Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Now Allows Prescription Heroin In Severe Opioid Addiction Cases

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2016 01:09 PM
    VANCOUVER — Health Canada has amended regulations allowing doctors to prescribe heroin to people who are severely addicted to opioids.
     
    The government says the country is facing an opioid overdose crisis and health-care providers need help in treating patients suffering from chronic dependency.
     
    The change to the former Conservative government's legislation means pharmaceutical-grade heroin can be prescribed under a special-access program in cases where traditional treatment has failed.
     
    However, Health Canada says that while there is scientific evidence to support emergency access to the drug, the treatment is not an option for most people.
     
    Health Minister Jane Philpott has said the government will hold a summit this fall to address the issue of opioid addiction leading to hundreds of overdose deaths across Canada.
     
     
    Supervised heroin therapy is used in several countries, including Switzerland, Germany and the Netherlands, and a clinical trial in Canada has concluded injectable heroin was more effective than standard methadone treatment.
     
    British Columbia's health minister says addicts need every option to help them regain control of their lives.
     
    "It indicates a willingness on behalf of the federal government to look at a health-based kind of an issue rather than a criminal-based issue and that they're not limiting the range of treatment options that are available because there isn't one size that fits all in these situations," he said.
     
    "Given the opioid epidemic that we're facing, we need every tool that is available." (The Canadian Press, CHNL)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Has Record Decline In Housing Affordability In First Half Of 2016

    Vancouver Has Record Decline In Housing Affordability In First Half Of 2016
    Royal Bank says the first half of this year marked the biggest six-month drop in housing affordability in the Vancouver area since at least the early 1990s.

    Vancouver Has Record Decline In Housing Affordability In First Half Of 2016

    Saskatoon Couple Asked By CRA To Prove They Have Children A Second Time

    Saskatoon Couple Asked By CRA To Prove They Have Children A Second Time
    'Why Do We Have 4 Car Seats?': Sask. Man Responds To Federal Tax Review With 29-page Sarcastic Letter

    Saskatoon Couple Asked By CRA To Prove They Have Children A Second Time

    Elderly Surrey Couple Living In Separate Care Homes To Be Reunited Soon

    Elderly Surrey Couple Living In Separate Care Homes To Be Reunited Soon
    Health authority overseeing the couples' care is moving forward with plans to reunite them.

    Elderly Surrey Couple Living In Separate Care Homes To Be Reunited Soon

    Victims In Toronto Crossbow Attack Part Of Same Family: Neighbour

    Victims In Toronto Crossbow Attack Part Of Same Family: Neighbour
    Court records name the victims as Susan, Alexander and Christopher Ryan.

    Victims In Toronto Crossbow Attack Part Of Same Family: Neighbour

    Immigration Detention Facing Rare Legal Challenge Today In Provincial Court

    Immigration Detention Facing Rare Legal Challenge Today In Provincial Court
      Government lawyers tell Ontario Superior Court in Toronto today that Alvin Brown, 40, is scheduled to leave Canada on Sept. 7.

    Immigration Detention Facing Rare Legal Challenge Today In Provincial Court

    Poison To Be Used In Two B.C. Lakes After Non-Native Fish Species Spotted

    Poison To Be Used In Two B.C. Lakes After Non-Native Fish Species Spotted
    Biologist Steve Maricle says perch were spotted earlier this year in Windy Lake and Little Windy Lake, both about 50 kilometres northwest of West Kelowna.

    Poison To Be Used In Two B.C. Lakes After Non-Native Fish Species Spotted