The News (New Glasgow)

On the front lines

Doctors need better education to treat addiction: scientist

- BY CAMILLE BAINS

Family doctors should be on the front lines of addiction treatment but many are unwilling to learn about substance use even as a national overdose crisis worsens, says the head of medical education at Canada’s largest mental health teaching hospital.

Dr. Peter Selby, in the addictions division of the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, said stigma and discrimina­tion prevent physicians from getting training to treat vulnerable patients who have become addicted to opioids such as heroin or those prescribed for pain relief.

“It comes from this core lack of understand­ing and training around helping people with addictions as a medical condition,” Selby said from Toronto. “It’s still seen as something bad that people do.”

Selby said it’s no longer acceptable for doctors to say they don’t know enough about addiction treatment, which he added should be integrated into primary care so patients can be screened and switched to medication­s, such as methadone and suboxone to reduce withdrawal symptoms.

“You’ve got a whole core of establishe­d physicians in Canada who refuse to accept patients with addiction, will not provide the evidence-based treatments,” Selby said. “And that leads to significan­t consequenc­es, like overdoses and deaths.”

Health Canada said 2,816 people died across the country in 2016 of suspected opioid overdoses. Between January and March 2017, the latest figures available, there were 602 fatalities. British Columbia alone recorded 1,208 deaths between January and October this year, up from 683 fatalities during the same period in 2016.

Leslie McBain said her son, Jordan Miller, feared he’d become dependent on oxycodone that was prescribed for a back injury and sought help. McBain accompanie­d him to see a doctor, who she said unleashed a torrent of anger when the issue of addiction came up.

“The doctor blew up,” said McBain, a founding member of a group called Moms Stop the Harm, which supports about 300 families across Canada as they deal with the death of a loved one who has overdosed. “I’ve never seen a profession­al person lose their temper like that. It was ugly. I was just sitting on the sidelines in the office and I thought, ‘My son came in here with his courage in his hand to say I need help and the doctor’s yelling at him.’”

McBain said she and her husband got their son into detox in British Columbia on their own. But she couldn’t find a counsellor, psychiatri­st or addictions specialist to help him afterward as he endured two months of painful withdrawal symptoms.

That’s when Miller relapsed and “doctor shopped” at walkin clinics, she said, getting more prescripti­on drugs to ease the agony. McBain’s only child died of an overdose at age 25 in February 2014.

“Very little has changed,” McBain said about stigma against substance users. She said progress toward recognizin­g addiction as a chronic and relapsing condition has been slow among doctors.

However, colleges that regulate the medical profession have created more awareness and offered continuing education for physicians who are interested in learning about addiction, said McBain, who also advocates for families through the B.C. Centre on Substance Use.

Dr. Jeff Sisler, executive director of profession­al developmen­t and practice support at the College of Family Physicians of Canada, said some doctors do shun patients struggling with addiction, which is considered less attractive, complex care.

“But the clinical demands and the societal pressures for doctors to manage this better is being felt,” he said.

The college has been focusing on linking doctors with mentorship networks to get the support they need, he said, noting that family physicians in Ontario are connected with specialist­s online, through texts and via phone calls.

“It’s a long-term relationsh­ip with regular family doctors and people with more expertise to provide informatio­n tailored to the person and also to encourage them, to give them confidence, to address some of the worries that family doctors have about these complex patients,” Sisler said. “We’re actually trying right now to get other provinces to offer similar networks.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? British Columbia Health Minister Terry Lake, right, stands with Leslie McBain, whose son died of an overdose in 2014, during a news conference about the overdose crisis of deaths involving fentanyl-laced drugs, in Vancouver, B.C.
CP PHOTO British Columbia Health Minister Terry Lake, right, stands with Leslie McBain, whose son died of an overdose in 2014, during a news conference about the overdose crisis of deaths involving fentanyl-laced drugs, in Vancouver, B.C.

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