Pubdate: Wed, 12 Jul 2017 Source: Metro (Ottawa, CN ON) Copyright: 2017 Metro Contact: http://www.metronews.ca/Ottawa Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4032 Author: Kieran Delamont Page: 3 NALOXONE TOUGH TO GET IN GATINEAU For Ottawa residents, getting a naloxone kit to help protect against overdose deaths is as easy as finding a pharmacy and going through a 30-minute information session. Across the river in Gatineau, however, the situation is much different. The Ministry of Health and Social Services in Quebec does not provide funding for naloxone kits like its Ontario counterpart. Some municipal public health units, like Sante Montreal, provide kits, but only within that specific city. For residents of cities like Gatineau, where neither the province nor the municipality provides coverage for naloxone, drug users may be left in the lurch. Catherine Hacksel, who works with the Drug Users Advocacy League in Ottawa, said she has heard complaints from Gatineau residents who are prevented from getting a naloxone kit due to costs. It may force harm reduction workers to get creative. Hacksel suggested that residents on the Ontario side of the river could potentially provide provincially covered naloxone kits to those on the other side of the river who are unable to purchase it themselves. A pharmacist at Pharmacie Brisson in the Byward Market said that since the program is administered through the Ontario health plan, a Quebec resident looking to access a naloxone kit from an Ontario pharmacy would have to purchase it out of pocket. The cost of an intramuscular kit (the type typically available at Ontario pharmacies) costs around $70, while the nasal spray version can cost as much as $150. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt