Vancouver Sun

Guidelines for treating young addicts elevate parents’ role

- CAMILLE BAINS

New guidelines aimed at improving treatment for opioid-addicted young people have been released by the B.C. Centre on Substance Use, which says a lack of youthfocus­ed treatment programs has created challenges in the province with the highest number of fatal overdoses.

Rachel Staples, whose 15-yearold son Elliot Eurchuk died in April from an accidental overdose, said that while the guidelines are a good start, insufficie­nt treatment beds and a law prohibitin­g parental involvemen­t in care without a youth’s consent are big problems that must be addressed.

Dr. Sharon Vipler, who was on the committee that developed the guidelines, said they call on doctors to prescribe treatment drugs such as suboxone before methadone is tried, as well as counsellin­g to support youth dealing with addiction.

The guidelines say short-term detox programs alone aren’t recommende­d because they tend to increase rates of relapse, HIV infection and overdose death, but that patients should be referred to ongoing treatment, including in residentia­l facilities.

Doctors are encouraged to screen all youth for substanceu­se disorders and mental-health disorders and to refer patients to addiction physicians with experience treating youth with opioiduse disorder.

Physicians should also work to ensure that their young patients are provided continuing treatment as they enter adulthood, with future caregivers identified early to prevent scrambling to get them into another program, said Vipler, an addictions specialist who works at a detox centre in Surrey, which has six beds for youth.

“What we’re saying is that if you are a clinician providing care for an individual who is going to age out imminently, or even in the foreseeabl­e year or so, that process should start as soon as that thought comes into mind,” she said.

The guidelines also call for involvemen­t of family so youth have the emotional support they need. However, the Infants Act in B.C. says children under 19 may consent to a medical treatment on their own if the health-care provider is sure the treatment is in the child’s best interest and if the child understand­s its potential risks and benefits.

“Parental participat­ion in the treatment of youth should be actively encouraged, and family members should be supported with sufficient informatio­n and training,” say the new guidelines.

The B.C. Coroners Service reported 1,449 illicit-drug overdose deaths in 2017, an increase from 992 deaths from a year earlier. The service said 23 people between the ages of 18 and 23 died in 2017, and 270 of them were aged 19 to 29.

 ??  ?? Rachel Staples and Brock Eurchuk are seen with sons Isaac, Oliver and Elliott. Elliot died from an accidental overdose at the age of 15.
Rachel Staples and Brock Eurchuk are seen with sons Isaac, Oliver and Elliott. Elliot died from an accidental overdose at the age of 15.

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