.com
Local woman wakes up, reminds everyone that safer communities are tied more to healthcare, housing and public services and less to police, makes oatmeal.
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Introduce legislation designed to "compassionately" disappear the people hit hardest by austerity measures. Down the hatch, out of sight, out of mind. bsky.app/profile/sena...
senatorpaulasimons.bsky.social
As city columnist for the Edmonton Journal, I wrote often about the crisis of homelessness. I was naive. For years, I thought people wanted to help those living on the street. It took me ages to realize that many people just wanted the homeless gone, someplace away, out of sight and out of mind.
atrupar.com
Brian Kilmeade endorses euthanizing homeless people: "Involuntary lethal injection, or something. Just kill them."
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Bring public discomfort with the consequences of austerity to a boil. Invoke fear, threat, and safety narratives and let simmer. Sprinkle misattribution of social disorder to drugs and let stand.
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Mix these ingredients just enough to create the conditions for an increase in the use of public space, not just to pass through, but to exist at all. Season liberally with the criminalization of existing in public spaces.
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Key ingredients: 1) Deprive people of a liveable income, especially people who the state believes do not "benefit the economy". 2) Defund public housing, passing the buck to whatever level of government other than yours is convenient. 3) Defund drop-in and other low-barrier public spaces.
nobill53ab.bsky.social
We are still overwhelmed by disability application forms, and thought it was time to share why austerity measures like this 👇 are a hard-to-digest recipe for involuntary treatment. 🧵
friendsofmedicare.bsky.social
Must read new guest post!

The government's latest cuts are creating massive confusion & additional financial barriers for Disabled Albertans, & needless administrative burden for their doctors—during a primary care crisis! We deserve better.

Read more: www.friendsofmedicare.org/blog_more_cu...
Blue-filtered photo of the Alberta legislature building with an overlaid Disability symbol, and text that reads: "Guest blog: More Cuts for People on AISH. Read the post from Dr. Ginetta Salvalaggio (Professor at the University of Alberta Department of Family Medicine) and Petra Schulz, (Disability rights advocate): friendsofmedicare.org/news"
nobill53ab.bsky.social
Please read this excellent thread from a long time Edmontonian. Involuntary treatment is an attempt to disappear what makes us uncomfortable. As healthcare professionals, we have a choice: Are we complicit in this violence? Or do we interrupt it?
senatorpaulasimons.bsky.social
As city columnist for the Edmonton Journal, I wrote often about the crisis of homelessness. I was naive. For years, I thought people wanted to help those living on the street. It took me ages to realize that many people just wanted the homeless gone, someplace away, out of sight and out of mind.
atrupar.com
Brian Kilmeade endorses euthanizing homeless people: "Involuntary lethal injection, or something. Just kill them."
Reposted by NotANarc
stephen-murray.com
When politicians show up at your #ioad event… remind them that almost every policy approach to overdose has made it worse and that’s by design.
Remember that when politicians come to your IOAD event that most of the drug policy approaches that have been done in the name of "ending" overdose have just made the problem worse.
1. Drug seizures - claimed to lower drug use, but we know the opposite is true.
2. Criminalization and incarceration - often framed as
"saving people" by locking them up, but this only lowers tolerance and increases overdose risk at reentry. Add to that the barriers of a criminal record-family separation, housing, employment, healthcare-and you set people up for more chaotic use.
3. Coerced, forced, or involuntary treatment - for the same reasons. In the name of "saving people," we statistically increase their risk of overdose. 4. Reducing opioid prescribing - removing regulated opioids created a vacuum filled by fentanyl. This has killed hundreds of thousands and harmed pain patients who are now pushed to the illicit market or toward suicide.
5. Abstinence-based treatment and recovery - people in treatment are still rarely taught about overdose prevention or the risk of returning to use. Talking about it is seen as
"triggering" or "enabling." The result: so many die within weeks or months of discharge.
So what are solutions that could reduce overdose? Harm reductionists have been screaming these ideas from the rooftops for decades. Providing a regulated supply (not just for people with OUD, as is often the pitch of safe supply efforts). Ending criminalization. Opening overdose prevention centers. Getting police out of pain management decisions between a doctor and patient. Removing barriers to medication access, methadone in particular. Improving mental health care. Building a more kind and just society, one that makes it safe for people to use drugs around one another so that overdose can be spotted and reversed.
Anyway... lots to think about. I miss my friends. Let's do better.
Reposted by NotANarc
dsdp.ca
Reject reactionary drug policy: Canada must not continue to follow the United States’ path of punitive and moralistic policy choices. B.C. must not continue emulate the regressive course taken by Alberta.

#bcpoli #cdnpoli #ioad #harmreduction
Reposted by NotANarc
dsdp.ca
Address the root causes of the crisis: regulate the drug supply. Invest in housing, mental health services, and voluntary addiction treatment. Recommit to the decriminalization of substance possession for personal use.

#bcpoli #cdnpoli #ioad #harmreduction
Reposted by NotANarc
dsdp.ca
End political interference in evidence-based health care and prescribing practices.

#bcpoli #ioad
Reposted by NotANarc
dsdp.ca
Evidence-based solutions exist. We demand:

1) Legalization and regulation of the entire drug supply.
2) Ready access to detox and treatment services.
3) An expanded decriminalization “pilot.”
4) Abundant public housing for all income levels.

#bcpoli #cdnpoli #ioad #harmreduction