Vancouver Sun

Clinics provide culturally sensitive opioid-addiction help for South Asians

- CAMILLE BAINS

A medical clinic in B.C. and a social service agency in Alberta are set to expand their programs to meet the often-hidden and growing problem of South Asians battling addiction to opioids.

The Roshni Clinic opened last spring in Surrey to provide services for South Asian clients addicted to alcohol and stimulants, including amphetamin­e and cocaine. But more programs will be offered in the coming months to deal with the use of opioids such as heroin, oxycodone and Percocet, said Dr. Rupinder Brar, an addiction specialist who works at the facility.

“Thirty per cent of the population in Surrey is Punjabi speaking,” she said.

“There are physicians out there who’ve been there for a while providing services, and I’m sure these patients bring their friend or a doctor may have a translator but it would be nice to expand those services in a way that is culturally sensitive and provide therapy to the family as well.”

However, she said immigrant patients urgently need treatment and counsellin­g from health-care providers who speak Punjabi or Hindi, and that’s what Roshni will offer them.

Brar lauded the Alberta government for providing $560,000 in funding in December for Punjabi Community Health Services in Calgary and said she is hoping for increased resources from the B.C. government.

Rimpy Hehar, a registered psychologi­st with the Alberta social services agency, said starting in March, provincial funding will be used to offer culturally tailored services including counsellin­g and distributi­on of the overdose reversing drug naloxone as well as referral to harm reduction services at supervised consumptio­n sites.

It’s difficult to know how many people in the South Asian community are struggling with opioid use disorder in the Calgary area, Hehar said.

“We’re finding that there is an overwhelmi­ng number of people within the northeast region of Calgary who are using opioids,” she said, adding the area has a large South Asian population. “People may be less likely to seek help because of keeping issues of the family within the family house.”

Providing support to family members who have shouldered the burden of a loved one’s opioid use until finances and relationsh­ips may have collapsed will be key, Hehar said.

“What we find is that family structure, family support, those can play a huge role in recovery or even the way that addiction progresses within a family setting,” she said.

In Ontario, naloxone distributi­on and counsellin­g are already offered through Punjabi Community Health Services in Brampton and Mississaug­a, said CEO Baldev Mutta.

He said 90 per cent of their clients struggling with opioid addiction are Punjabi Sikhs and services are also available in Hindi, Gujarati and Malayalam, a language mostly spoken in the south of India.

Mutta said he regularly raises the issue of opioid abuse on Punjabi TV and radio programs, but said more community leaders must create awareness about the crisis.

“The silence is deafening in our community around it.”

 ??  ?? Dr. Rupinder Brar
Dr. Rupinder Brar

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