
BBC revelation
It gives alarm to the first British drug use room.
A 30-year-old man has eaten a lot of meals in the “suplay” – a room at the Glasgow Foundation that nurses supervise injections in eight palaces.
He had only arrived a few minutes earlier, who had been looking for the police in Galogyte.
The staff hurried to help, and deliver it from his chair to a roll of falling on the ground.
Our film team will be removed from the area while an ambulance is called and the staff is working to save his life.
Eddie Kirni, a worker reduction worker, tells us that the man had ate three drugs before that day.
“He uses the ‘Snow tobacco’, he uses heroin and cocaine,” he said.
“He’s two minutes there and on the ground.

We will take pictures at the center after two days of reaching the leading room and controversial.
Less than an hour later, the alarm resonates for another man aged 30 years.
He had welcomed the workers of a charity organization, then took his way to the palaces to inject heroin.
Service Director Lynn McDonald tells us that it is another medical emergency.
“The first four weeks, there were no medical emergency cases, and then we had five this week.
“It could be a batch of drugs that are troubled. People notice the difference in the heroin when they make it and say they will notice a green color for it.
He says more aid is on the way.
Both men are brought to reversed by using naloxons before being seen by emergency doctors. The second is taken to hospital.

Then Lynn McDonald told us: “I am completely convinced that if we are not present at the extra meal we have seen in the Testel, people would not be alive.
Within 12 weeks, 16 such meals have occurred in the end of the east of Glasgow.
A total of 180 people visited the unit and more than 1,200 heroin and cocaine injections bought on the streets were supervised.
A total of 27 people have been sent to other services, including housing, by employees.
The service, which follows similar programs in 18 other countries, is trying to reduce the harms of drug-related drug-related damage to users of user injections in a community deprived of Glasgow.
By providing a safer place, he hopes to allow medical workers to prevent excessive death in meals, reduce the blood virus and clean a local area that has had a big problem with the abandoned injections and drug waste.

David Clark has been using drugs for 26 years and has spent a long time on the streets.
He gave Scotland the BBC to follow his progress within three months, when he tried to move forward from a city central hostoll and stop using heroin and cocaine.
The 47-year-old has revealed that he used Testle in February to inject Cocaine.
From there, they sent the staff to a new supported residence. It was during his interview for two weeks of avoiding.
“When I went (to the use room), it wasn’t what I was waiting for,” he said.
“I thought you were going inside, do what you do and the outside. But that’s not the case.
“The staff of the staff there supported me and helped me get to the place where I am now.
“I’ve helped it extensively. I feel better in myself.
During our visit in early March, we met James – not his real name – which has been turning out drugs for several years. In the mid-twenties of his life, he was one of the first to participate in the Testel.
He says the institution is “short.
“It’s much safer. I’m going to parking, the railway side, forests – anywhere I can feel safe to do without being trapped.
He admitted that the use of drugs is dangerous in front of people. “Especially alone.
The center remains argued in a community close to Caltoni.
During the consultative meetings held before the project, locals expressed concern that the region would become a tolerant area and fear that it would encourage the increase in drug dealings in the streets.
Linda Watson, one of the most voices, said the center is already attracting more people to the area to use drugs.
He revealed that on a trip to the well-known Caltoni using spots and said there was evidence of newly discarded injections.
Linda also expressed anger at the lack of investment in the area.
“When we first went to the meetings, the drug workers were: ‘We will provide a facilitation for your community, this will improve your community.
“But it is not for those who live in our society. It is for those who enter our society to buy drugs, drugs and leave all these things that have fallen around them.
“Why don’t they help us not to have happened first? Why have we been able to accept what this place will always be?
– Are we not more than that?

Dr. Saket Priardarshi, director of pharmaceutical pharmaceutical services at NHS GRETER GLASGOW and Clyde, said the drug use room was not only to treat the health needs of those who use the service.
“The social environment for communities, population, trade and visitors in these areas,” he said.
“I hope that the Test will reduce the mortality rate of drug-related people for the population they serve.
“His participation in national drug deaths is not very important. We must be honest about it.
Dr. Priadarshi said most of the anger out of society related to lack of resources for other services in the region.
“Sometimes I’m worried that paying attention to the housing repair rooms or the use of drugs, paying attention to the debate and discussions on this issue, turns away from the big picture,” he said.
“What are the main attackers here? The main engines are societies that experience high levels of deprivation and inequality, those who experience the highest number of deaths in drugs and drug-related damage.

The Using Room was first proposed in 2017 in response to the spread of HIV virus among the Glasgow injections, the worst seen in the UK for 30 years.
Health officials hoped that providing a sterile place for users for injections would reduce the risk of developing blood virus.
But critics of the plan say more money should be provided for other recoveries.
The then advocate of God James Wolf rejected the proposals rejected by the Interior Ministry.
The plan was revived in 2021 when the Scottish government declared its national duty to reduce the total number of deaths in the country.
After a change in the prosecutor’s policy, which allowed users to bring drugs to the center without fear of accusations, the center was approved in September
It costs £2
The government says it is part of a number of measures to combat drug deaths in Scotland, the highest death rate in Europe.
A final report on the general influence of the unit will be after the end of the test in
- Excessive Report by Kevin Anderson and Katie Mcevenye