Toronto Star

Use of prescripti­on heroin part of overdose action plan

Drive builds on work to lower death rate, transmissi­on of hepatitis C and HIV

- BETSY POWELL AND JENNIFER PAGLIARO CITY HALL BUREAU

The Toronto Board of Health is being asked to endorse a comprehens­ive overdose action plan that includes expanded use of prescripti­on heroin as a substitute treatment for opioid drug addicts.

The Toronto Overdose Action Plan, developed after public consultati­on, calls on the province to work with health profession­als “to expand the availabili­ty of on-demand opioid substituti­on treatment options.”

That includes “supporting the provision of injectable diacetylmo­rphine (prescripti­on heroin) and/or hydromorph­one, according to best practice, at appropriat­e health settings,” says a summary of the report posted on next Monday’s board of health meeting agenda.

The federal government has approved prescripti­on heroin through aspecial access program. Doctors apply through the program for a patient and, once approved, would supervise the patient injecting the drug at Toronto Public Health/The Works site, which already provides methadone and other treatments.

“Drug overdoses are an urgent public health issue that is having a devastatin­g impact on individual­s, families and communitie­s,” Dr. Barbara Yaffe, Toronto’s acting medical officer of health, said in a news release.

“Our Overdose Action Plan builds on the work already underway in our community, identifies new areas for action at the local level and recommends actions for the provincial and federal government­s.”

Toronto has had a 73-per-cent increase in reported overdose deaths over the past decade.

Councillor Joe Cressy, a member of the board of health, said Monday that research has shown prescripti­on heroin as a treatment option helps reduce the risks associated with drug use in the illicit market. In addition to reducing overdose deaths, the treatment helps reduce the transmissi­on of HIV and hepatitis C.

“Under a doctor’s supervisio­n, it allows the patient to focus on their life . . . rather than constantly out in the illicit market looking for drugs,” and perhaps committing petty crimes to support the habit.

The report calls for the federal government to “implement a range of options for people who come into conflict with the law because of substance use with a main goal of avoiding arrest and prosecutio­n,” including restorativ­e justice and community-based diversion programs.

It also calls for the federal government to allow the city to proceed with a drug-testing program at supervised injection sites and at music events.

The total cost of the action plan is $374,000. The city’s share is $94,000.

Last year, Health Canada changed regulation­s to allow doctors to prescribe pharmaceut­ical-grade heroin to chronic addicts as a last resort, citing scientific evidence .

The treatment is used in parts of Europe and is already being rolled out in Vancouver, which pioneered supervised injection services in Canada.

Toronto plans to open three supervised injection sites inside existing community health centres later this year.

Health Minister Jane Philpott has said she will work with cities looking to open what she called evidenceba­sed harm reduction programs following Vancouver’s example.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The number of reported overdose deaths in Toronto has risen 73 per cent over the last decade.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO The number of reported overdose deaths in Toronto has risen 73 per cent over the last decade.

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