Times Colonist

Rules relaxed for pharmacy sale of life-saving overdose antidote

B.C. among the first provinces to make naloxone available without prescripti­on

- KATHERINE DEDYNA kdedyna@timescolon­ist.com

Pharmacies across B.C. have permission to sell a life-saving overdose antidote without a prescripti­on thanks to a federal drug policy revision in tandem with a provincial push.

Health Canada revised its prescripti­on drug regulation­s this week to allow more leniency in the sale of naloxone, which is used to reverse the effects of overdoses from opioid drugs such as morphine, oxycodone and fentanyl.

B.C. is among the first provinces to amend its regulation­s to make non-prescripti­on naloxone more widely available.

“It is wonderful news,” said Petra Schulz, a Mayne Island mother whose 25-year-old son died last April after taking what she believes was one fentanyl pill.

“In the past, only the user himor herself could get the prescripti­on, so parents had to lie and say that they themselves are users to get the life-saving kit,” said Schulz, a co-founder of mumsDU — Moms United and Mandated to Saving the lives of Drug Users.

The changes mean that anyone can go to a participat­ing pharmacy for naloxone.

The drug, which is administer­ed by intramuscu­lar injection, will be available behind the counter in one-use doses, said Gillian Vrooman, spokeswoma­n for College of Pharmacist­s of B.C. Pharmacist­s will be required to provide training and informatio­n for the use of the drug.

The price of naloxone varies from $1 to $14 per dose depending on the manufactur­er — it will be up to pharmacies how to price it and the cost will not be covered by B.C. Pharmacare.

The move comes amid a growing number of drug overdoses.

The B.C. Coroners Service is investigat­ing 32 possible overdose deaths in the past four months on Vancouver Island, said Island Health official Sophie Bannar-Martin. There have also been twice the number of patients visiting Island emergency rooms for overdoses within the last three months than in same time period last year, she said.

Making naloxone easier to get will without a doubt save lives, said Dr. Richard Stanwick, medical officer for Island Health. He noted that the federal government moved quickly to bring about the drug policy changes, which some feared might take years.

Ashraf Amlani, an epidemiolo­gist, said staff at the B.C. Centre for Disease Control are ecstatic that federal and provincial regulation­s changed in light of “the opioid overdose crisis in Canada.”

B.C.’s Take Home Naloxone program, which distribute­s naloxone kits to people who use opioids, has trained more than 6,500 people to respond to overdoses by injecting naloxone, reversing 488 overdoses that could have resulted in death or severe brain damage, Amlani said in a statement.

Last year, Island Health distribute­d 992 kits, Bannar-Martin said. Since Jan. 1, 1,336 have been given out across Vancouver Island.

Provincial health officer Perry Kendall encourages “parents and friends of people who use drugs to visit their local pharmacist for training and include naloxone as part of their first aid kit.”

 ??  ?? Petra Schulz holds a photo of her 25-year-old son who died after taking what she believes was one fentanyl pill.
Petra Schulz holds a photo of her 25-year-old son who died after taking what she believes was one fentanyl pill.

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