Pubdate: Thu, 04 Aug 2016 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2016 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Heather Palis Page: A11 LIFE-SAVING TREATMENT DENIED TO OPIOID USERS Studies show these drugs are effective, writes Heather Palis One-third of Canadians have a chronic health condition. We all know someone living with one and count on our universal health care system to help them. Thousands of Canadians living with chronic opioid use disorder (i.e. injecting street opioids daily), however, are often excluded from universal health care, being denied the treatments they need. In the first half of the year, British Columbia saw 308 illicit drug overdose deaths, and is on track to reach 800 preventable deaths by the end of 2016. Last month, there were 36 overdoses in 48 hours in Surrey. B.C. Provincial Health Officer Dr. Perry Kendall has declared a public health state of emergency and Lisa LaPointe, the province's chief coroner, has noted that overdoses in the province have taken over as the leading cause of unnatural death, now killing more people than car accidents. While the standard treatments like methadone and Suboxone(R) work for most people, they don't work for everyone and they don't work all the time. Approximately 10-15 per cent of opioid users are not helped by these treatments. Just as diabetics have varying responses to different types of insulin, patients with chronic opioid use disorder have varying responses to different treatment options. As is the standard for other chronic conditions, a range of evidence-based treatments for the chronic condition of opioid use disorder should be made available to those who need them. Conveniently, strong evidence supporting effective life-saving alternative treatments already exists and expanding access to these treatments across Canada is a vital next step. Pharmaceutical-grade heroin provided in clinics under the supervision of health-care providers has been proven effective by numerous clinical trials and has been successfully implemented as part of the treatment offered in countries across Europe since the 1990s. In 2008, NAOMI, a clinical trial based in Vancouver and Montreal, showed this treatment to be safe and effective in the Canadian context. When untreated, chronic opioid use disorder costs taxpayers at minimum $45,000 per individual each year in health and criminal justice costs, while treatment reduces that cost by half. This year SALOME, a Vancouver-based clinical trial, showed that hydromorphone (Dilaudid(R)), an already licensed medication used to treat pain associated with other chronic conditions, could be as effective as pharmaceutical-grade heroin for the treatment of chronic opioid use disorder. Participants of SALOME receive either hydromorphone or pharmaceutical-grade heroin under the supervision of health-care providers on a daily basis at Providence Health Care's Crosstown Clinic in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, where in the midst of a public health crisis not one participant has died of an opioid related overdose. In the study there were 88,451 injections administered, with only 14 overdoses, none of which resulted in hospitalizations. Participants in the trial remain the only ones with access to these life-saving treatments, from which thousands of Canadians could be benefitting right now. The few patients receiving treatment at Crosstown Clinic see themselves as the lucky ones, and want to see this treatment expanded to those in need that are at risk of death every day they remain outside of treatment. In Canada, pharmaceutical-grade heroin unfortunately is not licensed. Hydromorphone, however, is licensed and is indicated for the relief of moderate to severe pain. It is used in health care settings on hundreds of Canadians every day. Its use for addiction treatment, however, would be considered "off-label," meaning it would be used for a condition other that for that which it is officially indicated. As such, the cost of the medication is not covered for patients who would use hydromorphone for the purpose of addiction treatment. B.C.'s Ministry of Health should conduct a Pharmacare review of hydromorphone, paying close attention to the evidence and input available, and take steps to ensure this licensed medication is made available to all Canadians, regardless of their condition. After all, the values of our universal Canadian health care system inform us that anything less would be unacceptable. Heather Palis is a PhD Candidate at the School of Population and Public Health at the University of British Columbia and is a student in UBC's Scholars Go Public Institute. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt