Pubdate: Mon, 16 Mar 2015 Source: Sault Star, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 The Sault Star Contact: http://www.saultstar.com/letters Website: http://www.saultstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1071 Author: Brian Kelly Page: A1 GROUP WANTS DRUG ABUSE STRATEGY FOR CITY Health: Strategy Would Address Harms to Public A community group that developed a recently launched program to fight fentanyl patch abuse now wants to create a strategy to combat drug abuse for the city. Sault Ste. Marie and Area Drug Misuse Strategy Committee wants to recruit more members they feel will be essential to help decide what the document should include, said interim chair Sandy Byrne. Invitations will be made by late April with meetings of the expanded group starting in May. Start date for the drug strategy with a goal of addressing the harms to the public associated with substance use is not known. Byrne noted "a collective concern" among committee members to keep working to combat drug abuse. "We need to do something," she said. "We need to continue on this path. This was certainly something that was a priority that we wanted to get started." The committee met recently for a debriefing on the fentanyl patch for patch program. It was officially launched Feb. 24 at Sault Ste. Marie Police Service. Residents who use the potent painkiller are now required to return used patches to pharmacies before they can get new ones. The group has six members now. Similar strategies developed in North Bay and Thunder Bay had about 14 and 30 participants craft similar documents. "It's about focusing on improvement and improving the community's well-being and safety," said Bryne, who is also manager of Algoma Public Health's alcohol and drug program. "We're going to start to build on what this drug strategy needs to focus on." Goals for the group include offering support to drug users and preventing others from trying narcotics. "I think it will strengthen some of the work that's being done in the overall well-being and safety of our community for all people," said Byrne. "Maybe a drug strategy can help highlight some areas that we need more focus on." Most clients who attend the program she manages want help with tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, cocaine and opioids. The committee will review similar strategies used in other major Northern cities before creating a plan to deal with issues specific to the Sault. Byrne's group may try for provincial or federal funding to hire a researcher to pinpoint drug concerns in the city. One source that could help in that assessment is research done by Algoma University's NORDIK Institute as part of Downtown Dialogue in Action Project. The project's goal was to was to ensure a safe, vibrant downtown core and curb crime. NORDIK collected comments from about 1,000 residents and businesses. Its findings were released in 2014. "We need to focus on the whole community to see what else is going on, so that we can develop this strategy that's going to focus on those high-risk needs and those issues that are associated with the substance use in the community," Byrne said. Robert Keetch, chief of Sault Ste. Marie Police Service, is keen to see a drug strategy developed in the city. He helped make a similar plan about four years ago when he served with Greater Sudbury Police. He worked with Brenda Stankiewicz, a public health nurse with Sudbury and District Health Unit, as past of that strategy's creation. "Being intricately involved in that process, I can certainly see value of a strategy for Sault Ste. Marie," Keetch told The Sault Star. "I'm certainly getting that feedback from community partners as well." He expects the strategy will include enforcement, intervention, harm reduction and prevention pillars. Drug use is "closely associated" with violent and property crime, said Keetch. The patch for patch program is a "great component" of such a strategy, he added. Byrne's committee began meeting last August. Members are Maria DeRubeis, a pharmacist at Group Health Centre, Jen Didonato, of Breton House's A New Link, Const. Darin Rossetto, community mobilization officer with city police, Dr. Al McLean, physician lead at Superior Family Health Team, and pharmacist Jon MacDonald of Jon's Medicine Shoppe. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom