Abstract

The Downtown Eastside of Vancouver has experienced ongoing epidemics of HIV infection and illicit drug overdoses since the mid 1990s. In 1997, in response to the emerging health crisis among injection drug users (IDU) and government inaction, individuals gathered in Vancouver to form a drug user-run organization. This group eventually became known as the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users (VANDU). Because of the growing interest in drug user organizations, this case study was conducted to document the genesis, structure, and activities of VANDU. In accordance with VANDU's philosophy of “user involvement and empowerment,” we employed a community-based case study methodology to achieve these aims. The findings demonstrate that through years of activism, advocacy, and public education, VANDU has repeatedly voiced the concerns of drugs users in public and political arenas. VANDU has also performed a critical public health function by providing care and support programmes that are responsive to immediate needs of their peers. This study indicates that greater efforts should be made to promote the formation of drug user organizations, and that health authorities and policy makers should explore novel methods for incorporating the activities of drug user organizations within existing public health, education, and policy making frameworks.

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