Pubdate: Fri, 17 Apr 2015 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2015 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Betty Ann Adam - with Calgary Herald files Page: A3 SASK. NEEDS NARCOTIC ANTIDOTE KITS, DOCTOR SAYS Antidote kits could save the lives of people who overdose on fentanyl and other opiates, says a Saskatoon addictions doctor. The province, or even just the Saskatoon Health Region, could follow the lead of the Alberta Blood First Nation, which last month began training people in the community to use Naloxone kits to rescue drug users who have accidentally overdosed on fentanyl, a powerful street drug that has killed at least 16 people at that First Nation. "It was a very smart, coordinated response by a First Nation to a community need. I think we should make (Naloxone kits) available here as well," said Dr Peter Butt, who noted fentanyl is a growing problem in Saskatoon. At least three people have died in the city from using the drug. Alberta's provincial government recently announced it will provide the kits to high-risk users through programs such as needle exchange outreach groups. Fentanyl, a painkiller up to 100 times more potent than morphine, can cut off oxygen to the heart and brain. Naloxone reverses these effects, allowing users to breathe again for 30 to 40 minutes before the antidote wears off. It offers a critical window of time to rush victims to hospital, where more life-saving care awaits. Providing families and peers of drug users with training to use the injection antidote is comparable to giving Epi-pens to families of people with life-threatening allergies, Butt said. He will be a prominent presenter at a two-day conference on methadone and suboxone opioid substitution therapy this week in Saskatoon. Saskatchewan health care workers snapped up all 175 spaces, and organizers have a waiting list. Butt said the province needs to enhance its response to the growing opiate problem by having enough doctors and pharmacists to prescribe and dispense methadone and suboxone, which reduces withdrawal symptoms in addicts. He said Saskatoon has a waiting list of at least 50 people to get into the methadone program. "We know these people are injecting drugs, they're at high risk of getting HIV and Hepatitis C, and yet we're turning them away because of the lack of capacity. It is horrible," Butt said. "I feel uncomfortable because I know there's an unmet need out there." Some of the pressure could be taken off pharmacists who oversee daily visits from addicts who come to drink the medication, by shifting stabilized patients to primary health care clinics with counsellors who could continue to support them in their recovery. That would open spaces with the pharmacist for new patients still adjusting to abstaining from narcotics and more in need of the higher intensity care. Some people are using services they no longer need, "but there's no way to graduate them out to something at a lower level," Butt said. "There's no place to send (them.) They still need their methadone but they're doing well and could be integrated into a primary care model, but we don't have that model out there to provide that type of service." "It's a case of matching services with client needs, (which) is a lean approach - a thoughtful, reflective, continuous quality improvement approach, which is how (services) should be used ... It's not one size fits all. There is a way of shifting resources around, but it takes work." Adequate response to the growing drug problem may require a large initial investment, but the benefits of treating addictions ripple throughout the health care system, policing, the justice system and education. The Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse reports that for every dollar spent on addictions services, seven dollars of negative impact on society are saved. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt