Harm Reduction - Canada
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181 CN MB: Ontario's Pot Plan Can Set StandardSat, 09 Sep 2017
Source:Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Author:Israel, Solomon Area:Manitoba Lines:194 Added:09/12/2017

Government union says public sales model best bet for health and safety

CANADA'S most populous province has announced a plan to sell legal marijuana through a publicly owned system, which is music to the ears of the Manitoba Government and General Employees' Union.

MGEU president Michelle Gawronsky said she hopes Ontario's plan to sell cannabis separately from alcohol in publicly owned, stand-alone stores will set an example for Manitoba. A public sales model operated by Manitoba Liquor and Lotteries Corporation would be the best possible option from a public health and safety perspective, she argued.

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182 CN ON: Pot Plan Good For Business: RetailerSat, 09 Sep 2017
Source:Packet & Times (CN ON) Author:Bales, Patrick Area:Ontario Lines:77 Added:09/12/2017

The Ontario government is going to pot.

The province announced Wednesday it plans to replace drug dealers and dispensaries next year when recreational marijuana use is set to be legalized in Canada. Legislation will be introduced at Queen's Park later in the fall that will make the government the only legal retail distributor for cannabis in Ontario.

The stores will be under the purview of the LCBO. However, alcohol and marijuana will not be sold side by side.

"We are committed to getting this transition right," Charles Sousa, Ontario's minister of finance, said in a news release announcing the policy. "When it comes to retail distribution, the LCBO has the expertise, experience and insight to ensure careful control of cannabis, helping us to discourage illicit market activity and see that illegal dispensaries are shut down."

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183CN ON: Ottawa Announces It Will Make Buying Pot DifficultSat, 09 Sep 2017
Source:Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Author:Reevely, David Area:Ontario Lines:Excerpt Added:09/12/2017

The LCBO model works. It's proven and we feel strongly that it's the way to go.

A new arm of the LCBO will sell recreational marijuana in Ontario, the province announced Friday morning, with the goal being to keep people from buying it.

"We've heard people across Ontario are anxious about the federal legalization of cannabis," Attorney General Yasir Naqvi said, setting the tone. "The province is moving forward with a safe and sensible approach to legalization that will ensure we can keep our communities and roads safe, promote public health and harm reduction, and protect Ontario's young people."

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184CN BC: B.C. May Be Ready To Take Page Out Of Portuguese Drug PolicyFri, 08 Sep 2017
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Author:Eagland, Nick Area:British Columbia Lines:Excerpt Added:09/12/2017

B.C.'s first minister of mental health and addictions says she will take an "all-ministry" approach to the overdose crisis, influenced in part by Portugal's renowned policy for druguse and addiction.

Minister Judy Darcy met with Dr. Joao Goulao, Portugal's national drug co-ordinator, at this week's Recovery Capital Conference of Canada in New Westminster.

In 1998, Goulao was part of a committee that developed policy to deal with a deadly drug crisis in his country, during which one per cent of the population was addicted.

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185 CN BC: City Hears Addictions AdviceThu, 07 Sep 2017
Source:Metro (Vancouver, CN BC) Author:Denis, Jen St. Area:British Columbia Lines:64 Added:09/09/2017

Canada should declare opioid crisis: Doctor

The head of Portugal's addictions directorate is urging Canada to declare the opioid overdose crisis a national health emergency.

On a tour of Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, the innercity neighbourhood home to many people who struggle with addictions and mental health, Dr. Joao Goulao said the sheer number of deaths caused by the tainted supply of illicit drugs warrants the declaration.

Portugal is often held up as a model of progressive drug reform. Policy changes started in the late 1990s in that country included decriminalizing drugs, something many public health advocates are now advocating for Canada as the only truly effective way to remove the risk of ingesting illicit drugs tainted with fentanyl, a powerful synthetic opioid.

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186 CN ON: Opioid Crisis ComingWed, 06 Sep 2017
Source:Niagara Falls Review, The (CN ON) Author:Benner, Allan Area:Ontario Lines:99 Added:09/08/2017

Niagara needs a multi-pronged approach to head off the increasing number of people overdosing on opioids like fentanyl, said associate medical officer of health Dr. Mustafa Hirji.

As part of that approach, members of Niagara's public health committee voted Tuesday to hire additional staff to implement an enhanced provincial government program that includes outreach services to assist people dealing with opioid addictions, opioid use surveillance, and increased distribution of naloxone kits, paid for with $250,000 in provincial funding.

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187 Canada: OPED: One Size Fits All Is Not Good Enough For Harm ReductionMon, 04 Sep 2017
Source:Globe and Mail (Canada) Author:Pacey, Katrina Area:Canada Lines:102 Added:09/08/2017

Earlier this month, people in Canada witnessed the importance of community resistance and activism on issues of drugpolicy reform.

Vancouver's lead organizers and front-line workers in Toronto pushed Health Canada to do what is right and necessary in order to effectively respond to the overdose crisis. A community of care, driven to save the lives of friends, family and neighbours, set up two white tents in Toronto's Moss Park. Inside, volunteers at this pop-up "overdose prevention site" supervise drug use and save lives - something the federal government should have been doing long ago, when communities across Canada first began sounding the alarm. I visited the site last week and was moved by the commitment and compassion of the volunteers who were valiantly saving lives, day after day.

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188 CN ON: Editorial: Action At Last On Opioid CrisisTue, 05 Sep 2017
Source:Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Author:Roe, John Area:Ontario Lines:69 Added:09/08/2017

The sheer magnitude of Ontario's opioid crisis became tragically clear with last week's revelation that 865 people in this province had died after overdosing on one of these powerful drugs in 2016.

To put this heartbreaking figure in perspective, consider that in the same year Ontario recorded 206 homicides while motor vehicle collisions claimed 482 lives, which included 96 alcohol-related deaths.

People and politicians are rightly committed to protecting human lives by preventing homicides, making roads safer and cracking down on drunk driving.

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189 CN AB: Experts OverwhelmedSun, 03 Sep 2017
Source:Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Author:Potkins, Meghan Area:Alberta Lines:232 Added:09/08/2017

Chief medical examiner's office pores over deaths in opioid fight

EDMONTON - In the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner each morning, medical examiners, investigators, and morgue staff divide the stack of files containing unexplained deaths that have come in from the night before.

Five years ago, this department, headquartered in a low-slung grey building in Edmonton, investigated between 1,900 to 2,000 cases a year.

But in the last couple of years the caseload has jumped to between 2,500 to 2,600 annually - the bulk of that increase, officials say, is due to fentanyl and other opioid deaths.

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190CN ON: OPED: How To Heal The Scars Of Our War On DrugsFri, 01 Sep 2017
Source:Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Author:Peirce, Jennifer Area:Ontario Lines:Excerpt Added:09/06/2017

The legalization of cannabis and rapid scale up of supervised-injection sites - as well as community-led initiatives, such as the site set up by Overdose Prevention Ottawa in Lowertown this month - have thrust Canada back into the limelight of global drug policy. Against the backdrop of a national overdose crisis and a fracturing of global consensus on drug prohibition, these are welcome changes. Yet they only begin to chip away at the drug policy challenges facing Canada.

Canada's policy community remains divided about how best to tackle the overdose crisis. As the death toll mounts, should we invest more in law and order approaches, treatment, harm reduction or some combination?

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191 CN NF: 'We're Trying To Save Lives'Sat, 02 Sep 2017
Source:Telegram, The (CN NF) Author:Plowman, Victoria Area:Newfoundland Lines:92 Added:09/02/2017

Advocate sees a role for public health nurses in fighting opioid crisis in rural communities

The opioid crisis in St. John's is far from over, and a community advocate wants to see changes.

"We see people every day who are at risk," said Tree Walsh, the harm reduction manager at the Safe Works Access Program (SWAP) for the AIDS Committee of Newfoundland and Labrador. "We're trying to save lives, and we're trying to prevent deaths, but as soon as the pharmaceutical supply of opioids dries up, which is happening now … things are going to get so much worse."

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192 CN ON: Reducing Harm Without JudgementSat, 02 Sep 2017
Source:Beacon Herald, The (CN ON) Author:Simmons, Galen Area:Ontario Lines:110 Added:09/02/2017

Perth District Health Unit highlights harm reduction for drug users

Nearly a year after the Perth District Health Unit (PDHU) began offering free Naloxone kits to residents in Stratford and across Perth County, the harm reduction benefits for opioid users are quite clear.

Naloxone, more commonly referred to by its brand name Narcan, can be administered as a nasal spray and is used to stop overdoses. At the PDHU's Festival Square office at 10 Downie St. in Stratford, staff have been giving away kits containing two doses of Narcan each to opioid users, their friends, relatives or caregivers who feel they or their loved ones are at risk of overdosing.

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193 CN BC: 5 Things B.C. Could Do Right Now To Curb OverdosesThu, 31 Aug 2017
Source:Metro (Vancouver, CN BC) Author:Ball, David P. Area:British Columbia Lines:66 Added:09/01/2017

Thursday is International Overdose Awareness Day, and Metro looks at just a few of the ideas to end an ongoing epidemic that's on track to kill 1,560 British Columbians in 2017.

1. Artisanal opiates?

Most overdoses have been from drugs laced with fentanyl and its even deadlier cousins. An Aug. 17 B.C. Centre for Disease Control report asked, why not let opiate users grow their own poppies to ensure an untainted supply? It suggested authorities "explore medical opium" through "grower's clubs, production on a model similar to medical marijuana, personal cultivation."

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194 CN ON: Opioid EmergencyTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:London Free Press (CN ON) Author:Daniszewski, Hank Area:Ontario Lines:139 Added:09/01/2017

Urged to declare an emergency, province promises "significant resources and supports"

The opioid drug crisis flaring up in Southwestern Ontario is becoming so bad across the province, hundreds of doctors, nurses and others are pushing Queen's Park to declare an emergency.

In an open letter to Premier Kathleen Wynne Monday, the health workers say limited resources and poor data are preventing them from responding properly to a disturbing, sustained increase in overdoses.

"The consequences have been clear: lives lost, families destroyed and harm reduction and health care worker burnout," they write.

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195 CN ON: LTE: Naive ViewTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:Ottawa Sun (CN ON) Author:Dixon, Garth Area:Ontario Lines:38 Added:09/01/2017

Your deputy editor Tyler Dawson's piece in Saturday's Sun is incredibly naive. Residents and law-abiding citizens have every right to complain about a pop-up harm reduction site in a city park and the resulting unleashing of stoned drug addicts carrying illegal and potentially lethal drugs wandering the park and the surrounding streets while families and their children play.

A two year old could tell you injecting illegal drugs into your bloodstream is bad. Observing the process in a city park in a tent to make sure they do it properly, if that is even possible, is asinine.

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196CN BC: Nanaimo Mother Marks Her Son's Birthday In SorrowFri, 01 Sep 2017
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Author:Eagland, Nick Area:British Columbia Lines:Excerpt Added:09/01/2017

Cheryl Guardiero should have spent Thursday celebrating her son's 30th birthday. Instead, she attended an International Overdose Awareness Day vigil in Nanaimo, her boy now among the dead for whom they grieved.

Brett Colton Mercer was born in Nanaimo on Aug. 31, 1987, to loving parents who eventually had five children. He died Aug. 19, 2017 of an accidental drug overdose, alone in a motel room in Hope, where he had recently landed a job with an oil and gas firm.

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197 CN ON: Supervised Injection Site Gets Tech BoostFri, 01 Sep 2017
Source:Metro (Ottawa, CN ON) Author:Delamont, Kieran Area:Ontario Lines:39 Added:09/01/2017

Funding set for advanced drug-testing system

The planned supervised injection site at the Sandy Hill Community Health Centre will include world-class drug-testing technology.

With funding from the Canadian Institute of Health Research, the program will be able to operate a mass spectrometry machine, which can determine the chemical makeup of users' drugs, Lynne Leonard of the Ontario HIV Treatment Network announced Thursday.

Drug-testing services are themselves rare, and it is even rarer for harm-reduction organizations to offer testing as technically advanced as mass spectrometry. The system at Sandy Hill will be the first of its kind in Ontario.

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198 CN ON: OPED: Ontario Must Declare An Opioid EmergencyTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:Toronto Star (CN ON) Author:Rai, Nanky Area:Ontario Lines:89 Added:08/31/2017

It is not enough to move slowly while people are losing their loved ones, family members, friends, colleagues and patients from preventable deaths

More than 700 harm-reduction workers, nurses, physicians, nurse practitioners, public health officials and others working within our health-care system, from 59 different cities and towns in Ontario, have signed a letter calling on the provincial government to declare an immediate emergency in response to opioid overdoses and related deaths in Ontario.

The Ontario provincial government has been slow and ineffectual in its response to the deaths of Ontarians from the opioid crisis. Drug users and their allies have been left to respond to the recent opioid crisis alone, without sufficient funding or support. Appallingly, the most recent data available for Ontario is from 2016. It showed that opioid deaths jumped 11 per cent in the first half of 2016. For those on the front lines, it is evident that the current rate of opioid-related deaths is exceeding the mid-2016 estimate of two deaths per day and the rate of emergency department opioid-related visits has risen dramatically. This crisis has impacted people all across the province, including in northern Ontario.

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199 CN ON: Editorial: This Is An EmergencyTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:Toronto Star (CN ON)          Area:Ontario Lines:66 Added:08/31/2017

Hundreds of health-care workers are urging the province to call the recent spate of opioid overdoses and deaths across Ontario by a different name.

More than 700 front-line workers want the province to declare a state of emergency over the opioid crisis, in hopes that the urgent classification will boost funding for front-line workers, open up more overdose prevention and safe-injection sites and increase support and treatment programs for drug users.

Whether or not the province chooses to declare the epidemic an emergency, it must start treating it as one immediately.

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200 CN ON: A Sudbury Problem, TooTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:Sudbury Star (CN ON) Author:Moodie, Jim Area:Ontario Lines:137 Added:08/31/2017

'People are dying in Northern Ontario and in our community with regularity' from opioids

Drug deaths are now happening at an alarming pace in Sudbury.

"It's not just in Vancouver," said Lisa Toner, community outreach coordinator with the Reseau Access Network. "People are dying in Northern Ontario and in our community with regularity. It's not once a month - it's weekly, is my experience this summer."

Toner, who has worked in addictions outreach for a decade, said her sense of the escalating crisis has lately been confirmed by people in the city's medical field.

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201 CN ON: Ontario Boosts Opioid-Crisis FundingTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:Globe and Mail (Canada) Author:Howlett, Karen Area:Ontario Lines:107 Added:08/31/2017

Province stops short of declaring public-health emergency, which more than 700 health-care workers called for in an open letter

The Ontario government is promising extra money to fight the opioid crisis after more than 700 health-care workers called on the province to use emergency planning measures to address a spike in overdoses.

"It is clear that more needs to be done," Premier Kathleen Wynne in a statement on Monday, vowing to commit "significant" additional resources to address the crisis.

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202 CN ON: Awareness Next Step In Opioid Abuse BattleTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:Niagara Falls Review, The (CN ON) Author:Dube, Kris Area:Ontario Lines:133 Added:08/31/2017

Niagara is not immune to opioid use.

Opiods are being used all over the region, not just in areas with lowincome housing and high crime rates.

According to Positive Living executive director Glen Walker, hard drugs such as fentanyl aren't only a problem in larger municipalities such as St. Catharines and Niagara Falls, places such as Fort Erie and Welland also have many users, part of an epidemic across Niagara.

"We have a lot of work to do," Walker says.

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203 CN ON: Opioid Deaths More Likely Illicit UseTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:Hamilton Spectator (CN ON) Author:Frketich, Joanna Area:Ontario Lines:96 Added:08/31/2017

City's death rate among the highest

An Ontario report warns Hamilton shows signs of having among the highest illicit opioid use in the province.

It also flags a potential lack of addiction treatment services here compared to the high death rates found by the Ontario Drug Policy Research Network.

Its alert comes at the same time that city data shows July had the highest number of opioid-related 911 calls so far this year.

"Hamilton has stood out as having one of the higher death rates in the province," said Tara Gomes, a scientist at St. Michael's Hospital and the lead author of the report.

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204CN BC: An 'Outside-The-Box' Solution To OverdosesTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Author:Fumano, Dan Area:British Columbia Lines:Excerpt Added:08/31/2017

Chatter was spreading online and through the Downtown Eastside on Sunday and Monday, a rumour about cops busting an unlicensed pop-up cannabis dispensary.

The dispensary in question is different from the roughly 60 unlicensed pot shops running in Vancouver, many of which are slick commercial operations. The High Hopes Foundation, a small booth that opened this summer in the Downtown Eastside, is run by the people behind the Overdose Prevention Society and works toward the same goal of saving lives as an escalating overdose crisis rocks the city and province.

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205CN BC: Pop-Up Pot Shop Part Of Overdose FightTue, 29 Aug 2017
Source:Province, The (CN BC) Author:Fumano, Dan Area:British Columbia Lines:Excerpt Added:08/31/2017

High Hopes cannabis dispensary an 'outside-the-box' solution supported by first responders

Chatter was spreading online and through the Downtown Eastside on Sunday and Monday, a rumour about cops busting an unlicensed pop-up cannabis dispensary.

The dispensary in question is different from the roughly 60 unlicensed pot shops running in Vancouver, many of which are slick commercial operations. The High Hopes Foundation, a small booth which opened this summer in the Downtown Eastside, is run by the people behind the Overdose Prevention Society and works toward the same goal of saving lives as an escalating overdose crisis rocks the city and province.

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206 Canada: Ottawa Rejects Expert Calls To Decriminalize Illegal OpioidsMon, 28 Aug 2017
Source:Globe and Mail (Canada) Author:Hager, Mike Area:Canada Lines:107 Added:08/31/2017

Ottawa says it has no plans to consider decriminalizing hard drugs, such as heroin, despite calls from local politicians, health officials and experts who argue such radical action is needed to combat the overdose epidemic that first hit British Columbia and is now a national crisis.

Vancouver's mayor became the latest person to advocate for this shift in drug policy after new statistics showed his city had already surpassed last year's overdose death toll of 231 people.

But a spokesperson for federal Health Minister Jane Philpott says Canada is focused on legalizing cannabis not decriminalizing other, more deadly illicit drugs.

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207 CN BC: Law Groups Call On NDP To Reform Justice SystemThu, 31 Aug 2017
Source:Globe and Mail (Canada) Author:Omand, Geordon Area:British Columbia Lines:66 Added:08/31/2017

A coalition of legal advocacy groups in British Columbia is pushing to make sure justice reform is top of mind as the new NDP government heads into its first legislative session early next month.

The B.C. Civil Liberties Association, Pivot Legal Society, West Coast LEAF and the Community Legal Assistance Society banded together on Wednesday to call for sweeping changes to the province's justice system.

Recommendations include abolishing solitary confinement, protecting tenants from unfair rent hikes and stopping the arrest of harm-reduction workers or people in possession of small amounts of drugs.

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208 CN ON: Opioids Causing Crisis In C-KThu, 31 Aug 2017
Source:Chatham Daily News, The (CN ON) Author:Shreve, Ellwood Area:Ontario Lines:97 Added:08/31/2017

Community marks International Overdose Awareness Day for first time

A total of 48 opioid-related deaths have been reported in Chatham-Kent between 2005 and 2016, according to Public Health Ontario, but it's likely that number is higher.

Jordynne Lindsay, a registered nurse with the Chatham-Kent Public Health Unit, believes the number of local deaths could be under-reported due to a difference in the coding used by the Chatham-Kent Health Alliance emergency department, Chatham-Kent EMS and Chatham-Kent police.

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209CN BC: Overdose Crisis Unites Diverse GroupWed, 30 Aug 2017
Source:Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Author:Petrescu, Sarah Area:British Columbia Lines:Excerpt Added:08/30/2017

For the past several months, a group of frontline workers, illicit-drug users and parents have met to discuss how they can better inform the public on the one thing that unites them: The overdose crisis.

"It's such a diverse mix of people, but we've all been affected," said Leslie McBain, a founding member of Moms Stop the Harm.

She lost her only son, Jordan Miller, to an opioid overdose in 2014. She has helped support other parents and has become a respected advocate at all levels of government.

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210 CN ON: Dozens Making Use Of New Safe-Injection SiteSun, 27 Aug 2017
Source:Toronto Star (CN ON) Author:Poisson, Jayme Area:Ontario Lines:97 Added:08/29/2017

Temporary clinic has been open for a week in building at Victoria and Dundas Sts.

It has been nearly one week since Toronto opened its first city-run site for people to use illegal intravenous drugs and, so far, three dozen people have used the controversial service.

"We are thrilled to be offering this life-saving service to the community," Dr. Rita Shahin, Toronto Public Health's associate medical officer of health, said Saturday.

"The very first client that we had when we opened our doors, to us, represents a potential life that we may have saved. We had 36 visits in just five days, which . . . represents a great success. We look forward to more people becoming aware of the service and helping more people in our community."

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