Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Nurses to prescribe medication to battle addiction

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Feb, 2021 09:16 PM
  • Nurses to prescribe medication to battle addiction

Thirty registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses in British Columbia are expected to complete their training this month to prescribe medication to those battling addiction to opioids.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry says more than 6,000 people have died from overdoses since B.C. declared a public health emergency nearly five years ago, but the pandemic has increased the risk of overdosing.

She issued a public health order last September authorizing the nurses to prescribe some controlled drugs and substances as part of the effort to reduce overdoses and deaths.

Henry says in a release that while the overdose crisis is not unique to B.C., the province is the first in Canada to equip registered nurses and registered psychiatric nurses to join family doctors, psychiatrists and nurse practitioners in prescribing medication.

The Mental Health and Addictions Ministry says more of the nurses will be trained to prescribe medications such as suboxone to those in the grip of addiction.

It says other medications will be added to the training, including morphine and methadone.

A spokeswoman for the College of Nurses and Midwives, which regulates standards of practice, says nurses could start prescribing the medications by the end of the month.

Mental Health and Addictions Minister Sheila Malcolmson says too many people have been left grieving the loss of someone who died of an overdose.

"Expanding access to addiction treatment medications is essential to getting a handle on this crisis," she says.

The ministry says the first group of nurses represents every health region and the training is in addition to work being done to expand access to pharmaceutical alternatives to toxic street drugs.

Kate Hodgson, a registered nurse and consultant on substance use with the Four Directions Team that is part of the First Nations Health Authority, says the training initiative will improve access to life-saving medication.

She says nurses will have the opportunity to support access to the full spectrum of substance use care for rural and remote Indigenous communities.

"The Nation-based health centre teams and (the First Nations Health Authority) community health nurses who have taken on nurse prescribing are creating innovative programs from a place of wellness, compassion and self-determination."

The Mental Health and Addictions Ministry says more than 23,000 people in B.C. are currently receiving some form of treatment for opioid use.

Health officials say street drugs have become more potentially deadly during the pandemic because border closures have meant the toxic substances are being locally produced.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. police investigate after man was set on fire

B.C. police investigate after man was set on fire
Investigators later discovered the 20-year-old man had been sleeping under a highway bridge when he was set on fire and his belongings taken.

B.C. police investigate after man was set on fire

NDP seeks CERB extension, sick leave

NDP seeks CERB extension, sick leave
Singh wouldn’t say clearly whether those are conditions for backing the Liberals in a confidence vote on the speech, which will come after a debate in the House of Commons.

NDP seeks CERB extension, sick leave

Work with Canada on Pacific Rim plan: Blumenauer

Work with Canada on Pacific Rim plan: Blumenauer
Rep. Earl Blumenauer, chairman of the House Ways and Means trade subcommittee, recalled his efforts to make the Trans-Pacific Partnership more palatable to critics before President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. out of the deal in 2017.

Work with Canada on Pacific Rim plan: Blumenauer

Greens expel second candidate from leadership race

Greens expel second candidate from leadership race
A spokesperson for Haddad's campaign said the appeal was filed this afternoon and the party's leadership committee is to make a decision this evening.

Greens expel second candidate from leadership race

Church seeks leave to appeal Mount Cashel ruling

Church seeks leave to appeal Mount Cashel ruling
The archdiocese says in a release that its lawyers today petitioned for leave to appeal the July decision from the Newfoundland and Labrador Court of Appeal.

Church seeks leave to appeal Mount Cashel ruling

Daily new COVID-19 cases triple in past month

Daily new COVID-19 cases triple in past month
Canada's chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, said the country had seen an average of more than 1,100 new cases of the novel coronavirus a day this past week compared with about 380 a day in mid-August.

Daily new COVID-19 cases triple in past month