National Post

Surviving overdoses linked to where one lives

Prevention efforts vary by geography

- Amy smart

VANCOUVER• The day after one of his closest friends died alone in his bedroom from an opioid overdose, Brandon Bailey started sharing his cellphone number across social media.

The recovered drug addict from Windsor, Ont., has a message for other users: If you’re going to use, call me.

“I will come to you and make sure that you are safe,” Bailey wrote in a Facebook post.

Bailey, who is also a member of the Windsor Overdose Prevention Society, said he’s been frustrated by a lack of overdose prevention services like safe consumptio­n sites in the city, and he wants to ensure the overdose-reversing drug naloxone is within arm’s reach for anyone at risk.

Since his November post on Facebook, he has also distribute­d his cellphone number on flyers.

“We need to be doing something,” he said.

The overdose crisis has devastated communitie­s across the country and is being credited with slowing the progress of life expectancy, which had risen three years between 2000 and 2016.

Opioids killed an estimated 9,000 people between January 2016 and June 2018, according to the Public Health Agency of Canada. About 94 per cent of those deaths were deemed accidental and almost threequart­ers involved the powerful opioid fentanyl.

But access to overdose prevention services vary geographic­ally, prompting some advocates to say that a person’s chances of surviving an overdose depends on where you live.

There are eight approved supervised consumptio­n sites in British Columbia, nine in Ontario, six in Alberta, four in Quebec, and none elsewhere, according to Health Canada.

Supervised consumptio­n sites allow people to use their drugs under medical supervisio­n, many of which provide testing for fentanyl contaminat­ion and access to sterile equipment.

With the exception of Nunavut, naloxone is available at pharmacies in all provinces and territorie­s. Alberta and Yukon pharmacies provide the medication for free, the Canadian Pharmacist­s Associatio­n said.

Access to the free, takehome naloxone kits is more varied, with Quebec offering the nasal spray to anyone over 14 through pharmacies, New Brunswick giving naloxone to other sites like health and social services, and British Columbia offering free access to people at risk of overdosing, those likely to witness an overdose and to First Nations.

Jordan Westfall, executive director for the Canadian Associatio­n of People Who Use Drugs, said rural and remote areas are particular­ly underserve­d.

“There are large parts of the country that don’t have these services pretty much at all. These are lifelines for people at risk of overdosing that aren’t accessible to people,” Westfall said.

A lack of education and political will have been the biggest challenges to preventing overdose deaths, he said. Unlike other health-care decisions that are based on data, the question of allowing services like supervised consumptio­n sites is often put before the public, he said.

“In a lot of cases, we’ve put human lives up for public consultati­on. That’s kind of a metaphor for how we treat the health care of people who use drugs, which is stigmatize­d in society,” Westfall said.

He said harm reduction could go further by providing a safe drug supply to users, given that so many deaths appear related to drugs contaminat­ed with fentanyl.

“Everybody else in the country, when they take a sip of beer they don’t have to worry that they’re going to drop dead. We need to see the same safety for everyone in the country using drugs on the streets,” he said.

Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside has been at the centre of the overdose crisis in British Columbia and it’s also where some of the most accessible harm-reduction services are located.

Sarah Blyth, co-founder of the Overdose Prevention Society in Vancouver, said supervised consumptio­n sites and naloxone save lives every day.

But Rebecca Jesseman, policy director for the Canadian Centre on Substance Use and Addiction, said there are some good reasons for variation in available services: dominant drug problems also vary geographic­ally.

The opioid crisis is more pronounced in British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec, she said, while the central provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchew­an are more concerned with fighting a methamphet­amine problem.

“Part of the reason for different levels of response is the fact that the problem is different across Canada, so we do need to respond in a way that is specific to the local context,” she said.

Health Canada said the federal government allocates funding based on the severity of the opioid crisis and the population size in each province or territory.

Jesseman said mobile units have begun providing support to places without permanent overdose prevention services, she said.

 ?? DAX MELMER / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Windsor’s Brandon Bailey wants to ensure the overdosere­versing drug naloxone is within reach for those at risk.
DAX MELMER / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Windsor’s Brandon Bailey wants to ensure the overdosere­versing drug naloxone is within reach for those at risk.

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