“They talk about it like it's an overdose crisis when in fact it's basically genocide”: The experiences of Indigenous peoples who use illicit drugs in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside neighbourhood

Original research
by
Lavalley, Jennifer et al

Release Date

2024

Geography

Canada

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

Yes

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

Yes

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

This study was undertaken to examine the experiences and perspectives of Indigenous Peoples who use illicit drugs (IPWUID) in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver regarding the drug poisoning crisis and the responsiveness of harm reduction programs within the context of settler colonialism.

Findings/Key points

Our analysis reviewed three key themes that centered the experiences of IPWUID in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside in relation to the drug poisoning crisis: (1) that the drug poisoning crisis is understood as a form of genocide toward Indigenous Peoples; (2) that the crisis is experienced within the context of pervasive distrust and adversarial relationships with police rooted in structurally racist experiences of place-based policing practices; and (3) that there is a desire for culturally-safe harm reduction care with Indigenous representation, cultural integration, and that addresses inequities and injustice stemming from colonialism and structural racism.

Design/methods

Indigenous-led qualitative interviews were conducted with 16 IPWUID recruited by Indigenous peer researchers.

Keywords

About PWUD
Equity
Harm reduction
Illegal drugs
Indigenous
Legal system/law enforcement
Overdose
Peer/PWLLE program involvement
Poverty