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Fentanyl and naloxone: Independent pharmacists want bigger role

Independent pharmacists say they can play a larger role in the distribution of life-saving naloxone and educating people who need it most.

Pharmacists say antidote kits should be available free of charge in drugstores

Karen Francis owns Compounding Wellness Pharmacy in Mount Pearl. She is also on the board of the Council of Independent Community Pharmacy Owners (CICPO). (Sherry Vivian/CBC)

Independent pharmacists say they can play a larger role in the distribution of life-saving naloxone and educating people who need it most.

Karen Francis owns Compounding Wellness Pharmacy in Mount Pearl and is also on the board of the Council of Independent Community Pharmacy Owners (CICPO).

She would like to see freenaloxone kits available in pharmacies province-wide.

These commercial naloxone kits retail for about $60 in Karen Francis's pharmacy in Mount Pearl. She would like to see free kits available at all pharmacies in the province. (Sherry Vivian/CBC)

"Pharmacies should be providing this service and pharmacists are more than qualified to dispense, consult with patients and do the injection training," she told CBC News Friday.

Naloxoneis an antidote tofentanyl, morphine, heroin, methadone andoxycodone. It reverses the effects of an overdose and has been used to save lives across the country.

"First responders and the availability of thosenaloxonekits have actually saved 14 lives in two weeks," Health Minister John Haggietold reporters Wednesday.

While the free kits are available through 74 distribution sites, you can't get them at all pharmacies.

Currently, Francis and some other Newfoundland and Labrador pharmacists have commercialnaloxonekits in stores but they retail for about $60 each.

That's unlike Ontario where, according to Progressive Conservative health critic Steve Kent , pharmaciesare eligible to dispense the emergency kits free-of-charge to patients, and then submit claims to be reimbursed.

Not consulted

Francis said she sees people everyday who would benefit from education on the deadly consequences of opioids.

"Our group believes that pharmacies should have been invitedto participate in the rollout of the naloxone kits."

Shesaid it's not just drug addicts who should have greater access to these kits, but alsopatients who rely onopioidsto control pain.

Francis said on the prevention side, pharmacists are able to identify who is at risk.

Street outreach

The topic of fentanyl and it's deadly griptwo people in the St. John's area have died of overdoses over the last three weekswas front and centre on Water Street in St. John's Friday.

Christopher Smith, the local site co-ordinator for the Canadian Community Epidemiology Network, passed out information sheets on fentanyl in downtown St. John's Friday. (Ariana Kelland/CBC)

"If this isn't a screaming beacon thatsomething is awry, I don't know what is," said Christopher Smith, the local site co-ordinator for the Canadian Community Epidemiology Network, which tracks drug use and type information.

"And ...there's no public health authorities on the street, generating discussion, talking to people."

Smith and others brought information sheets to the busy downtown area, to answer questions and educate people.

"This wave is cresting and if and when it crashes, another two dozen bodies are going to wash up and before that happens, I could not live with myself if I didn't do something," he said.

While he applauds the government's efforts, Smithagrees with the independent pharmacists that the morenaloxone kits available, the better.

Meanwhile, the health department says a working group will meet next week to talk about the naloxone take home kit.

Representatives from the Pharmacists Association of Newfoundland and Labrador and the Pharmacy Board have joined and the department saidindependent pharmacists are welcome also.