Pubdate: Mon, 25 May 2015 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Joe Fiorito Page: GT2 A DISPATCH FROM THE FIELD OF HARM REDUCTION Recently I chewed khat, a leaf with properties conducive to sociability; and on a couple of occasions I ate cannabis chocolate. I neither brag nor complain, I merely think we ought to normalize khat, find a reliable way to measure the potency of cannabis, in any and all forms, so that those who use it can make informed judgments. As you might guess from the above, I am also a supporter of harm reduction, and so I went to an information meeting awhile back to learn a little bit about the problems of drug overdose. The presentation was made by four people who are prominent in the harm reduction movement, one of them a woman who is now on methadone after years of using heroin. In the audience were perhaps 40 people who work, in some way, with those who use drugs. We were asked a question off the top: Had anyone in the audience ever had an overdose? A couple of hands went up. Then, a more specific question: how many in the audience have ever had a hangover? Many more hands were raised to the tune of nervous laughter; the chuckles turned to chagrin when it was pointed out that a hangover is the result of an overdose of alcohol. So there. And then things got really serious, and here are some things I learned: We have a crisis on our hands. In Toronto, in 2010, there were 106 deaths attributed to the misuse of opioids; 26 of these deaths involved heroin; 17 deaths involved the painkiller fentanyl; and there were 30 deaths in which oxycodone played a part. All those numbers are significantly higher than they were in 2002. Now hear this: There were, in Toronto, more accidental deaths caused by drugs than there are deaths in car accidents, and yet car accidents are prominent in the news, and overdoses are not. Do we value some lives more than others? And do you still wonder why some people are cynical about the media? Someone in the seminar asked why drug deaths are rising if harm reduction works? It's a good question with a complicated answer. There may be more users who don't know what they're doing. There are certainly all sorts of new drugs on the street, some of which are tainted and some of which are quite powerful. There's also more to it than that. Some people return to drugs after a long absence, perhaps a spell in prison, only to find that their drug of choice is more powerful than it was when they quit. And some drug users are quite inventive. For example, there are those who will extract the fentanyl from used dermal patches, and add it to their heroin; thing is, fentanyl is powerful in and of itself, but it is also unevenly distributed in the patches, so that a user may not know how much he or she is getting. Inventive, yes. Dangerous, utterly. An aside: there are some places in the world where used fentanyl patches can be turned in, much the same way as used needles can be turned in; this practice should be widespread. Things may get worse before they get better: someone in the gathering observed that her old neighbour, who had been taking an opioid medication, forgot that she had done so and took more. The ambulance came for her, as it does a couple of times a year. We're all getting older; brr. We were then given a short course in the symptoms of various kinds of overdose, and what to do, but these were not the most interesting things I learned. This was: There are all sorts of new drugs popping up on the street, and sometimes they are dirty or profoundly powerful and it takes some time for information and cautions to circulate. At the moment, for example, there is some particularly nasty crack cocaine in circulation. How do people learn about these things? The hard way, early on. There is a website - ReportBadDrugsTO.ca - but it's really just a survey and requires one to fill out a detailed form, and you don't go there to learn about bad drugs, you go there to report them. I offer no comment. I do have a question: Shouldn't there be an app for that? - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom