Pubdate: Wed, 27 Jan 2016 Source: Medicine Hat News (CN AB) Copyright: 2016 Alberta Newspaper Group, Inc. Contact: http://www.medicinehatnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1833 Author: Charles Lefebvre Page: B5 ACTION NEEDED TO SLOW DOWN, OR STOP, SPREAD OF KILLER DRUG FENTANYL There really is no other way to describe it. Fentanyl use in the province has reached the crisis stage. Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid which can be up to 100 times more powerful than opioids such as oxycodone, has seemingly become a drug of choice throughout the province. It has taken hold in communities across Alberta, leaving a trail of destruction in its wake. According to statistics provided by Alberta Health Services at the recent Palliser Triangle Health Advisory Council meeting, six deaths were linked to fentanyl in the province in 2011, and the number grew steadily from there. In 2012, 29 deaths were reported, with the number spiking to 66 in 2013, 120 in 2014 and 213 deaths reported from January to October of last year (of those deaths, nine were in the South Zone, which Hatters reside). This past October, Medicine Hat Police Service S/Sgt. Jason Graham with the Major Crimes Section reported they had been seizing more fentanyl in drug busts this year, and have changed the way they handle drug seizures to reduce the chances officers accidentally come in contact with the drug. Health Minister Sarah Hoffman is also working to deal with the fentanyl crisis in the province, hoping to develop a national strategy to combat its use at a meeting with health ministers in B.C., because if fentanyl is affecting Alberta, it won't be long until it takes hold in other provinces. In order to combat the drug, several steps need to be taken. Education needs to be at the forefront of the fight against fentanyl. Albertans need to know the effects of the drug, the danger it possesses, and what can happen if you overdose on it. Some of this is happening already and is visible around the province. Another step to deal with the drug has been distributing Naloxone kits to EMS and police to help counteract the effects of the drug. Many law enforcement agencies now have the drug which can help reverse the effects of an overdose, which will hopefully reduce the number of deaths resulting from fentanyl use. It's an important step to take. The most important step the province has to take, however, is to expand and fund treatment for addiction to opioids. Opioid addiction has been on the rise in Canada, and the distribution and creation of fentanyl on the street is the end result of an opioid addiction crisis. There needs to be more resources available for those who are addicted to opioids of all kinds, to prevent them from believing getting pain medication from a dealer, where they don't know what is mixed within, is an option. Fentanyl is at a crisis level in the province, and cooperation from everyone, from citizens to police to government, is needed to help combat the issue. We can't keep losing more lives to addiction. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom