Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

More Family Doctors Should Be Trained To Help Drug-Addicted Patients: B.C. Study

The Canadian Press, 17 Aug, 2016 12:53 PM
    VANCOUVER — A study by the British Columbia Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS is calling for more doctors across Canada to be formally trained to diagnose and treat patients addicted to drugs.
     
    Dr. Evan Wood, co-author of the study published in the current edition of the Journal of Addiction Medicine, said there's a greater awareness that for many people, addiction is a chronic disease that must be treated with evidence-based medicine, the same as heart disease or any other condition.
     
    "We're just sort of learning and trying to unpack the mystery that some people will go into long-term recovery and never go back, whereas for other people it ends up being a fatal disease and they can never put it down. In many cases it's because people haven't accessed good treatment."
     
    Statistics from the BC Coroners Service show there were 371 drug overdose deaths between January and June of this year, about 60 per cent of which were tied to fentanyl, a powerful pain killer.
     
    Wood said the prevalence of addiction means treatment must be integrated in the primary care setting where family doctors are trained to help patients who may need further care from specially trained physicians.
     
    There are about 25 addiction-care providers in British Columbia based on their accreditation with the American Board of Addiction Medicine, the study said. There is no formal system of accreditation in Canada.
     
     
    Wood, who is accredited through the American board, said one-year fellowship programs in addiction medicine are offered in Calgary, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver.
     
    "British Columbia is ahead in that our addiction medicine training program is the largest in North America," Wood said.
     
    He said 13 doctors took part this year in the fellowship program at St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver, where addictions training is also offered to nurses and social workers who visit detox centres, recovery programs and primary-care clinics where drugs are prescribed as part of addiction care.
     
    "We're really trying to look at what are the structural reasons that addiction care has really behind in terms of what's available for patients and families and really trying to address some of those structural barriers head on."
     
    The need for specially trained health-care providers is even more dire in rural and remote areas, he said, adding opioid addiction needs to be treated in the primary-care setting in all areas because too many patients are ending up in emergency departments and leaving without referrals elsewhere for follow-up care.
     
    Dr. Francine Lemire, executive director and CEO of the College of Family Physicians of Canada, said she supports the study's recommendations to invest in addiction training at medical schools, along with continuing medical education for health professionals dealing with the issue.
     
     
    "If we are serious about the extent and depth of this societal problem, early screening, diagnosis and treatment is key," Lemire said in a statement.
     
    Lemire said the college will recognize physicians who acquire enhanced skills with a special certificate of competence and anticipated the process to be completed over the next 12 to 18 months.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Immigration Minister John McCallum Discusses Crucial Issues With Surrey Media

    Immigration Minister John McCallum Discusses Crucial Issues With Surrey Media
    John McCallum, Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship, visited the city of Surrey on August 16 for a Meet and Greet with the Surrey media.

    Immigration Minister John McCallum Discusses Crucial Issues With Surrey Media

    Toronto Doctor Facing Penalty Over Patient's Sexual Abuse Allegations

    Toronto doctor faces a possible penalty after Ontario's medical watchdog found he made sexual remarks and inappropriately touched a female patient during psychotherapy sessions over several years.

    Toronto Doctor Facing Penalty Over Patient's Sexual Abuse Allegations

    Family Home Sale Marred In Uncertainty In Wake Of B.C. Foreign Buyers' Tax

    Family Home Sale Marred In Uncertainty In Wake Of B.C. Foreign Buyers' Tax
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — A Vancouver-area family says they feel like pawns in a political game after the province introduced a foreign buyers' tax that put the sale of their home in jeopardy.

    Family Home Sale Marred In Uncertainty In Wake Of B.C. Foreign Buyers' Tax

    Virgin Mobile Launches Home Internet In Ontario Starting At $50 Per Month

    Virgin Mobile Launches Home Internet In Ontario Starting At $50 Per Month
    Customers who fall within Virgin's coverage map in the province can sign up for a 300 GB plan for $50 per month or an unlimited plan for $65 per month. 

    Virgin Mobile Launches Home Internet In Ontario Starting At $50 Per Month

    Indian-Origin Man Blames 'Sikh Upbringing And Cultural Factors' For Raping An 18-Yr-old In Australia

    Indian-Origin Man Blames 'Sikh Upbringing And Cultural Factors' For Raping An 18-Yr-old In Australia
    It was submitted in Simardeep Singh's defence that his Sikh upbringing and cultural factors led to his offending

    Indian-Origin Man Blames 'Sikh Upbringing And Cultural Factors' For Raping An 18-Yr-old In Australia

    B.C. Man Alvin Randhawa Pleads Guilty In New York In Major Cocaine Ring Bust

    B.C. Man Alvin Randhawa Pleads Guilty In New York In Major Cocaine Ring Bust
    He entered the plea Monday, admitting to exporting large quantities of cocaine from the United States to Canada

    B.C. Man Alvin Randhawa Pleads Guilty In New York In Major Cocaine Ring Bust