Pubdate: Wed, 07 Dec 2016 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2016 The Calgary Sun Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://www.calgarysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67 Author: Yolande Cole Page: 7 GREATER ACCESS TO DRUG TREATMENT NEEDED, SAYS OFFICIAL Alberta has never been in more urgent need of providing improved access to treatment for drug users, says addictions medicine specialist Dr. Hakique Virani. Virani said news from the provincial government this week that carfentanil overdoses have killed 15 people is tragic, as well as predictable. "This is what we expect to happen in this illicit market when we're not meeting the needs for opioid addiction treatment and still drug traffickers are going to meet the demand for opioids, and they're going to do that with the path of least resistance," said Virani, who is based in Edmonton. "That means that the opioids we see are going to be more and more toxic, because you can traffic smaller volumes of them to manufacture the same number of doses." Carfentanil is 100 times more toxic than fentanyl, and just micrograms could be fatal. Provincial health officials issued a bulletin Monday warning Albertans about the drug. "I'm very concerned about the increased number of deaths due to carfentanil," said Chief Medical Officer of Health Dr. Karen Grimsrud. "To me it points out that we still have carfentanil in the province and I want Albertans to be aware of that, as well as how toxic this particular drug is. Just a small amount can be lethal." Virani said naloxone, which can reverse a fentanyl overdose, should be distributed much more widely than it is now. Kits containing the antidote are available in certain pharmacies and walk-in clinics. "Colleagues and I across the country are suggesting that now that it's non-prescription status in places like Alberta, it should be distributed in convenience stores and high schools and night clubs and gas stations, everywhere," said Virani. "One of the challenges of carfentanil is that it's likely to take many more doses of naloxone to reverse an overdose - and it needs to be freely available." The public health physician said the recent overdoses make harm reduction services "even more critical than they ever were" and point to the need for expansion of treatment for opioid users. "With medication therapies like suboxone and in some cases methadone, we've not come nearly to the level that's required to even put a dent in this epidemic," he said. "To think that in a public health emergency we have opioid dependency treatment clinics that are open until 3 in the afternoon - it's just mind-boggling. This should be a 24/7 operation." There are 11 clinics treating opioid dependency in Alberta, including three that are provincially funded and delivered by Alberta Health Services. The wait time for the AHS clinic in Calgary is currently four to six weeks. From January to September of this year, 338 Albertans died from an apparent drug overdose related to fentanyl or another opioid. Of those deaths, 193 were related to fentanyl, including 82 in Calgary. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt