Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
International

Canada's Move To Control Fentanyl Chemicals Not Enough To Stem Crisis: Expert

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Sep, 2016 11:55 AM
    VANCOUVER — Canada's plans to restrict six chemicals used to make fentanyl will only increase demands for a more dangerous replacement if other steps to stem a national opioid crisis are not taken, a drug-policy expert says. 
     
    Don MacPherson, executive director of the Canadian Drug Policy Coalition, was responding to Health Canada's announcement that a bill brought in by a senator means the government can act quickly to make the unauthorized importation and exportation of the precursor chemicals illegal.
     
    Health Canada said Wednesday — International Overdose Awareness Day — that its regulatory proposal expeditiously achieves the intent of Sen. Vern White's bill.
     
    Regulations on selling, importing or exporting six chemicals that can be used in the production of the opioid fentanyl are expected to be in place by the end of 2017.
     
    Health Minister Jane Philpott said she is also planning a summit for this fall to address the opioid crisis.
     
    Restricting the flow of chemicals from countries such as China will not be enough because the illegal market will come up with another drug that may be even more powerful, said MacPherson, who spent 10 years as a drug-policy co-ordinator for the City of Vancouver.
     
     
    Fentanyl arrived on the illegal market after 2012 when oxycontin was pulled from shelves in Canada after so many people became addicted to the painkiller, which also drew heroin users because it could be snorted or injected, he said.
     
    "Fentanyl is cheap to make, it's cheap to import, it's powerful, it can be cut. So it's sort of a drug dealer's dream but it's a drug user's nightmare," he said.
     
    "So enforcement actions may actually make it worse in the short term."
     
    Health Canada's decision to loosen regulations that made the drug naloxone available to reverse overdoses is a good step but it must be combined with other efforts to prevent more overdose deaths, he said.
     
    Supervised injection sites where people can take their own drugs, more specially trained addiction doctors and drug-substitution programs involving methadone, for example, are needed across Canada, MacPherson said.
     
     
    Deputy Chief Trevor Daroux of the Calgary Police Service, who serves on a drug-abuse committee of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, said controlling chemicals is an important step but Canada needs a national strategy to provide timely drug-addiction treatment.
     
    "In order to be truly effective we have to impact both the demand side of the drug equation and the supply side," he said.
     
    Daroux said many chemicals involved in producing fentanyl are already banned in the United States.
     
    "If we don't follow suit with the U.S., Canada could very quickly become the source country for precursor (chemicals) in the U.S."
     
    Alberta and British Columbia have been hardest hit by the opioid crisis, but Ontario police issued a warning this week of a record seizure of "bootleg" fentanyl.
     
    On Wednesday, a joint task force examining the drug overdose crisis in B.C. highlighted steps the province is taking on opioid overdoses, pointing to a new testing service to help users determine if their drugs contain potentially deadly contaminants, such as fentanyl.
     
    In a tweet, Vancouver Coastal Health said Insite — the supervised injection site in the city — is offering the new program and that 86 per cent of drugs checked so far contain the powerful opioid.
     
     
    A recent coroner's service report said there were 433 apparent illicit drug overdose deaths in B.C. between Jan. 1 and July 31. More than 62 per cent linked to fentanyl-laced drugs.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Cruz And Trump: Boost Surveillance Of Muslims After Brussels

    We need to empower law enforcement to patrol and secure Muslim neighbourhoods before they become radicalized

    Cruz And Trump: Boost Surveillance Of Muslims After Brussels

    Blame-Game Begins After Brussels Carnage

    Blame-Game Begins After Brussels Carnage
    An internecine battle between various European Union nations, especially between France and Belgium, which had been brewing since the November 13, 2015 attacks in Paris, flared up in public again after the carnage in Brussels on Tuesday.

    Blame-Game Begins After Brussels Carnage

    US First Lady Wears 'Kashmiri Gown' For Cuba Dinner

    US First Lady Wears 'Kashmiri Gown' For Cuba Dinner
    The embroidery on the gown was Kashmir's traditional "Ari work". 

    US First Lady Wears 'Kashmiri Gown' For Cuba Dinner

    Vancouver Students Visiting Belgium Are OK After Brussels Bombings, Infosys Techie Missing

    Vancouver Students Visiting Belgium Are OK After Brussels Bombings, Infosys Techie Missing
    A group of Grade 9 and 10 students from Vancouver, B.C., is safe in Belgium.

    Vancouver Students Visiting Belgium Are OK After Brussels Bombings, Infosys Techie Missing

    Speech In Cuba, Death In Belgium, Anger In US: One-day Snapshot Of The Obama Era

    Speech In Cuba, Death In Belgium, Anger In US: One-day Snapshot Of The Obama Era
    Barack Obama was concluding a once-unimaginable televised speech to the Cuban people about the power of protest and democracy, capping it with a Spanish-language version of his 2008 rallying cry: "Yes, we can."

    Speech In Cuba, Death In Belgium, Anger In US: One-day Snapshot Of The Obama Era

    Indian-American Publisher Sudhir Parikh Drops Support To Donald Trump

    "I allowed myself to be identified with that group," he said in an emailed statement "because some members of the group are friends of mine".

    Indian-American Publisher Sudhir Parikh Drops Support To Donald Trump