Times Colonist

Two overdose prevention programs have ‘significan­t deficienci­es’: B.C. auditor

Mother who lost daughter to suicide sees hope in Royal Jubilee Hospital’s new unit >A3

- BRIEANNA CHARLEBOIS and DARRYL GREER

Nearly eight years after British Columbia declared a publicheal­th emergency because of escalating drug overdoses, it still hasn’t set a standard of care for those struggling with addiction, the auditor general says.

“Minimum level standards are at the core of consistent service quality, access and availabili­ty across the province and these should be well establishe­d by now,” Michael Pickup told a news conference Tuesday.

The B.C. government and public health officer announced the emergency in April 2016 and since then more than 14,000 people have died, most of them from highly potent opioid fentanyl.

Pickup called for a new provincewi­de evaluation of overdose prevention and supervised consumptio­n services, saying the last one was done in 2021 and the illicit drug supply has changed since then.

His office released two independen­t audits Tuesday on the government’s supervised consumptio­n services and the first phase of the prescribed safersuppl­y program.

“A prominent theme runs through both of these audits, and that is that the Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions and Ministry of Health have not effectivel­y addressed the many challenges and barriers facing each program,” he told the news conference.

The audit found the ministries’ guidance didn’t include minimum service standards that ensured consistent quality and access of services, that it did not adequately respond to barriers such as local government resistance, and that a new program evaluation was needed as the health emergency evolved.

Pickup’s audit of safer supply found the ministries didn’t make “significan­t progress” in tackling its “most challengin­g barriers,” such as rural access to the program, health-care providers’ hesitancy about prescribin­g the drugs and whether the drugs being offered were appropriat­e.

The auditor said the deficienci­es have impacts on the people who need the services, their families and the health-care system.

“Many thousands of people in B.C. are grieving the losses of family and friends from the toxic-drug supply,” Pickup said in a news release. “The crisis is also an immense challenge for those working to provide care and support for people who use substances. My team and I have a deep sense of empathy for everyone who has been touched by this continuing tragedy.”

The reports said both ministries have accepted all seven recommenda­tions, including improving minimum service standards, increasing public reporting on the programs and addressing a lack of doctors who prescribe safer-supply drugs.

The B.C. government has since rebranded the safer-supply program as “prescribed alternativ­es.”

Addictions Minister Jennifer Whiteside declined an interview to comment on the report, but said in a statement that the government is building a continuum of care “that includes prevention, harm reduction, treatment and recovery.”

“While we have rapidly expanded access to overdose prevention sites as a critical tool to keep people alive, we acknowledg­e there are some persistent barriers impacting implementa­tion and service standards,” she said in the statement.

“In the same way, while monitoring is in place for our prescribed alternativ­es program, we continue to work directly with prescriber­s to support implementa­tion.”

She said the ministry is already working to address many of the items cited in Pickup’s reports.

At an unrelated news conference on Tuesday, Premier David Eby acknowledg­ed the reports’ findings of barriers to accessing prevention services, especially in remote parts of B.C.

“There are big challenges for us in delivering rural health care, period, and including in the areas where people are struggling with addiction at risk of overdose,” he said. “It’s important

to note [Pickup’s] not saying stop the program, he’s not saying the program doesn’t work, he says he wants more of it in every part of the province. This is a challenge for us.”

The auditor’s report said overdose-prevention and safeconsum­ption sites provide safer environmen­ts for people to use drugs under the supervisio­n of a health-care profession­al or harm-reduction worker to monitor for signs of drug toxicity.

It found the government did not ensure provincewi­de implementa­tion of those services and said it was “out of step with changes to the toxic drug supply.”

The report says overdose prevention and supervised consumptio­n

services are critical to saving lives and connecting people to the supports they need, but it cited municipal resistance, location and accessibil­ity of the sites and human resources as roadblocks to implementa­tion across the province.

The safer-supply prescripti­on program, the report says, is meant to generate evidence, and evaluating that evidence will be “crucial to the program’s continuati­on.”

Pickup found that assessing the program’s success will require “high-quality evaluation data” because some clinicians are still skeptical due to lack of evidence and the program’s “politiciza­tion.”

He said collaborat­ion and communicat­ion between ministries and its health partners, as well as its public reporting, is insufficie­nt.

“This is a novel program that required transparen­cy with key partners to build trust,” he said of the safer-supply program. “However, we also found weaknesses in the transparen­cy and communicat­ion.”

The program has generated criticism since its implementa­tion, including from federal Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith, who both claimed that drugs from the program were being diverted into the rest of Canada.

The audit says the most common drug offered, hydromorph­one, isn’t strong enough for fentanyl users and substances aren’t given out in “smokable form.”

Pickup told the news conference B.C.’s addictions ministry had “developed an enhanced monitoring plan on diversion.”

“However, they have not publicly reported that this work is underway,” he said.

The report says some service providers are “hesitant” about giving out prescripti­ons because of stigma and concerns over the drugs being diverted to the illegal market.

People accessing the safesupply program, the audit says, also face restrictio­ns about getting the drugs because they have to visit a pharmacy each day, and those in rural areas might lack access to “services required to safely and reliably access prescribed safer supply.”

The audit says antiIndige­nous racism and stigma against drug users are also factors, making access more difficult for those in need and limiting the number of health-care providers willing to provide the drugs.

 ?? DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST ?? Auditor general Michael Pickup presents his report about B.C.’s toxicdrug crisis and the implementa­tion of harm-reduction programs during an announceme­nt in the press theatre at the legislatur­e on Tuesday.
DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST Auditor general Michael Pickup presents his report about B.C.’s toxicdrug crisis and the implementa­tion of harm-reduction programs during an announceme­nt in the press theatre at the legislatur­e on Tuesday.

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