The Province

Support expanding for families of drug users

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A support group for families of people who have fatally overdosed is expanding its services across the country to also help those whose loved ones are addicted to illicit drugs.

The Alberta chapter of Moms Stop the Harm has received $345,000 in federal funding over two years to launch the Stronger Together Canada project from Alberta to all other provinces except B.C., which has already establishe­d its own program with provincial funding.

Stronger Together B.C. includes two groups: Healing Hearts for people grieving the overdose death of a family member to substance use, and Holding Hope for those connected to someone in active addiction.

The B.C. model, which includes input from families and Indigenous communitie­s that are disproport­ionately affected by the overdose crisis, is being used in Alberta to establish the larger program for the rest of the country.

Helen Jennens, a Moms Stop the Harm spokeswoma­n in Kelowna, B.C., says the group that began in 2015 with three mothers from B.C. and Alberta has seen a 25 per cent increase in membership in the last three months.

Jennens, whose two sons died of overdose, says the two Stronger Together B.C. groups are led by volunteer facilitato­rs with lived experience.

“We also had a doctor come and talk to us and we've had an ex-coroner come and talk to us,” she says.

Jennens says facilitato­rs will receive training to lead each group that will meet online during the pandemic to ensure people in remote communitie­s get help while in crisis.

Half of the 2,000 members of Moms Stop the Harm across the country are from B.C., where over 7,000 drug users have died of overdose since 2016, when the province declared a public health emergency.

Jennens says provincial funding provided last year has helped the group produce a guidebook for facilitato­rs, pay for online accounts and hire someone to organize the groups.

The B.C. Coroners Service reported a record 1,716 annual deaths last year as border closures during the pandemic disrupted the usual flow of illicit drugs and more toxic fentanyl-laced substances took their place.

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