Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

4 Heroin-Addicted B.C. Inmates Say Difficulty Accessing Opiate Replacements Unconstitutional

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Mar, 2016 02:14 PM
    VANCOUVER — Four heroin-addicted inmates in British Columbia jails have launched a charter challenge to gain opiate addiction treatment, arguing they deserve the same health care they could access in the community.
     
    The group contends that B.C. Corrections' policies unconstitutionally block them from being prescribed methadone or suboxone if they don't meet specific criteria.
     
    "What I know about addiction is people have insight into their condition and they're ready to ask for help when they're ready to change," said their lawyer Adrienne Smith.
     
    Smith filed a notice of civil claim and an application for an injunction in B.C. Supreme Court on Friday.
     
    "There's a fantastic opportunity there and Corrections is squandering that opportunity for no good reason," she said. "There ought not to be barriers in the way of people who are ready to change."
     
    The inmates, Brian Cooper, Shawn Gillam, Nikola Skupnik and Troy Underhill, are all men in their late 20s and early 30s. They are in provincial custody either awaiting sentencing or remand. Two are incarcerated in a Kamloops facility and the others are being held in Prince George and Port Coquitlam.
     
    All four have sworn in affidavits they were told they required a three-month or greater sentence to be prescribed the opiate replacement drugs. They each allege the time has passed yet they've been denied access to a doctor, Smith said.
     
    Their claims conflict with a statement from the B.C. government, which says there is no minimum time or length of custodial sentence to start treatment.
     
     
    "To be clear, upon admission to a correctional centre, medical staff can refer an inmate for either methadone or suboxone treatment, or an inmate can request it," said a statement from the Ministry of Public Safety and Solicitor General.
     
    "A physician then assesses the inmate and develops an individualized care plan, regardless of the length of the inmate's sentence."
     
    The ministry said no one was available for an interview and no comment would be made while the case is before the courts. Chiron Health Services, a private health provider also named in the suit, referred request for comment back to the ministry.
     
    Smith said her clients were referred to her by Prisoners' Legal Services, which advocated for the inmates after they allege they filed internal complaints with B.C. Corrections that have never been addressed.
     
    Smith is scheduled to argue on March 31 for an injunction that would give her clients immediate access to a doctor to determine whether treatment is appropriate before a trial. She's hopeful the issue can be resolved before then.
     
    "I would like my clients to stay alive so they can have their day in court."
     
    Smith said she will argue that opiate replacement drugs prevent illicit drug use behind bars and help prevent inmates from starting to reuse upon release. She said there have been overdoses in B.C. institutions, where addicts inject contraband drugs without sterile syringes or take dangerous portions.
     
    Her clients also fear they might take drugs with the deadly contaminate fentanyl, she said, which is up to 100 times more toxic than morphine.
     
     
    Smith estimated that replacement drugs would cost an estimated $4,000 annually, but the price is $60,000 to treat someone who contracts hepatitis C or $14,000 to treat a case of HIV.
     
    "We know there is a base cost to prescribe medication, but the savings to the public are enormous in comparison."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Deciding On Assisted Death In Context Of Mental Illness Highly Complex: Experts

    The court made no specific pronouncement about medically assisted dying for those with a psychiatric illness, and that has left mental health experts wondering how its  decision might be interpreted — and what that could mean for such a vulnerable segment of the population.

    Deciding On Assisted Death In Context Of Mental Illness Highly Complex: Experts

    Seven Held For Burning Alive Woman In Rajasthan

    Seven Held For Burning Alive Woman In Rajasthan
    "After living somewhere else for all these years she returned to her village along with her three-year-old daughter to meet her family and in-laws." 

    Seven Held For Burning Alive Woman In Rajasthan

    Saskatchewan NDP Would Scrap Some Ambulance Fees They Say Hurt Rural Residents

    Saskatchewan NDP Would Scrap Some Ambulance Fees They Say Hurt Rural Residents
    NDP Leader Cam Broten also promises the party will scrap a per-kilometre rate for ambulances if it wins next month's provincial election.

    Saskatchewan NDP Would Scrap Some Ambulance Fees They Say Hurt Rural Residents

    Former US First Lady Nancy Reagan Dies At 94

    Former US First Lady Nancy Reagan Dies At 94
    ABC News received a statement from a family spokesperson saying that Reagan died this morning at her home in Los Angeles.

    Former US First Lady Nancy Reagan Dies At 94

    'Hooker Monologues' In Vancouver Reveals Hidden World Of Sex Work To Dispel Myths And Stigma

    'Hooker Monologues' In Vancouver Reveals Hidden World Of Sex Work To Dispel Myths And Stigma
    Neither cast member sees any harm with displaying the multi-faceted trade in an entertainment format.

    'Hooker Monologues' In Vancouver Reveals Hidden World Of Sex Work To Dispel Myths And Stigma

    RCMP Seize $500,000 In Marijuana, Hash Oil After Traffic Stop In Field, B.C.

    RCMP Seize $500,000 In Marijuana, Hash Oil After Traffic Stop In Field, B.C.
    Mounties were conducting road safety checks in Field, B.C., on Wednesday when an officer pulled over a Mitsubishi Outlander.

    RCMP Seize $500,000 In Marijuana, Hash Oil After Traffic Stop In Field, B.C.