Pubdate: Mon, 11 Jul 2016 Source: Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Copyright: 2016 The Hamilton Spectator Contact: http://www.thespec.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/181 Author: Molly Hayes Page: A1 OPIOID ANTIDOTE NOW EASIER TO ACCESS Ontario makes overdose-blocking naloxone available at pharmacies for users and their families For the first time in Ontario, family and friends of opioid users will be able to pick up naloxone kits for free from pharmacies. In the midst of what they're calling an opioid crisis, local addictions experts are thrilled with recent undertakings by the province to make a life-saving opioid antidote more accessible to those at risk of overdose. Previously available only by prescription and through public health unit programs, kits with injectable naloxone - which blocks the effects of opioids to reverse the effects of an overdose - will now be available free at Ontario pharmacies, and will also be offered to anyone being discharged from a provincial corrections facility - including the Barton Street Jail. It's a "logical and evidence-based" step, Dr. Fiona Kouyoumdjian, a part-time physician at the Barton Street Jail, says. "It just makes sense." As a public health physician at St. Michael's Hospital and McMaster University, Kouyoumdjian was involved in two recent studies that highlighted the heightened risk of overdose post-incarceration. In the two weeks after someone is released from jail, they are 56 times more likely than the general population to overdose. And in the year that follows, they are between 12 and 14 times more likely to overdose. With decreased access to drugs in jail, tolerance is lowered. The risk is that former inmates go back to using the same amount they used to use before incarceration, and their bodies won't be able to handle it. The distribution of naloxone kits to those getting out of jail is a move that addictions experts - including the Municipal Drug Strategy Coordinators' Network of Ontario (MDSCNO) and the Association of Local Public Health Agencies - have long been calling for. "I guarantee lives will be saved," Michael Parkinson, a member of the MDSCNO, says of the increased access. In Scotland, for example, a similar national naloxone program, which provides discharged inmates with a kit, has cut its fatality rate by almost 50 per cent in just a few years. It's unclear exactly how the program will actually be rolled out in Ontario, between the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care and the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services. Hamilton's public health unit says they are awaiting word from the health ministry on the parameters of the program, such as eligibility and funding details. But out the gate, spokesperson Clorinda Pagliari says, they are "pleased" with the announcement. Clare Graham, press secretary to David Orazietti, Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services, expressed full support for the program. "We recognize that those admitted to the correctional system with complex, social, medical, and behavioural needs require our support," she said. "Doctors and other medical professionals will also continue to work with inmates while in custody to provide withdrawal counselling and access to drug replacement therapies, such as methadone and suboxone, to reduce overdoses among discharged inmates." Kouyoumdjian stresses the importance of consulting inmates and those with lived addictions experience as part of the implementation process, and hopes that this will lead to more engagement opportunities to prevent overdoses behind bars. Pharmacists are similarly hopeful about increasing dialogue with clients, now that naloxone kits are available for free without prescription. Pharmacist Kathleen Leach, at Sutherland's Pharmacy on James Street South in Hamilton, says she has already had inquiries from clients who are actively using opioids, and she welcomes the opportunity to have conversations about the kits with other clients down the road. "Certainly if I saw somebody on large doses of narcotics, or who were routinely taking them, then I might have a conversation with them about keeping a kit in the home," Leach says. She has signed up for the mandatory training through the Ontario Pharmacists Association, and expects she will be ready to dispense kits in a week or so. Pharmacies will be reimbursed $70 for the kits, the dispensing and the training. One hurdle, Leach says, is that pharmacists have to source the kit components themselves, and some mechanical parts may be difficult to track down. She expects some pieces will be available for purchase only in bulk - in quantities far larger than she'll need. But she acknowledges there is a certain level of "public service" in carrying the kits. She also expressed concern that the reimbursement process requires pharmacists to track the names of those who receive kits, which she says could be a barrier to some people because of the stigma surrounding opioid use. But for the first time, you don't have to be a user yourself to get a kit. Friends and family of those at risk of overdose are also able to walk in and pick one up. Leach says this is crucial. The MDSCNO's Parkinson agrees. "An opioid (overdose) victim cannot save themselves," he says. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt