Pubdate: Thu, 05 Oct 2017 Source: Grimsby Lincoln News, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2017 The Grimsby Lincoln News Contact: http://www.thegrimsbylincolnnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3974 GRIEF TURNS TO OPIOID ADVOCACY They're still dealing with crushing grief barely contained, but a group of Niagara mothers who lost children in the prime of their lives to overdoses from opioids delivered a powerful message to regional politicians last week on the desperate need to deal with the opioid crisis sweeping like a freight train across the country. The powerful drugs such as fentanyl have left a trail of destruction starting on the West Coast and moving east, with soaring numbers of emergency rooms visits due to overdoses in Ontario now. Most people are very aware of the dangers of heroin, an opiate derived from the opium poppy. But many people falsely believe that if a painkiller is prescribed by a doctor, it must be benign. In fact, synthetics such as oxycodone, hydrocodone and the extremely potent fentanyl can be extremely addictive - and deadly. Fentanyl can be upward of 50 to 100 times more deadly than heroin. The five mothers who appeared before the region's public health and community services committee - Ann Minors, Sandi Walker Tantardini, Wilma Thompson, Judith Rossman and Jennifer Johnston - know all too well the dangers. Johnston, of St. Catharines, said her son Jonathan was in Toronto where he was working on becoming a world-class chef when he took what he thought was a safe dose of heroin in April of last year. He didn't know it was in fact 99 per cent fentanyl: she said he collapsed on a dirty sidewalk, and was gone forever. The mothers are pushing decision makers to take swift action on the crisis, pleading for initiatives such as a safe injection site in Niagara - a step that can be controversial and requires provincial approval - combating the stigma attached to drug addiction, and rapid treatment plans immediately upon request for substance users when they issue a call for help. Regional politicians were clearly moved by the searing stories of grief and loss the mothers told. They backed a call by Niagara Falls Mayor Jim Diodati to have public health consult with agencies in Western Canada that have more experience with the opioid crisis, and to take the lead on a co-ordinated strategy on prevention and education with partners such as Niagara Regional Police, Niagara Emergency Medical Services, the school boards, mental health organizations, Niagara Health, Hamilton Health Sciences and the mothers' opioid group. The region is already a member of Niagara's opioid network, a partnership of about 20 partner agencies set up a little over a year ago to prepare for the opioid crisis. But regional medical officer of health Dr. Valerie Jaeger stressed even having representatives from a cross-section of 20 agencies won't be a cure-all. Combating opioids will require huge buy in and "tentacles" across society to even start tackling it, she said. No doubt, that is true. But by sharing their personal stories, the Niagara mothers have helped to ignite a new urgency to fight this deadly menace before more teens and young adults are lost. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt