Pubdate: Tue, 11 Oct 2016 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2016 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.theprovince.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Erin Ellis Page: 5 B.C. AIMS TO STREAMLINE ADDICTION HELP Health Care: Goal is to teach primary physicians how to best treat specific cases As fentanyl overdoses continue to dominate headlines, the head of a newly announced B.C. Centre on Substance Use says finding the best addiction treatment in B.C. is notoriously difficult because there's no single system to navigate - and science-based addiction therapy is vastly underused in the province. "The medical side of addiction treatment isn't well established," says Dr. Evan Wood, who was named interim head of the new research centre by Premier Christy Clark on Sept. 28. Addicts and their families seeking help can face a bewildering range of options, says Wood, who is also leader of addiction services for Vancouver Coastal Health and Providence Health. There are public and private recovery centres, each with their own admission rules and waiting lists. Add to that individual counselling or group programs offered throughout the province, many based on the 12-step program pioneered by Alcoholics Anonymous. Wood's new job is to help increase education about addiction throughout the health system. "We haven't had well-organized structures for training health-care providers in addiction care. (Until recently) we also haven't had guidelines for the treatment of addiction disorders that would inform primary physicians about the best approaches to take," he says. VCH and Providence released guidelines for treating opioid addiction in 2015 and Wood says guidelines on alcohol is expected in 2017. According to the most recent available data released in 2006, alcohol and cigarettes created by far the biggest drain on Canada's health-care system. Rather than offer the same treatment to everyone, Wood says each substance requires a specific approach. To that end, an expanding education program at St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver run by addiction researcher Dr. Keith Ahamad has provided month-long training in the evolving field to 100 physicians and 13 year-long fellowships for doctors, nurses and social workers over the last academic year. They learn that Naltrexone, for instance, is a drug that blocks the euphoric effects of opiates such as heroin - but it has also been shown to reduce the amount of alcohol a patient drinks. (It's not to be confused with naloxone, a drug much in the news for reversing the effects of opioid street drugs during an overdose.) Another medication called acamprosate can prolong abstinence from alcohol. "Particularly in the case of alcohol addictions, some of the proven medical approaches have been greatly under-utilized," Wood says. For opioid addictions, Wood says rapidly detoxing without being admitted to follow-up treatment is more dangerous than taking no action because risk of relapse and overdose is greater after a patient's tolerance for drugs is reduced. The 2015 guidelines on opioids also recommend a drug combination sold under the trade name Suboxone as the preferred substitute for street opioids because it's much less likely to cause an overdose compared to the more regularly prescribed methadone. The idea is to avoid relapse and gradually taper the patient off the replacement drug over a year or more. Some recovering addicts will remain on substitutes indefinitely. But many private treatment facilities won't take people unless they're on a low-dose replacement therapy, or none at all - and some 12-step groups frown upon it because it gives the impression that an addict still depends on a drug to conduct daily life. In terms of publicly funded addiction treatment beds in B.C., the numbers are in flux. The premier promised to have 500 beds by 2017, yet information provided by the Provincial Health Services Authority, which oversees the majority of them, currently lists 162 available to people with combined addiction and mental health problems. All of the places require a referral from a doctor, a process that can take weeks. Admission can be immediate after that. An additional 42 beds dedicated to youth (in Keremeos, Surrey and North Vancouver) are scheduled to open next year. And a much larger project to replace the aging 94-bed Burnaby Centre for Mental Health and Addictions with a new 105-bed development on the former Riverview Hospital lands in Coquitlam is slated for completion in 2019. The Ministry of Health says it spends more than $1.42 billion each year in mental health and substance use services. Connie Coniglio, director of the Burnaby centre, says an estimated 130,000 people in B.C. have problems with both mental health and addiction, but the centre treats only those with "complex concurrent disorders" who aren't able to function day to day. It provides the highest level of care in the province, often after patients have had run-ins with the law or have become homeless. "People aren't necessarily cured by one round of treatment in our level of care. It's often a lifetime journey," says Coniglio. "It's not a single event that changes their lives, it's often a series of treatments." That can include opioid replacement and psychiatric medications, along with counselling to teach coping skills like cognitive behavioural therapy and even spiritual awareness. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt