The Hamilton Spectator

Canada urged to declare public emergency over opioid crisis

- KRISTY KIRKUP

OTTAWA — Members of the medical community and front-line soldiers in Canada’s opioid crisis are pressing the federal government to declare a national public health emergency.

Dr. David Juurlink, head of pharmacolo­gy and toxicology at Toronto’s Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, says the opioid problem is so dire it demands an urgent response at the highest levels of government.

Politician­s are meeting with public health experts, doctors and family members who have lost loved ones at a two-day summit in Ottawa to hash out a solution to escalating — and deadly — rates of drug addiction.

Declaring a public health emergency would empower chief medical officers to take the actions necessary to reduce harm, Juurlink said. The federal NDP is calling on the federal government to do the same.

The two-day meeting is being cochaired by federal Health Minister Jane Philpott and Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins, both of whom are doctors themselves.

Declaring an emergency “takes out of the political realm the singular job of protecting public health and gives it to the people who are tasked with and empowered to do that,” Juurlink said.

There is clear consensus that leadership and effective co-ordination at the federal level would have a major impact on reducing overdose

deaths in Canada, said NDP health critic Don Davies.

“We urge the federal government to take immediate action to help save lives,” he said.

The federal government is exploring every lever at its disposal to address the issue, Philpott said Friday.

“If there are tools that are available to me that we believe will be helpful, I will find the authority and go through the appropriat­e steps to be able to access those tools,” she said.

“If we determine this is an appropriat­e tool, certainly we would do so.”

There is no question the opioid issue is a national public health crisis, she added.

Philpott has admitted she is unhappy with a lack of data and surveillan­ce programs that could shed light on how many opioids are prescribed, where they are coming from and how many people are overdosing and dying.

However, the problem requires a concerted, multiprong­ed approach among multiple jurisdicti­ons and won’t be solved overnight, she warned.

“By working together to develop a national response to this crisis, we have an incredible opportunit­y to pool our knowledge, our experience­s and the lessons learned and help to save the lives of people across this country suffering from opioid addiction,” Hoskins said.

Canada has the world’s secondhigh­est per capita consumptio­n of prescripti­on opioids, said Philpott, noting that in some parts of the country, drug overdoses are killing more people than motor vehicle accidents.

B.C. Premier Christy Clark is also pressing Ottawa to take steps to stop the flow of fentanyl from China — a drug that prompted that province to declare a public health emergency last spring.

 ?? FRED CHARTRAND, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? B.C. Premier Christy Clark looks on as Marilyn Oberg of the B.C. Ambulance Service talks to reporters regarding the impact of opioid overdose on Parliament Hill, in Ottawa on Thursday.
FRED CHARTRAND, THE CANADIAN PRESS B.C. Premier Christy Clark looks on as Marilyn Oberg of the B.C. Ambulance Service talks to reporters regarding the impact of opioid overdose on Parliament Hill, in Ottawa on Thursday.

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