Pubdate: Thu, 04 Mar 2004 Source: Halifax Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2004 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Tera Camus Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/oxycontin.htm (Oxycontin/Oxycodone) TASK FORCE TO TACKLE C.B.'S DRUG PROBLEM SYDNEY - A task force will investigate ways to stop rampant prescription drug abuse that is linked to rising crime in Cape Breton and three sudden deaths last month. John Malcom, chief executive officer of the Cape Breton district health authority, told this newspaper Wednesday that a brainstorming session of key players occurred Tuesday night, setting the wheels in motion for recommendations they hope will benefit the entire province. Among the participants were doctors, pharmacists, police officers, addictions staff, educators and bureaucrats. More groups - including officials from the Community Services and Justice departments and recovering drug addicts or their families - are being invited to join the community partnership. "We acknowledge - and we're not alone in Canada - to have seen an increase in the use of drugs," Mr. Malcom said. "What is different here is, where in the past maybe illicit drugs (like cocaine or marijuana) were being used, there's now higher use of prescription drugs. "We acknowledge there's a growing problem. We think the best way to solve this is with a community plan, a community action, a community partnership to come up with some strategies." Cape Breton Regional Police blame the highly addictive opium-based narcotic OxyContin and other prescription drugs for 12 sudden deaths in the past year and escalating violent and petty crime committed by addicts. Three of those deaths - two brothers in Glace Bay and a New Waterford man - occurred within five days in February and involved overdoses. OxyContin, known as hillbilly heroin, sells for $20 to $80 per pill on the street and produces a high that resembles that from cocaine or heroin. Addicts get high by snorting crushed pills or mixing them with water and injecting the mixture. The problem facing health practitioners, Mr. Malcom said, is that the pill is also considered one of the best to treat patients who legitimately suffer moderate or severe pain. When taken as directed, OxyContin gives no high, just 12 hours of pain relief. Cape Breton has an unusually high cancer rate and leads Canada in the rate of occurrence of other industrial diseases. Mr. Malcom said the local palliative care unit has as many patients as Halifax's does, with one-third of the population. One in 200 Cape Bretoners was prescribed OxyContin in 2002. That's three times the rate at which the drug was prescribed in other parts of Nova Scotia. And the prescribed doses were stronger. It's unknown how many pills were dispensed last year but officials suspect the rate was even higher. OxyContin pills also arrive in Cape Breton through crime. "Building on that tradition we have in Cape Breton of working together, maybe, just maybe, we have a better chance of solving this problem," Mr. Malcom said. Chief Edgar MacLeod of Cape Breton Regional Police welcomed the initiative. "I think it's an excellent first step," he said Wednesday. "Generally I'm quite optimistic that things will start to happen as a result of this first meeting, so I'm excited about the potential outcomes." The chief said the whole idea is to acknowledge that prescription drug abuse is a complex problem that police can't handle on their own. "I'm hoping there will be a permanent structure put in place to deal with not just prescription drug abuse but other issues like family violence. "Right now, we work in different departments . . . and I think it's important we come together." But Chief MacLeod said the province still needs to introduce a real-time online method to give doctors immediate access to an accounting of the quantity of narcotics sold to prevent the inadvertent feeding of pills to patients faking symptoms. "It's very, very important," he said of a better prescription drug monitoring program. The province's existing paper method of tracking prescriptions is always at least two weeks out of date and depends upon pharmacies sending in forms detailing narcotics sold. Some pharmacies take longer than others to file the forms. Health Minister Angus MacIsaac also praised the initiative after emerging from a cabinet meeting at Halifax International Airport on Wednesday. "The (Cape Breton) district health authority was instrumental in bringing the group together," he said. "They will certainly be keeping us informed. Certainly the Department of Justice are very interested in the outcome of these discussions as well." Liberal health critic Dave Wilson said it's important for the province to act. "The issue of prescription drug abuse has been a problem for some time and I hope that government is not simply announcing a community partnership to stop the flow of negative media attention," Mr. Wilson said. "Clear recommendations, including a timetable for implementation, must be part of the mandate requested by government and addressed." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin