Vending machines supplied with various disturbing products aimed at drug users!
ONTARIO, Canada (PNN) - June 26, 2024 - A new device in Ontario, Canada offers people easy access to some disturbing supplies like HIV self-test kits, meth pipes, naloxone, crack kits, and condoms.
The real shocker is that all the items are free. Users just need to tap on the screen after creating an account, which is meant to better track supplies and limit abuse.
The bizarre vending machines have sparked backlash online, with some viewing it as a sign that “Canada is broken.”
CTV News reported that the jaw-dropping device is located at the office of SOAR Community Services.
It was dubbed “our Healthbox” by manager of healthy communities at the Brant County Health Unit (BCHU) DeAnna Renn.
“This is the third vending machine [like this] in Ontario, but the only one in southwestern Ontario,” she explained. “We will be restocking the machine regularly and we have a way to detect when the supplies are low so that we can restock.”
“SOAR services is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. If people need to access harm reduction supplies, they can access them within SOAR during business hours,” said Renn.
Back in 2021 Canada invested roughly $3.5 million to fund “MySafe” vending machines in four cities that dispense a medical-grade opioid to help prevent overdose deaths.
The machines were similar to ATMs, allowing drug users to get a heroin-like pill dispensed to them after a quick palm scan.
The goal was to help users access a safer drug without fear, shame and stigma, Global News reported.
The Brantford vending machine aims for the same impact. “Our community, like many across the province, has been struggling with opioid use and the impacts of that,” SOAR’s executive director of services Kim Baker said. “We are higher than the provincial average in terms of hospital visits, overdoses and deaths related to substance use.”
The vending machine - part of a three-year pilot project - arrives as new HIV cases rise across the country and the opioid crisis claims the lives of 21 Canadians every day, per CTV.
This style of vending machine, however, has been subjected to abuse in recent years.
Some people working in the recovery sector reported last year that children aged 16 and 17 are accessing MySafe products to later sell them for cash, often to buy other drugs.
Director of operations with the Last Door Recovery Center Jessica Cooksey outlined to Global News, “They and their friends are accessing safe supply because they want to use it recreationally and they know, relatively, that it’s safer than the alternative. They’ve specifically mentioned taking transit downtown and purchasing.”
BC Liberal mental health and addictions critic Elenore Sturko argued the vending machines “expose people to have access that wouldn’t necessarily have ready access.”
Sturko believes that the vending machines need better management to combat its products getting “into the wrong hands”.
“There needs to be oversight so that any drugs that are being publicly funded and supplied, addictive drugs, that there are safety measures in place and other ways of having that supervised,” she explained.