The Hamilton Spectator

‘Losing people at an alarming rate’

Front-line workers call for Ontario to declare opioid emergency

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More than 700 doctors, nurses, harm-reduction workers and academics are calling on Ontario to declare opioid overdoses and deaths an emergency, as British Columbia did last year.

The front-line workers delivered an open letter Monday to Premier Kathleen Wynne, saying limited resources and poor data are preventing them from responding properly to a disturbing and sustained increase in overdoses.

“The consequenc­es have been clear: lives lost, families destroyed and harm reduction and healthcare worker burnout,” they write.

An emergency declaratio­n would allow for increased funding to front-line harm reduction workers, more overdose prevention sites and opioid programs, they write.

In the first six months of last year, 412 Ontarians died of opioid overdoses — an 11 per cent increase from the previous year. That is currently the most recent provincial data available on opioid deaths.

After meeting with members of the group on Monday, Wynne said in a statement that the government will announce “significan­t additional resources and supports” in the coming days.

“We agreed that what’s happening in Ontario is a public health crisis,” she said. “That’s why I strongly reaffirmed our government’s commitment to combat this crisis with additional resources, and reassured the group that this is a top priority for me.”

Health Minister Eric Hoskins has noted Ontario launched a strategy on opioid addiction and overdose last year, has provided funding for new front-line addiction and mental health workers and is distributi­ng more than 6,500 kits with the overdose-reversing drug naloxone each month.

There are also supervised injection sites coming to Toronto and one to Ottawa, with temporary sanctioned and unsanction­ed sites popping up in the meantime.

The front-line group was unable to quantify how much more funding is needed to address the crisis but said it’s certainly in the millions and needs to come urgently.

“We’re leaving the responsibi­lity of this crisis to people’s families and their friends and people who use drugs to save each other’s lives and it is not OK,” said harm reduction worker Zoe Dodd. “It is hard to manage what’s going on and we are trying our best, but it is time that the government step up and do something. We cannot afford to lose any more people and we are losing people at an alarming rate.”

Dr. Alexander Caudarella, an addiction physician, said the declaratio­n of an emergency would also send a symbolic message “to the front-line workers that they’re not alone and will send a powerful message to those suffering with addiction, to those who use substances and to their families that their lives have value.”

B.C. declared a public health emergency in April 2016 after 201 overdose deaths were recorded in the first three months of that year, 64 of them involving fentanyl.

The Ontario NDP said it supports the front-line group’s call.

“The need for action is urgent and any further delays by the Wynne government are simply unacceptab­le,” health critic France Gelinas said in a statement.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Patrick Brown has called for Ontario’s Liberal government to spend at least 10 per cent of its advertisin­g budget on an opioid and fentanyl awareness campaign.

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