Pubdate: Sun, 05 Feb 2017 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2017 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.theprovince.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Tasha McAdam Page: 27 IT'S TIME THAT WE OFFERED PRESCRIPTION HEROIN The overdose crisis, especially in British Columbia, has become an issue of moral panic, and everyone is paying attention. The B.C. Coroner's Report for 2016 revealed a shocking number of deaths from overdose - 914, which far surpassed previous records and is nearly three times the number of deaths from automobile collisions. This crisis impacts us all and it requires a radical shift in the ways all provinces provide health care. Unfortunately, the human and financial toll continues to rise because we continue to view illicit substance use as a moral and criminal issue rather than the healthcare issue it is. As a health-care social worker on the front line, I am lending my voice to those with substance-use disorders, the ostracized and overlooked. The time is now for diacetylmorphine - prescription heroin - to be available along the continuum of services for those with substance-use disorders seeking treatment. In September 2016, Health Canada amended legislation so that any doctor can apply for the ability to prescribe pharmaceutical-grade heroin. Despite this, Vancouver's Crosstown Clinic is the only site in North America offering this service, which allows addicts to inject medical-grade heroin with clean supplies in a supervised setting. The costs saved, both financial and social, are monumental. There is no need for shoplifting or sex-trade work when health care covers the cost of the substance. The criminal justice system will no longer be as bogged down by those facing possession or trafficking charges. The level of transmission and the need to treat HIV and hepatitis declines when people no longer share needles. The expansion of this service in B.C. will restore our reputation as innovative health-care strategists and, more important, save lives. Vancouver's Four Pillars approach to drug problems highlights prevention, treatment, harm reduction and enforcement. Each of these is crucial in putting an end to the opiate crisis; a range of treatment options is required for different people at various stages of recovery. Residential treatment and substitution therapy, such as methadone and suboxone, work for some, but not all. Prescription heroin needs to be available as a last resort for those who have tried everything else. Canada's new drug strategy is on the way, and it will apparently move drug policy back under the control of the Ministry of Health and away from the Department of Justice. Under Stephen Harper's government in 2008, a whopping 70 per cent of National Anti-Drug Strategy funding was allocated to law enforcement. RCMP officers I regularly encounter on the job are tired of criminalizing people who are desperately needing help. The Vancouver Police Department is even on board, stating they support further research on medically prescribed heroin for users who have not succeeded with methadone maintenance or abstinence programs. We need to stop classifying people who use drugs as deviants and make the best practices in health care available to all. Physicians, including Vancouver addiction specialist Dr. Gabor Mate, consider prescription heroin safe for long-term use, especially compared to legal and readily available substances like cigarettes and alcohol. Side-effects include not much more than constipation, yet the use of alcohol and tobacco can lead to the development of cancer and other chronic illnesses requiring lengthy hospitalizations. The B.C. Centre for Disease Control reports that in 2011, the tobacco-related death rate was three times the alcohol-related death rate, which was three times the illicit drug rate. Those of us who enjoy relaxing with a glass of wine after a difficult day are not so different from those who use opiates to cope with emotional or physical pain. We must compassionately acknowledge our shared humanity. Allowing addicts to safely access their drug of choice is not unethical; the denial of evidence-based first-class health care is. B.C. is in the midst of an overdose crisis and the world is watching. It is time we prove ourselves as world leaders and make radical changes. Tasha McAdam is a registered health-care social worker in Kelowna. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt