B.C. nurses will soon be able to prescribe opioid-use disorder medication - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. nurses will soon be able to prescribe opioid-use disorder medication

Registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses in B.C. will soon be able to prescribe medicationfor opioid use disorderin a move the province hopes will allow more people with addiction to seek help.

RNs, RPNs will need to complete trainingfrom B.C. Centre on Substance Use to prescribe medication

A hand holding a small plastic cup containing some red liquid.
A liquid dose of methadone pictured at a clinic in Georgia in March 2017. Under a proposed scope of practice, nurses will be able to prescribe drugs that are used for opioid agonist therapy, such as methadone and suboxone. (Kevin D. Liles/Associated Press)

Registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses in British Columbiawill soon be able to prescribe medicationfor opioid use disorder (OUD)in a move the province hopes will allow more people with addiction to seek help.

The B.C. College of Nurses and Midwives (BCCNM) announced in Septemberthat it had created a new designation of certified practice, to allow RNs and RPNsto diagnose and treat substance use disorderaftercompletingtrainingfrom the B.C. Centre on Substance Use.

B.C. is the first province in Canada to allow these new prescribing powers. Previously, prescribing OUD medicationwas the domain of doctors and nurse practitioners in the province, which has been gripped by a toxic drug crisis for a number of years.

The president of the B.C.Nurses' Union says the news is a positive first step, but more needs to be done to get addictions treatment to peoplewho need it, especially in non-urban areas of B.C.

"I think that expanding the scope of of registered nurses and psychiatric nurses with respect to opioid use disorder is a good move," Adriane Gear told CBC News.

"Long-term investments are still needed to build a comprehensive mental health and addictions care in B.C.,but I think it's a good step in the right direction."

Some RNsand RPNs have been prescribing OUD medication aftera September 2020order from Public Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry, which came amid a significant spike in toxic drug deaths.

However, the new designation means there will bea more robust regulatory regime, and nurses will be allowed to continue prescribing medication after the order expires.

According to the province, 255 RNs and RPNs from all health authorities have enrolled in the training program as of Tuesday, and 144 have completed it.

Under the proposed scope of practiceof the new designation, nurses will be able to prescribe drugs that are used for opioid agonist therapy, such as methadone and suboxone. Opioid agonist therapy is a form of treatment thatinvolves taking medicationthat reduce withdrawals from opioid use.

The regulatory changes take effectWednesday, and nurses will be required to have completed the trainingin order to prescribe medicationstarting Nov. 30.

Minister says move will help stabilize lives

Jennifer Whiteside,minister of mental health and addictions, said she wasgrateful to regulators and frontline workers who made the designation a reality.

"We know that having people who are struggling, particularly with opioid use disorder, having them in a position where they are able to to access quickly medication-assisted therapies is really important," she told CBC News.

"The evidence is really strong about [medication] helping to stabilize their lives and really setting them up for success along their wellness journey."

A white woman with short gray hair, wearing a blue top, speaks.
Jennifer Whiteside, B.C. minister of mental health and addictions, says she hopes the new designation will boost the number of prescribers in rural areas. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Whitesidesaid that in August, there were 459 patients who had to fill prescriptions for drugs like methadone, slow release oral morphine and hydromorphone and those prescriptions were written up by just 48 nurses.

"We know that if we scale that up and we have more nurses prescribing, we know that more people can access this life-changing treatment."

Gear saysthe province still needs to work on providing more treatmentbeds for peoplewho need them, and that there is anacute lack of addictions services in rural communities.

Whiteside acknowledged thelack of prescribers for substance use medications in rural B.C., and said shehopesthe new designation willhelp boost those numbers going forward.

There is no official count for the number of people with opioid use disorder in B.C., but a 2020 studyestimated around 83,000 people had the disorder in 2017.

Advocates for drug users have said addictions treatment is one of the ways governments should respond to the toxic drug crisis, which has killed at least12,929 people since a public health emergency was declared in B.C. in 2016.

However, they say the governmentshould also focus on creating a safe supply of drugs.

With files from Yvette Brend