Pubdate: Thu, 01 Dec 2016 Source: Vancouver 24hours (CN BC) Copyright: 2016 Vancouver 24 hrs. Contact: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/letters Website: http://vancouver.24hrs.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3837 Author: Ada Slivinski Page: 6 RECOVERY NEEDS MORE RESOURCES AMID OVERDOSE EPIDEMIC This week, the B.C. Coroners Service announced that Vancouver police had for the first time found carfentanil at the scene of an apparent illicitdrug overdose death on Nov. 17. The deadly drug is used as an elephant tranquilizer and 100 times more toxic than fentanyl, and deadly to humans in an amount smaller than a grain of salt. The fentanyl crisis in the province has reached epidemic proportions. So far this year, overdoses have killed 622 people in B.C., a 56.7 per cent increase over the same time period last year, during which there were 397 deaths. Hospital emergency departments are flooded with overdose patients and staff say they often say the same people being brought back multiple times for a shot of the antidote naloxone. InSite is overflowing and street patrols and makeshift supervised injection sites have been launched in attempts to prevent overdose deaths. Emergency responders are having to prioritize overdose calls because they are life and death situations. Drug screening at InSite can help identify the presence of fentanyl cut into other drugs but the problems is, drug users will often inject the stuff anyway. When they reach the point where they're sick for drugs, many addicts say there is not really anything that will stop them from injecting. Supervised injection sites alone are not the answer to this crisis, they are a band-aid solution and staff are finding themselves responding to the same people overdosing. It's a revolving door and the crisis just keeps getting worse. Ottawa has banned six of the chemicals used to make fentanyl, but there will always be another - stronger - drug. We need to invest resources in recovery programs. Lift people out of the constant cycle of devastating addiction. Most recovery programs are at capacity and always turning people away. A few years ago, I visited a women's recovery home in Surrey. The home was managed by women who themselves were graduates of the program and I heard so many stories of hope, of reuniting with family, and building a life free from the chains of addiction. If we want to see an end to this crisis, save lives and relieve our health care system from the flood it's currently experiencing, we need to think long term and fund both prevention and recovery. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt