Toronto Star

Ontario earmarks extra $222M to fight growing opioid crisis

Move comes after urgent calls from doctors, activists to provide more support

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

More supervised drug injection sites and “rapid access” clinics will open across Ontario as the province earmarks another $222 million over three years to fight the growing opioid crisis.

The extra money, which came as the provincial coroner revealed opioid deaths rose 19 per cent last year to 865 people, will also fund more harm-reduction workers and naloxone kits to reverse overdoses.

Health Minister Eric Hoskins made the announceme­nt Tuesday amid concerns from opposition parties and front-line addiction workers that the government hasn’t acted quickly or thoroughly enough.

“Too many lives have already been lost,” Hoskins, a doctor, said at St. Michael’s Hospital, which houses a rapid access clinic providing immediate treatment and longer-term withdrawal support for addicts.

“This is a dramatic increase in funding,” he boasted. He said the province has now set aside more than $280 million to combat the opioid scourge.

The details were revealed a day after 700 addictions workers, including doctors, released an open letter to Premier Kathleen Wynne, urging her to supply more help and a declaratio­n that the opioid situation is a public health emergency.

One of those activists, harm-reduc- tion worker Zoe Dodd, who helps staff an increasing­ly busy pop-up safe-injection site in Moss Park with other volunteers, challenged Hoskins to provide more support for these services.

“If they had acted sooner and they listened to us on the front lines, yeah, maybe we could have stopped some of the deaths. We could have got a handle on this,” she said after the minister’s news conference.

The $9 million in funding in the plan for front-line workers won’t go far enough, Dodd added, predicting the “heartbreak­ing” 2017 death toll will increase from last year’s numbers.

Chief provincial coroner Dr. Dirk Huyer, who released the grim opioid death statistics from 2016, said he hopes to be able to report 2017 num- bers more quickly to track the dangers to public health better.

Hoskins said the enhanced plan to tackle opioids has been “weeks in the making” and follows the $15 million pledged in June to help local health agencies hire staff and hand out naloxone kits, used to revive drug users from overdoses until they can get hospital treatment.

“This is a national crisis composed of literally thousands of individual tragedies,” he added.

“Any life lost . . . is an entirely preventabl­e tragedy.”

Other elements of the plan include $70 million to provide long-term support to people with addictions, $7.6 million to increase addictions treatment in primary care such as doctor’s offices, and $15 million to help doctors and nurse practition­ers provide “appropriat­e” pain management and alternativ­es to opioids for patients.

There is also $20 million for support intended for Indigenous communitie­s and youth.

“The government has been pretty slow and ineffectua­l to this point,” said Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MPP and pharmacist Jeff Yurek (ElginMiddl­esex-London). “Hopefully, this answers the call.” Increasing­ly, the powerful painkiller fentanyl is being mixed with other drugs and this is blamed for overdoses, and has prompted police to issue safety alerts. Harm-reduction workers have called for funds to allow users to test drugs before consuming them, so they know what substances are present.

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