Ottawa groups welcome Ontario funding to fight opioid crisis - Action News
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Ottawa groups welcome Ontario funding to fight opioid crisis

Professionals on the front line of the opioid crisis in Ottawa say there's hope to be found in Ontario's announcement of $222 million in funding over three years to fight addiction and overdoses.

Province to spend $222M over next 3 years, Ontario health minister announced Tuesday

Ontario Health Minister Eric Hoskins announced Tuesday that the province will invest $222 million over three years to fight the rise of opioid addiction. Front-line workers in Ottawa are pleased with the announcement. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

Ottawa professionals on the front line of fighting the opioid crisis are welcoming the Ontario health minister's pledge of $222 millionto fight addiction and overdosing.

The urgency was underscored Tuesday when Ontario's chief coroner announced there were 865 opioid deaths in the province last year, an increase of 19 per cent from the previous year.

The risk of deadly outcomes and the speed deadly opioids, such as fentanyl and carfentanil, have spread is forcing addiction services centres to adapt.

"The game changer is that we don't have as much time and the risks are higher and the outcomes are more severe," said Marion Wright, executive director of RideauwoodAddiction and Family Services.

Rideauwood opened a rapidaccess opioidtreatment program earlier this month, and Wright said it has had more than 15 clients already a combination of parents and youthsbetween the ages of 12 and 25.

The program provides assessments and gets people into appropriate treatment within 24 hours, five days a week. It normally takes two to three weeks to get an assessmentand months to place someone in anappropriate program.

"When, in fact, somebody needs treatment, they don't want to go on a waiting list," Wrightsaid. "And if you're the parent of a youth who is experiencing substantive opioidor addiction issues using opioids, the last thing you want to do is be told you have to be on a wait list."

Expanding rapid response

Wright said she's heartened by the province's emphasis on rapid treatment, young peopleand the $70 million being directed toward long-term support for people with addiction disorders.

She hopes thefunding will help expand theprogramat Rideauwood and similar programs at other organizations, she said.

The Sandy Hill Community Health Centre may also be able to expand its Rapid Access Addiction Medicine Clinic, which provides treatment for people suffering from opioidwithdrawal.

Luc Cormier, a nurse co-ordinator at the Sandy Hill Community Health Centre, said the funding announcement could lead to an expansion of addiction treatment services at the centre. (CBC)

"We're hopeful that it will help us address the crisis more effectively," said LucCormier,head of the nursing team for the supervised injection site at the Sandy Hill Community Health Centre.

The province will alsoincrease the distribution of naloxone, the antidote which reverses the effects of an opioidoverdose, Cormier said.

Pain management

Ontario's health minister also said the province is spending $15 million to improve the prescription of opioids and train health care providers to manage pain in a way that could stemaddiction to the powerful painkillers.

But Dr. PeterMacDougall, director of pain medicine for the Ottawa Hospital, said that along with funding fortraining,there will also need to be ongoing support as medical professionals change their practices and encounter issues with peoplealready usingthose drugs.

Two vials of naloxone taken from a kit handed out at an Ottawa pharmacy in August 2017. The province will be issuing more naloxone kits. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

"We have to think about what we do to manage all those patients who are out there now on these large doses of opioids, or other medications, who may or may not have developed an addiction to them," he said.

"We need to think about supporting those primary care providers, physicians, nurse practitioners and pharmacists, who are going to be working to reduce the burden of opioids in the community and then to treat those people."

There also needs to be support for the medical needs of people with addiction and also examining non-medicinal pain treatments, such as physiotherapy and psychiatric support, he said.