Vancouver Sun

Prescribed opioids seen as one solution

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The B.C. Centre for Disease Control is calling for the expansion of prescripti­on opioids in place of contaminat­ed street drugs as a way to combat the province’s overdose death crisis.

The idea to expand the prescribin­g of opioids such as injectable heroin and long-acting slow-release oral morphine is among 10 areas of action that came out of a meeting in June.

The B.C. Overdose Action Exchange meeting involved 130 people, including health profession­als and drug users, and resulted in a report released by the centre Wednesday.

Its first recommenda­tion is to consult with illicit drug users and allow for education and training in overdose prevention.

The centre’s executive medical director, Dr. Mark Tyndall, says he heard over and over again that the overdose crisis is about more than just drugs.

Other recommenda­tions include support for painmanage­ment therapies and increasing the number of doctors and nurse practition­ers trained in addiction medicine.

The B.C. Coroners Service has said 780 people died in the province between January and June of this year and that the powerful opioid fentanyl was detected in many of the deaths. The death toll is almost 90 per cent higher than during the same period last year, when B.C. declared a state of emergency into the startling trend.

Tyndall says he hopes the recommenda­tions will be used as a guide to action.

“It is a crisis that has a tremendous impact on people, people who live with trauma and addictions, their families, friends and the communitie­s they live in,” he says in a news release.

Minister of Addictions Judy Darcy says the exchange is giving people with front-line experience a voice in the fight against overdose deaths.

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