Pubdate: Sun, 20 Nov 2016 Source: Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) Copyright: 2016 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.winnipegsun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://www.winnipegsun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/503 Author: Jim Bender Page: 3 'UNDERWHELMING' Opioid conference misses point, advocate says A policy to address the latest opioids crisis at a Health Canada conference in Ottawa does not go far enough, or fast enough, to prevent future deaths, an advocate says. Cynthia Genaille, whose daughter Brittany died of a fentanyl overdose on Oct. 6, speaks to media during a small rally denouncing the opioid in front of the Legislative Building. "Where's the urgency?" Richard Elliott, the executive director for the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network, asked. "You need to stop people from dying now." People from all across Canada are dying as the result of taking such opioids as fentanyl or carfentanil. Canadian Health Minister Jane Philpott conducted a two-day conference of health ministers, including Manitoba's Kelvin Goertzen, to come up with a plan to discuss the issue of deaths associated to opioids like fentanyl and carfentanil. That plan includes better collection of data about drug overdoses, greater free distribution of nalaxone, the antidote to such drugs as fentanyl, improved addiction services, better monitoring of legal prescriptions and changing the Respect for Communities Act, which would allow more provinces to offer safe injection sites. It will also increase border security to stem the flow of illegal fentanyl from China. "It's pretty underwhelming," said Elliott, who attended the conference. "There are some things that are fairly innocuous, like collecting better data, which is fine." Expanding the distribution of free naxolone is a good move but monitoring legal prescriptions for opioids isn't, Elliott said. "Clamping down on the prescriptions for opioids does little to respond to overdoses and death," he said. "It's the wrong response because it keeps them from getting legally obtained drugs. "When they clamped down on prescriptions for Oxycontin, it led to this crisis with fentanyl. So, they're missing the point." Elliott called for the immediate repeal of the Respect for Communities Act so that provinces across the country could start safe injection sites to save lives. B.C. currently has the only one in Canada. "Just go out and do it without waiting for an exemption from the local (Health) Minister. It would stop people from dying," Elliott said. "Maybe we need to stop criminalizing these people because that stops them from getting the help they need. Programs can't help them if they're already dead. "But there has been no commitment to them from other provincial governments." Health Canada will also issue new prescription guidelines to doctors to increase access to suboxone, a substitute painkiller, in First Nation communities come January. "There is no single solution to this devastating problem," Philpott said in a release. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt