Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Prisoners Get Addiction Therapy After Settlement In Charter Challenge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Apr, 2016 01:37 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's corrections system has implemented a new policy to ensure prisoners with opiate addictions can access the same treatment as patients outside provincial jails.
     
    Four prisoners who launched a charter of rights legal challenge in late March have also gained opiate replacement therapy as part of a settlement reached this week.
     
    Their lawyer, Adrienne Smith, says the agreement protects the men's lives, especially because one client had overdosed on illicit drugs while asking for treatment.
     
    But Smith says the new policy is also significant given the declaration on Thursday that B.C. is facing a public health emergency as overdose deaths have surged from powerful drugs like fentanyl.
     
    The policy follows the same guidelines for administering suboxone or methadone treatment as set out by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of B.C.
     
    It means any prisoner who is seeking opiate replacement therapy can request an appointment with a jail doctor.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ex-Boyfriend Gurjinder Dhaliwal To Be Sentenced Today For Gunning Down Surrey Teen Maple Batalia

    Ex-Boyfriend Gurjinder Dhaliwal To Be Sentenced Today For Gunning Down Surrey Teen Maple Batalia
    Dhaliwal pleaded guilty last week to the second-degree murder of 19-year-old Maple Batalia

    Ex-Boyfriend Gurjinder Dhaliwal To Be Sentenced Today For Gunning Down Surrey Teen Maple Batalia

    Burger Named After Canada's Sikh Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan

    Burger Named After Canada's Sikh Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan
    Mr Sajjan Tried his namesake burger at #Vancouver's @TheCannibalCafe and was not disappointed

    Burger Named After Canada's Sikh Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan

    Toronto Mom Cindy Ali Found Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In Death Of Disabled Daughter

    Cindy Ali, 45, was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

    Toronto Mom Cindy Ali Found Guilty Of First-Degree Murder In Death Of Disabled Daughter

    Victoria Homeless Camp Faces Legal Showdown As B.C. Looks To Clean Up Site

    Victoria Homeless Camp Faces Legal Showdown As B.C. Looks To Clean Up Site
    Chris Parent says he was offered shelter space that includes a bed, bathroom and heat, but he's staying put in his tent on the grounds of Victoria's courthouse.

    Victoria Homeless Camp Faces Legal Showdown As B.C. Looks To Clean Up Site

    RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties

    RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties
    A workplace investigation that followed the shooting of two Mounties in Alberta last year says the RCMP contravened Canada Labour Code health and safety rules.

    RCMP Told To Follow Safety Rules Following Shooting Of Alberta Mounties

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter
    oronto author Rosemary Sullivan is behind "Stalin's Daughter: The Extraordinary and Tumultuous Life of Svetlana Alliluyeva," which has won the $40,000 British Columbia National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction and the $60,000 Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction.

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter