The Hamilton Spectator

B.C. getting $71.1M to boost access to opioid abuse treatment

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

TORONTO — One of the provinces hardest hit by what health officials consider a national opioid crisis is receiving tens of millions of dollars to increase access to treatment for substance abuse.

The federal government said it is giving British Columbia $71.7 million as part of a bilateral agreement signed Thursday, the fourth such agreement related to the opioids issue.

Federal Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor said the money was part of an emergency treatment fund included in the 2018 federal budget.

In total, the provinces and territorie­s will receive $150 million for opioid-related initiative­s, she said.

“This funding will enhance treatment and recovery options for individual­s in British Columbia,” said Petitpas Taylor, who made the announceme­nt alongside B.C. Minister of Mental Health and Addictions Judy Darcy at an opioid symposium in Toronto.

“The funding provides concrete help for people who need it.”

“British Columbia is in the midst of the worst public health emergency in decades,” she said.

“Before the end of this of this day, three to four people ... will die, each of them leaving behind family, friends, loved ones and communitie­s that are devastated by their loss.”

The federal funding will help increase supports for youth and Indigenous people living with addiction, expand and enhance treatment options for opioids abuse.

It will also fill in the gaps between treating people for overdoses in emergency rooms and connecting them with addictions treatment and recovery services, she said.

“It’s critically important to understand how and why people seek treatment but also how and why they may leave treatment so that we can do everything in our power to prevent people from falling through the cracks and going back to a poisoned drug supply on the street,” Darcy said.

The money will also help create 25 supportive residentia­l treatment beds, which offer 90 days of opioid substituti­on treatment, psychosoci­al care, life skills training and aftercare support, she said.

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