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Nova Scotia

Life-saving naloxone for opioid overdoses to be offered for free

Nova Scotia will offer free naloxone kits to anyone who wants one in an effort to keep the number of people dying from opioid overdoses from growing.

Naloxone kits should be available to the public in Nova Scotia pharmacies by Sept. 1

The synthetic drug is used to treat people who suffer from an overdose of opioids. (CBC)

Pharmacies in Nova Scotia will soon give out a potentially life-saving medication used in opioid overdoses for free andwithout a prescription as the province ramps up its fight against a drug epidemic spreading across Canada.

Starting Sept. 1, anyone seeking a kit of injectable naloxonewill be able to get one at no cost simply by stopping by their local pharmacy no ID needed. The kits normally cost between $10 and $25.

"By puttingnaloxonein pharmacies, we want to make it accessible to everyone in a convenient and trusted location, one that doesn't carry a stigma if you're to go in to visit," Health Minister Randy Delorey said Wednesday as he announced the $500,000 program.

"I would urge people in the province with family members, friends and other loved ones who are usingopioidsto visit the local pharmacy thisfall and ask for a kit."

Plan includes tracking fatal overdoses

Along with the kit, pharmacists will also provide information on how to recognize an overdose and how toadminister naloxone.

We do know the issue is growing and it is moving east.- Health Minister Randy Delorey

The initiative is part of the province's new plan to deal with opioidabuse and overdoses.

The province saidthere have been 24 confirmed and five probable deaths from opioid toxicity this year alone. As of Wednesday,the province has been publicly tracking andposting overdose figures on a government web page that will be updated monthly.

Deloreysaid more than 2,400 Canadians died last yearfrom accidental drug overdoses. Of those deaths,60 occurred in Nova Scotia.

"We may not be seeing the opioiduse and overdose at the same levels here in Nova Scotia as they are seeing in other parts, particularly the western parts of Canada," said Delorey.

"But we do know that the issue is growing and it is moving east."

Naloxonekits in hands of EHS, police

In response to the potential threat, Delorey said the province hasbeen preparing by making naloxone and proper training available.

He said people who call 911 during an overdose will be told how to use a naloxone kit, while paramedics and many volunteer medical first responders in rural areas carry the drug and know how to use it.

Naloxonehas also been distributed to 130 sheriffs, 86 corrections officers and more than 1,900 police officers across Nova Scotia, he said.

Const. AsifKhan of the Bridgewater Police Service said the training allowed him to savea man he had picked up for public drunkennesslast March. When he found theman passed outin his jail cell, Khanadministereda nasal spray version of naloxone.

"I was lucky I had the naloxonespray available on me and I was able to deploy it with the symptoms that I had in front of me and how quickly the situation deteriorated," he said.

5 key areas

Nova Scotia's chief medical officer of health, Robert Strang,helped create the new planto deal with thegrowing opioid problem. It includesfive key components:

  • Understanding the issue
  • Prevention
  • Harm reduction
  • Treatment and prescribing practices
  • Criminal justice and law enforcement

Strangtold reporters work is underway in each of these areas, but he put particular emphasis on the need to find ways to reduce the number of people dependent on opioidsfor pain relief.

Robert Strang, chief medical officer of health, (left), worked with the province in creating a new strategy to deal with the rising problem of opioid abuse and fatalities. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

Doctors are being encouraged to reduce the number of opioid prescriptions they write and to seek alternative pain relief methods. As well, the Nova Scotia Health Authority is creating an inventory of public and private chronic pain services, said Strang.

Reducingopioid dependency takes time

As for reducing the amount of opioidsindividuals rely on for pain, Strangsaid that takestime and great care.

"We have to be very careful that we don't make changes to current prescriptions rapidly," he said.

"The last thing we want to do is to cut people off or rapidly decrease their prescription and then they're looking to illegal sources of opiods."

Those illegal drugs are Roger Merrick'sfocus asthe director of public security at the provincial Justice Department.

He said police forces needto improve how theyshare information on drug seizuresand test more of what isfound on their streets.

The plan calls for just that.

"What we're looking for is, is there a particular hotspot in Nova Scotia where a certain type of drug, say fentanyl or carfentanil, may be showing up?" said Merrick.