Waterloo Region Record

B.C. boosts drug-checking service

Portable machine helps fight against overdose deaths

- Gemma Karstens-Smith

VANCOUVER — A shoe box-sized machine is powering a one-year pilot project with the hope of cutting British Columbia’s soaring overdose death rate.

The specialize­d portable machine costs $60,000 and uses infrared light to test small samples of illicit drugs for contaminan­ts.

Two supervised consumptio­n sites in Vancouver started sharing the machine last week for two days a week each in an effort to determine if drug checking will reduce overdoses.

The Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions is also expanding the use of fentanyl test strips in all supervised consumptio­n and overdose prevention sites.

The powerful opioid was detected in about 83 per cent of the 1,103 overdose deaths in the province in the first nine months of this year, the BC Coroners said Thursday.

In 2016, 982 people fatally overdosed in British Columbia.

“Drug checking is something that can give people the informatio­n they need in order to make choices about how much to use and whether to use. And this informatio­n can save a person’s life,” Addictions Minister Judy Darcy said at a news conference on Friday.

Former drug user Dean Wilson attended the news conference and said he believes the testing will be beneficial.

“The fact that we’re going to be able to actually figure out what’s going into our bodies is huge. It’s going to save lives and its going to save lives across this province,” he said.

In most cases, the powerful painkiller fentanyl was combined with other drugs, including cocaine, heroin and methamphet­amine, the coroners service said.

In 2012, fentanyl was detected in just four per cent of overdose deaths.

Insite, a supervised consumptio­n facility in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, has been using fentanyl test strips since July 2016. Dr. Mark Lysyshyn with Vancouver Coastal Health said results from Insite show drug checking changes the way people use illicit substances. When people saw their drugs tested positive for fentanyl, they reduced the amount they used, he said.

“When they did that, they overdosed less often. So it helps people make safer decisions and use drugs in a safer way.”

Two other health authoritie­s in the Fraser Valley and the Interior recently introduced fentanyl test strips at some overdose prevention and supervised consumptio­n sites.

The government said more of the test strips will be sent to the remaining sites across the province in the coming weeks.

Safe consumptio­n sites have opened around B.C., and the coroners’ service said there have been no deaths at those locations.

Ninety per cent of the deaths this year happened indoors, and half were in private homes, the service said.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Activist Dean Wilson, front, former president of the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users, places cocaine on an infrared spectromet­er to be tested in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver on Friday.
DARRYL DYCK, THE CANADIAN PRESS Activist Dean Wilson, front, former president of the Vancouver Area Network of Drug Users, places cocaine on an infrared spectromet­er to be tested in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver on Friday.

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