Ottawa Citizen

Drug overdose numbers are staggering

Why didn’t this health crisis become election issue? asks Dr. Mark Tyndall.

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In 2015, when deaths due to unintentio­nal drug overdoses were rapidly rising in British Columbia, no one would have predicted that more than 4,500 people would die over the next four years. It wasn’t long before overdose deaths began to rise across Canada, with Alberta and Ontario hit particular­ly hard. Officially, more than 12,000 Canadians have died in the past three years and this is likely an underestim­ation.

These numbers are staggering when compared with other recent epidemics. In 1995, the year before effective HIV treatment was available, 1,500 people died of AIDS. In 2003, 44 Canadians died of SARS. The impact of the overdose crisis has been so prodigious that life expectancy in Canada has actually fallen. While death statistics represent lives that are taken too early, the impact on the families, friends and communitie­s left behind will be lasting.

As this public health catastroph­e unfolds in full view, why is it not a major election issue? Why isn’t the public demanding action? The simple answer is entrenched stigma and discrimina­tion, and a general perception that people who use drugs should just stop. The blame for the overdose crisis has fallen squarely on the very people who are dying. Basically, if people decide to get their drugs from unknown sources such as drug dealers, the internet, or a friend of a friend, they get what they deserve. Government­s, policy-makers and medical profession­als have largely escaped any direct accountabi­lity. After all, what are they supposed to do if people will go to any extreme to purchase these dangerous substances?

What is entirely missing from this narrative is any reasonable discussion about pain, trauma, addiction and why people are using drugs in the first place. Instead of providing care, empathy and social supports, we have focused on abstinence, prohibitio­n and a punishing criminal justice system. We have denied people basic social services and have created environmen­ts that basically lock people in. Those already suffering from trauma are re-traumatize­d over and over. For most, the response to this mistreatme­nt is a spiral of isolation, despair and hopelessne­ss. Many people see no way out; paradoxica­lly it is the drugs that provide the only real relief.

While the political conversati­on should be focused on progressiv­e and novel ways to deal with this crisis, we are mired in endless debates around issues that were settled decades ago. It is especially frustratin­g to see pushback on the programs that actually make a difference. The energies of experts and advocates are spent defending needle-exchange programs, supervised-injection sites, opioid-substituti­on therapy, naloxone distributi­on and supportive-housing projects. These critical harm-reduction interventi­ons are proven to keep people alive and provide essential access points to care. Statements and actions by local, provincial and federal politician­s that challenge, underfund and in some cases block these interventi­ons are misinforme­d, punitive and demoralizi­ng to the people who are on the front lines and actually making a difference.

Until we begin to change the policies and environmen­ts that perpetuate drug use, we will not make progress. The poisoned drug market has not only pulled back the curtain on the life and death struggles of people using drugs but has shown that current strategies are not enough. While the chance of surviving an overdose has improved due to current heroic interventi­ons that can reverse an overdose, the risk of overdosing has not. As long as people are purchasing drugs of unknown quality and potency from street-based sellers who are supplied by criminal gangs, the risk remains high.

Federal parties must declare the overdose crisis a national health emergency. There should be clear goals to reduce overdose deaths and commitment to fund these efforts. For communitie­s most affected, there must be detailed local emergency plans that will be closely monitored and where people are held accountabl­e. Scaling up the harm-reduction tools that we do have must be a priority.

Ultimately what is needed are serious policy changes that put an end to prohibitio­n and the criminaliz­ation of drug users, provide the housing and social supports that people can access, and, in the current poisoning crisis, access to a regulated and safe supply of opioids.

Dr. Mark Tyndall is a researcher and infectious diseases specialist and a professor at the School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia.

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