Pubdate: Sat, 14 Mar 2015 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Copyright: 2015 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.leaderpost.com/opinion/letters/letters-to-the-editor.html Website: http://www.leaderpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: Charles Hamilton Page: A6 DRUG TESTS COULD SAVE LIVES, DEAD TEEN'S MOM SAYS SASKATOON - Marie Agioritis suspected something was wrong with her 19-year-old son in the weeks leading up to his death. Now, months after Kelly accidentally overdosed on fentanyl, she only wishes she could have proven it. "I was a little suspicious something was going on with him, but I didn't have a drug test at home," she said. Agioritis said Kelly wasn't an addict and was only experimenting when he took a lethal dose of the opiate. She wishes she had acted on her suspicions before it was too late. More than that, she wishes a take home drug test would have been at her disposal. "If I could have just driven over to the drugstore and grabbed a drug test kit and brought it home and said, 'Do it, buddy.' It's instant," she said. Take-home drug test kits can test for everything from marijuana to methamphetamine to heroin with nothing more than a simple urine sample. The tests are common on drugstore shelves in the United States, but they are harder to find in Canada. While the kits can be purchased online and occasionally at some specialty stores, they are noticeably absent from the shelves of major drugstore chains. "It should be more readily available," said John Haines, the executive director of Addictions Canada. Haines said the drug tests are a regular part of interventions at Addictions Canada's drug rehabilitation centres, but the company orders them in bulk online. There are no Health Canada restrictions on the take-home tests. "I don't think this is the responsibility of the pharmacies, but I think pharmacies should maybe be looking into supplying better options for parents," Haines said. Agioritis has been fighting for better drug education in the wake of her son's death. She said the take-home tests are just one more tool for parents who might suspect their children are taking drugs. "They could save lives. The drugs out there are way different then the drugs we saw in the '70s," Agioritis said. She had ordered drug tests online for her other son, Kayle, but the weeks-long waiting period is just too much, she said, adding it's much easier to act on your suspicions right when they happen. She hopes speaking out will encourage more pharmacies to carry the test kits and help stop drug abuse before it's too late. "There is no harm of having these drug tests on the shelves. They are only going to do good," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom