Pubdate: Wed, 09 Aug 2017 Source: Standard Freeholder (Cornwall, CN ON) Copyright: 2017 Cornwall Standard Freeholder Contact: http://www.standard-freeholder.com/letters Website: http://www.standard-freeholder.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1169 Author: Hugo Rodrigues Page: A6 WE NEED RECENT OPIOID ABUSE DATA Is Cornwall gripped by the fentanyl-driven opioid crisis swallowing other Canadian communities or not? It's been difficult to get clarity on this question in recent months, made no clearer by a media release issued by the Eastern Ontario Health Unit late last week. The EOHU is concerned recent reporting on fentanyl and the increasing availability of naloxone kits in our community has suggested there is no problem with opioid abuse in our communities. It told us the EOHU has tracked 35 opioid-related deaths in the area from 2010-15, which would put us with a rate among the highest in Eastern Ontario. Despite the age of this data - the illicit fentanyl crisis was only beginning to spread from B.C. eastwards in 2015 - at least it's data. As we've attempted to define whether there is an opioid crisis in Cornwall and area in the last few months, any quantifiable data has been hard to come by. Even anecdotal data hasn't stood up to verification. As naloxone became available in all local English-language high schools and Catholic elementary schools this spring, we again attempted to get data on whether this was just an abundance of caution or whether the fentanyl-driven crisis seen in an increasing number of Canadian communities had reached Cornwall. We did the same last week, as the Cornwall Fire Department announced its staff members would be carrying the anti-overdose drug in their medical-response kits. We didn't have comment from the EOHU in that coverage, but did from Cornwall SDG paramedics, who confirmed we're not in the midst of the crisis seen in other nearby communities. The fire department's training was politicized by Cornwall Coun. Mark MacDonald, whose opinion is the fire service should apparently only respond to fire-related calls and nothing else. We are not - so far as anyone is disclosing - in a situation where 10 or more people per week are being treated for opioid overdoses in our three hospitals. Thankfully. But this publication has never suggested there isn't an opioid problem in our communities. We know opiates, including fentanyl, are present - either in street trade from prescription painkillers or illicitly sourced. We're not sensationalizing this story - an increase in deaths by drug abuse is sensational enough on its own - but we can't report on it accurately and fairly without data. As suggested in a private email to officials at the EOHU, if recent data was made available to the public, it would do more to quantify the nature of opioid abuse in this community than anything else. A monthly or quarterly release of this information would help us put everything into perspective and push public officials to act appropriately. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt