The Georgia Straight

Health Canada is backing a new plan by the B.C. Centre for Disease Control to make hydromorph­one pills available to reduce the number of opioid addicts dying from fentanyl overdoses.

> BY TRAVIS LUPICK

- > BY TRAVIS LUPICK

Vancouver has a history pioneering harm-reduction programs. In 2003, it opened North America’s first supervised-injection facility, Insite. In 2014, it moved a prescripti­on-heroin program beyond the confines of an academic study.

Now B.C. will launch its most radical drug program yet. It’s a plan that one of the province’s top doctors says could be a partial solution to the province’s opioid crisis.

Tentativel­y scheduled to begin in March 2018, Vancouver will dispense hydromorph­one—a synthetic opioid similar to heroin—in a way that, if all goes according to plan, will not require a doctor’s visit and possibly not even a prescripti­on for the powerful drug.

In a telephone interview, Dr. Mark Tyndall said the program’s primary goal is not to address addictions but to reduce overdose deaths.

“We’ll put our concerns with fixing addiction on the back burner right now while we deal with this crisis,” the executive director of the B.C. Centre for Disease Control told the Straight.

“This is a public-health response, not an addiction-medicine response,” Tyndall continued. “People need access to safer drugs.”

B.C. is on track for more than 1,400 illicit-drug overdose deaths in 2017. That compares to an average of 204 deaths per year from 2001 to 2010. In 2017, fentanyl and fentanyl analogues have been detected in more than 80 percent of drug-overdose deaths in B.C.

Searching for answers, Tyndall submitted a proposal to Health Canada’s substance-use-and-addictions program to remove the risk posed by fentanyl. He outlined how B.C. could give people access to a regulated supply of opioids distribute­d by the government and its partners in health care and social services.

Health Canada approved the applicatio­n and is providing $1 million to run the program for three years. Tyndall emphasized that the details are still being worked out but said the proposal describes three options for distributi­on. All three create scenarios in which someone addicted to opioids would no longer have to purchase unknown substances on the street but would instead obtain pure and regulated opioids of an exact and known dose.

Hydromorph­one pills (sold under the brand name Dilaudid) could be dispensed inside social-housing projects where nonmedical staff already provide residents with methadone and Suboxone (traditiona­l medication­s for the management of an opioid addiction).

The proposal also suggested a pilot project could see hydromorph­one available at certain supervised­injection facilities, such as Insite.

The third option is for select storefront pharmacies to provide access to hydromorph­one pills, again similar to how they already provide methadone and Suboxone to registered patients.

Regarding who will qualify to receive hydromorph­one as a substitute for street drugs, Tyndall described a group that could be quite large.

“People who are at risk of overdosing and who have an opioid dependency,” he said.

In this respect, the program could differ significan­tly from Vancouver’s prescripti­on-heroin program, which operates out of a Downtown Eastside clinic called Crosstown.

Crosstown’s prescripti­on-heroin program was designed to stabilize the life of a person who’s been severely addicted to opioids for many years. For Tyndall’s hydromorph­one patients, the bar could be set significan­tly lower.

Another key area where the two programs differ is money.

The average Crosstown patient costs B.C. $27,000 a year. That’s because diacetylmo­rphine—the medical term for heroin—must be imported from Europe. As well, dispensing the drug requires a full-time staff consisting of both doctors and nurses and a stand-alone building with stringent security requiremen­ts specific to diacetylmo­rphine.

Meanwhile, the cost of an eightmilli­gram Dilaudid pill obtained via B.C.’S Pharmacare program is just 32 cents. If a patient is given three pills three times a day, the cost of one patient’s drugs works out to about $700 annually. Then, because the distributi­on model Tyndall envisions integrates the program into existing social services, and because it may not require the involvemen­t of doctors or nurses, administra­tion expenses will likely also be significan­tly lower than those of prescripti­on heroin.

“It [Crosstown] is not nearly addressing the scale of what we’re up against,” Tyndall said. “The next step, to me, is that we get people something that’s cheap and scalable, which is hydromorph­one pills.”

Tyndall named two of Vancouver’s largest nonprofit-housing providers as possible partners.

The first is Lookout Housing + Health Society, with which he said talks are progressin­g. He also mentioned the Portland Hotel Society (PHS) as a potential “natural fit”. (As the Straight reported last June, PHS quietly launched a hydromorph­one program of its own in December 2016. It continues today but is different from what Tyndall has proposed in that its primary focus is addictions management rather than preventing overdose deaths.)

Tyndall acknowledg­ed the will not be perfect.

“For some people with high tolerance, this might not be an option for them, because we can probably only give out so many pills at a time,” he said.

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