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New Brunswick

Doctor fears narcotic use in N.B. will lead to more fentanyl deaths

A Moncton doctor is warning that New Brunswick physicians are writing too many "inappropriate" prescriptions for narcotics and that is paving the way for more overdoses from fentanyl.

Dr. Tom Evans warns province must curb prescriptions for narcotics that are gateway drugs to fentanyl

Dr. Tom Evans says people who try fentanyl have usually already used other prescription narcotics which he calls "gateway drugs." (CBC)

A Moncton doctor is warning that New Brunswick physicians are writing too many "inappropriate" prescriptionsfor narcotics and that is paving the way for more overdoses from fentanyl.

Dr. Tom Evans, an anaesthesiologistand the lead physician at the pain clinic in Moncton,says most people who try fentanylhave already tried many other prescription drugs.

"You don't get tofentanylwithout passing throughcodeine, OxyContin, MS Contin, Tramacetyou don't get there without being exposed to the narcotics firstyou have to have the gateway drug," Evans toldInformation Morning Moncton.

"And we've got a problem in this province with inappropriate prescribing of the gateway drug."

A CBC news investigation into drug overdoses in the Martimes has found fentanyl was involved in at least 32 deaths since 2008.

"Unfortunately the root cause of all of this is prescription opiates. The opiates that are out there primarily have been prescribed to people," Evans said.

Evans has been studying chronic pain since 2001 and has collectedcomprehensive dataon about 700 patients that shows when they arrived at the pain clinicnearly half of them were alreadytaking a prescribed narcotic.

"That reflects the practice of 256 physicians from around New Brunswick so it's not the prescribing pattern of a couple of doctors," he said.

The New Brunswick College ofPhysicians and Surgeonsis hoping a new prescription monitoring program, launching in 2017,will be part of the solution to thegrowing problem of narcotics addiction.

Worries dealers won't stop at fentanyl

Up until the 1990sit was considered taboo to prescribe narcotics for non-cancer patients, but Evans said that changed whenan aggressive marketing campaign convinced many doctors to write more narcotics prescriptions for all kinds of chronic pain.

"It's taken us from the mid-1990suntil the last few years to recognize the downside of this, which is inadvertent addiction andhigh rates of inadvertent opiate-related deaths even prior to fentanyl coming on the scene."

Moncton doctor Tom Evans warns that "inappropriate prescribing" of narcotics by doctors in New Brunswick is paving the way for more deadly overdoses of fentanyl. (CBC)
Evans believes opiates have a role in controlling pain but advises that all non-narcotic options should be tried first and all patients should be screened for risk factors before a narcotic trial.

"That's not happening," he said.

"What we're seeing in the datais no screening," he said. "Tylenol 3s doesn't work, Percocet doesn't work.

"We get into all sorts of combinations of narcotics and people just carry on and then they're exposed and then they're at risk for a fentanyl event."

Evans worries that drug dealers won't stop with fentanyl,which is 50 to 100 times strongerthan morphine.

"There are other ones beyondfentanylthat we use ... that are cousins of it which are even morepotent," he said.

"I think once they get the handle onfentanylthese guys will start to make the other one which issufentanylwhich is even more potent."

With files from Information Morning Moncton