Toronto Star

Task force to join province in opioid fight

Ontario health minister reveals plans to distribute public education material

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

Ontario is creating an “emergency task force” of front-line workers to advise on next steps in fighting the opioid overdose crisis, Health Minister Eric Hoskins said after quietly visiting the Moss Park overdose prevention site with Premier Kathleen Wynne.

“It was clearly a moving experience for both of us,” Hoskins told reporters of the two-hour Tuesday evening tour that included talks with drug users and “courageous” harmreduct­ion workers.

“They’re literally saving lives every day,” the health minister, a physician, said at a news conference Wednesday.

Hoskins revealed plans for “robust and targeted” public education materials on the dangers of opioids for distributi­on in schools, campuses, coffee shops and night clubs, as well as pamphlets to be handed out at pharmacies for people picking up opioid painkiller prescripti­ons.

It’s not just people with hard-core addictions that need to know the dangers, he added.

“Whether it’s a ‘weekend warrior’ taking ecstasy or cocaine that’s tainted with fentanyl or . . . a long-time drug user, the risks are inherent and the same.”

“It’s not often an easy conversati­on to have, but we all have a role to play in talking to our loved ones, our friends, our patients and our clients,” Hoskins said. “We have to do it in every home.”

Officials said the educationa­l materials, for which Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MPP Lisa MacLeod urged speedier action on Tuesday, are still in developmen­t.

MacLeod said the task force, which she called for last winter, and educationa­l materials “could have been quicker, but that’s not the point right now.”

“People are dying on the streets of Ontario . . . We’re going to see, hopefully, real action.”

The informal Moss Park site, which consists of tents staffed by volunteer nurses and others, represents an “effective and necessary” resource for drug users, Hoskins said.

“They have found an entry point into the health-care system . . . which makes them feel safe . . . not just feel safe, but be safe.”

The task force will report directly to Hoskins with help from the ministry’s emergency operations centre and include front-line workers, drug users, their families, municipal representa­tives and health-care groups.

“Their voices are absolutely integral to our government’s response,” said Hoskins, who pledged to “receive and act on their absolute best advice” to improve services with additional investment­s.

Hoskins announced an additional $222 million in August to fight the opioid crisis over the next three years as the crisis continues.

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