Vancouver Sun

A closer look at safer supply drugs

How does B.C.'s program work, is it helping prevent deaths — and is it being abused?

- KATIE DeROSA

B.C.'s so-called safer supply program, which provides prescripti­on opioids as an alternativ­e to potentiall­y fatal toxic drugs, has come under fire amid concerns that some of the government-provided hydromorph­one isn't being taken by the patient but sold for street drugs.

Critics say it's evidence the program is being abused and opens the door for hydromorph­one, sold under the brand name Dilaudid, to be marketed to youth at rock bottom prices.

Harm reduction advocates and public health officials say there's no evidence that the safer supply program is fuelling new addictions. The biggest problem with the B.C. NDP's safe supply program, they say, is that it's not widespread enough, which is leaving people in remote communitie­s without access to potentiall­y life-saving opioid alternativ­es.

Here's what you need to know:

WHAT IS THE SAFER SUPPLY PROGRAM?

In March 2020, B.C. became the first jurisdicti­on to roll out a provincewi­de prescripti­on opioid program that allowed physicians or nurse practition­ers to prescribe pharmaceut­ical-grade opioids free of charge to people at high risk of overdose.

It was launched in the early days of COVID-19 when many in-person support services were scaled back. The aim was to ensure people had an alternativ­e to toxic street drugs that are now killing an average of seven people a day.

HOW COMMON IS OPIOID ALTERNATIV­E USAGE?

In February, provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry released a report following a months-long review of the prescribed opioid alternativ­e program.

Henry endorsed the program and called for it to be expanded to reach more people across the province.

According to the report, 4,331 people were given prescribed opioid alternativ­es, which is less than four per cent of the estimated 150,000 people with a substance-use disorder.

Henry said in the report that many British Columbians are unable to access prescribed opioid alternativ­es because of limited access to health care in rural or remote communitie­s, or an inability to find a doctor willing to prescribe opioids.

HOW BIG A PROBLEM IS DRUG DIVERSION?

Prince George RCMP said last month that a recent seizure of thousands of pills included morphine and hydromorph­one, two drugs that are part of B.C.'s safe supply program.

Vancouver police Deputy Chief Fiona Wilson told a House of Commons' committee this week that 50 per cent of hydromorph­one seizures in B.C. had been diverted from “safe supply” drugs.

Henry's report confirmed that “some diversion is occurring,” but added “the extent and impacts are unknown.”

B.C. United addictions' critic Elenore Sturko said it's unacceptab­le that instead of “benefiting the person who is suffering from the illness” these opioids are “being used as a currency to benefit organized crime.”

Dr. Paxton Bach, co-medical director at the B.C. Centre on Substance Use, said the diversion of hydromorph­one is “a legitimate concern and something we absolutely need to be talking about.”

However, to put that diversion into context, he said, it's important to consider that “hydromorph­one remains a very small part of the overall opioid seizures” by the RCMP.

WHAT DO CRITICS SAY ABOUT THE PROGRAM?

Critics of the program, including B.C. United and both the federal Conservati­ves and B.C. Tories, say the B.C. NDP is keeping people sick by handing out taxpayer-subsidized addictive drugs with no focus on treatment and recovery.

Sturko has called for pharmacist­s to witness people taking their hydromorph­one pills to prevent them from being sold on the street for more toxic street drugs.

The problem with witnessed supply, said Bach, is it's too onerous for people to come to a pharmacy five times a day to take hydromorph­one. People are typically given a maximum of 14 hydromorph­one pills a day.

Methadone is consumed under the watch of a pharmacist but Bach said that's because methadone's effects are longer-lasting and can be consumed once a day.

“It's setting an extraordin­arily high bar” for people to access the prescribed opioids, he said.

WHAT ABOUT RESEARCH ON PRESCRIPTI­ON OPIOIDS?

A B.C. study published in the British Medical Journal in January found people with addiction who received a safer supply of prescribed opioids were 61 per cent less likely to die than those without access to it.

The peer-reviewed study analyzed 5,882 people who received prescripti­on opioids between March 2020 and August 2021 and compared the number of overdoses and deaths with a similar number of people who didn't receive a safer supply of drugs.

Bach, a co-author of the study, said concerns about diversion should be offset by these life-saving results.

“So to suggest that everyone who's participat­ing in these programs is turning around and trading their hydromorph­one for fentanyl is very hard to reconcile with the data that we have that suggests this can be really an effective way of reducing one's overdose mortality risk,” he said.

IS HYDROMORPH­ONE MARKETED TO YOUTH?

Dr. Mark Mallet, a Victoria-based hospitalis­t with more than a decade of experience, wrote an opinion piece in The Globe and Mail last September expressing concern that teens are buying “dillies” and becoming addicted to opioids.

Greg Sword, a Vancouver father, has become an outspoken critic of the safe supply program after his 14-year-old daughter Kamilah died of a drug overdose in August 2022. He told Postmedia News that a coroner report found his daughter had three drugs in her system: cocaine, MDMA and hydromorph­one.

Guy Felicella, a peer clinical adviser with the B.C. Centre on Substance Use in Vancouver, said he's done more than 100 talks to students about drugs and he's never heard of a youth getting addicted to opioids by taking hydromorph­one. He said most kids tell him their gateway drugs were cannabis, alcohol and party drugs like MDMA.

Felicella has become a widely sought after public speaker following his decades-long struggle with heroin addiction.

Felicella has been sober for more than 10 years following treatment and recovery but he's also a staunch advocate for harm reduction measures that will keep people alive.

“I have challenges with people saying that safer supply, it's flooded the market, it's created new addictions,” he said.

It's counterpro­ductive to focus “on a small safer supply program that pales in comparison to what's killing people,” Felicella said. “If people are buying those pills ... at least they ain't dying from them.”

 ?? NICK PROCAYLO ?? The Pier Resource Centre pharmacy on April 18, one year after B.C.'s drug decriminal­ization program went into effect.
NICK PROCAYLO The Pier Resource Centre pharmacy on April 18, one year after B.C.'s drug decriminal­ization program went into effect.

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