Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Drug Overdose Crisis, Deadliest Of Long Career, Says Health Officer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Feb, 2017 12:34 PM
    VICTORIA — Among the medical diplomas, certificates and degrees on Dr. Perry Kendall's office wall is a framed copy of a newspaper with a headline that screams, "City Doctors Give Okay to Socialized Medicine."
     
    B.C.'s provincial health officer laughs at the mock front page of a Vancouver newspaper from 1951 that was given to him by his father-in-law, also a doctor.
     
    The page is forward looking, similar to Kendall's approach during a 45-year career in public health that started in free medical clinics in Toronto and Vancouver, and now sees him at the forefront of British Columbia's overdose crisis.
     
    The arrival of the powerful opioid fentanyl caused 914 overdose deaths in B.C. last year, almost 80 per cent higher than the 510 deaths recorded by the provincial coroner in 2015.
     
    The British-born Kendall said his family roots have helped him drive health policy changes that were sometimes controversial, but now are common practice.
     
    "My father was very socially conscious," said Kendall, who has been the provincial health officer since 1999. "He was a very ethical person. So was my mother."
     
    Banning smoking in work and public spaces, providing needle exchanges to prevent the spread of HIV and opening safe injection sites for illicit drug users have been championed by Kendall, who was city health officer in Toronto and Victoria before becoming B.C.'s provincial health officer.
     
    He recalls how former Vancouver mayors Philip Owen and Larry Campbell supported supervised injection sites in the Downtown Eastside, despite being at opposite ends of the political spectrum.
     
    "They saw it as a health problem and a way to stop people dying," he said.
     
    But of all the public health problems Kendall has dealt with — such as HIV, AIDS, SARS and H1N1 — nothing has been as devastating as the opioid crisis in B.C., he said.
     
     
    "In terms of morbidity and mortality, it's way above anything killing people in the time I've been in public health," he said. "The issue is, it's not something that by and large everybody thinks could happen to them, which is the difference between an infectious disease, something that terrifies us like Ebola or a pandemic."
     
    Kendall said fentanyl is killing people from all walks of life and he's pushing the province to adopt a European-style drug treatment program that includes providing medicinal heroin to patients. The European programs work, he said, with evidence of reduced overdose deaths and stable lives for drug users.
     
    Vancouver's Crosstown Clinic is the only facility in North America that offers medicinal heroin.
     
    John Blatherwick worked with Kendall on anti-smoking, needle exchange, HIV infection and safe injection programs when he was Vancouver's health officer and is impressed by his former colleague's political savvy in promoting change.
     
    "He positions things well for the politicians to be able to make some of the tough decisions they have to make. That's a really tough trick."
     
    Kendall was appointed by the New Democrats and has held the position during four consecutive Liberal governments. He has announced his retirement twice, but never followed through.
     
     
    Blatherwick said he senses Kendall has the ear of Health Minister Terry Lake on the overdose crisis.
     
    "I see Terry Lake making statements that tell me Perry has been talking to him very earnestly and has gotten him to understand how serious the crisis is," said Blatherwick.
     
    Lake, who acknowledges the government is considering recommendations on pharmaceutical heroin, said he and Kendall have a working relationship that resembles a professor and student.
     
    "I learn so much from him," said Lake. "I don't think you could find any person working in public health in Canada who has the experience and helped shape the response to so many public health issues."
     
    Prof. Bernie Pauly at the University of Victoria's centre for addictions research said Kendall's ideas get wide attention.
     
    "When I think about who is best to be in that lead role in the province, having someone like Perry, who has been a leader throughout his career in harm reduction and prevention, I think of few who have been such a pioneer in that area," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Labour Minister Says Flexible Work Rules Won't Harm Small Businesses

    Labour Minister Says Flexible Work Rules Won't Harm Small Businesses
    OTTAWA — Labour Minister MaryAnn Mihychuk says proposed rules to provide flexible work options for federally-regulated workers won't become a burden on small businesses.

    Labour Minister Says Flexible Work Rules Won't Harm Small Businesses

    Canada's Sports Hall Of Fame Unveils Terry Fox Exhibit On Eve Of Namesake Run

    CALGARY — A Terry Fox exhibit opens at Canada's Sports Hall of Fame with the 36th running of his race just days away.

    Canada's Sports Hall Of Fame Unveils Terry Fox Exhibit On Eve Of Namesake Run

    Rise In Interest Rates Could Cause Trouble For Some Canadians: TransUnion

    Up to one million Canadian borrowers could face problems paying their debts if interest rates rise by a full percentage point including some of the highest rated consumers, a report released Tuesday by TransUnion suggests.

    Rise In Interest Rates Could Cause Trouble For Some Canadians: TransUnion

    Scheer Quits Caucus Post, Expected To Announce Leadership Bid In Near Future

    The Saskatchewan MP says his discussions about joining the race to replace former prime minister Stephen Harper have been going well.

    Scheer Quits Caucus Post, Expected To Announce Leadership Bid In Near Future

    B.C. Premier Offers Flood Relief For Kitimat Hydro Dam Project Decades Later

    B.C. Premier Offers Flood Relief For Kitimat Hydro Dam Project Decades Later
     It's been more than 60 years since members of the remote Cheslatta Carrier Nation in northern British Columbia were told they had a few weeks to leave their homes because a man-made flood was coming.

    B.C. Premier Offers Flood Relief For Kitimat Hydro Dam Project Decades Later

    10 Years After Dawson College Shooting By Kimveer Gill, Victims And Families Still Suffering

    10 Years After Dawson College Shooting By Kimveer Gill, Victims And Families Still Suffering
    Kimveer Gill, 25, used a semi-automatic rifle to shoot 72 rounds in and near Dawson College in downtown Montreal on Sept. 13, 2006.

    10 Years After Dawson College Shooting By Kimveer Gill, Victims And Families Still Suffering