Alberta government report on safe consumption ‘pseudo-science,’ says medical journal
EDMONTON — An Alberta government report that influenced safe drug consumption policy is so badly flawed it’s harming people and should be withdrawn, says a new study in a prominent medical journal.
The paper, published Monday in the Canadian Journal of Public Health, calls the government’s 2019 report into seven supervised consumption sites “pseudo-science.” It says the United Conservative-commissioned study is irredeemably flawed by bias against safe consumption sites, in which drug addicts can use illegal substances in a safe and supervised environment.
“It is critical that the report be retracted by the Alberta government and that any of its scientifically trained authors distance themselves immediately from its contents,” the new study says. “It is fundamentally methodologically flawed, with a high risk of biases that critically undermine its authors’ assessment of the scientific evidence.”
A spokesman for Alberta Health downplayed the report’s influence on policy, saying funding was pulled from a Lethbridge site over financial irregularities. Hunter Baril said the government remains willing to fund safe consumption sites.

