Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Doctors In Saskatchewan Worried About Spike In Crystal Meth Problems

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Dec, 2015 02:24 PM
    SASKATOON — At least one Saskatchewan health official says fire evacuations in the north during the summer created more crystal meth problems which in turn are making the HIV situation in the province even worse.
     
    Dr. Kris Stewart, co-director of Saskatchewan HIV/AIDS Research Endeavor, says some of his clients who were crystal meth addicts started using again when they had to leave their homes during the evacuations.
     
    He says until then, many were stable and in treatment, but the evacuation "really unsettled a lot of people and exposed them to drugs they haven't done before and that's injected a lot of chaos into the situation."
     
    Dr. Nnamdi Ndubuka, medical health officer for the Northern Inter-Tribal Health Authority, says the increase in crystal meth use actually stretches over the last two years.
     
    Although crystal meth can be smoked, it can also be injected, which Ndubuka says leads to a correlation with increases in rates of HIV infection.
     
    Crystal meth can also affect the immune system and that can accelerate the progression of HIV. It is a particularly significant issue for pregnant women using crystal meth, because the amount of the virus in their system may increase.
     
    “When the viral load increases in their system then that increases the risk of transmission of the virus from the mother to the baby,” Ndubuka says.
     
    “It might become difficult to get the treatment because of the chaotic lifestyle that they live when they get involved with the use of crystal meth.”
     
     
    Stewart calls the situation "extremely troubling."
     
    “We're seeing more crystal meth use than we have seen in the past," he says. “So crystal [meth] is a problem because we don't have a drug like methadone to help people get off of it. So this is a worry, it is a huge worry.”
     
    The drug has moved from being a middle-class drug to one that affects people who are lower income, says Cory Rennie, interim manager of Addictions Services for the Prince Albert Parkland Health Region.
     
    “We started to see little hints of it before summer started. April, May, we started to have a few clients that would come and present that they had been using this, and it's just increased since then. I'm not sure what prompted its influx into the community, but I know that it's been steadily increasing since that time.”
     
    Stewart says there needs to be a new provincial HIV strategy and better research.
     
    “We have to find the resources to do extra clinics if we need them," he says. "When we have people that we know are HIV positive, but are not in care, we have to do whatever it takes to get them into care. To not do so is to allow transmission to continue and I think we're missing opportunities right now."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Budget Watchdog Warns Ontario Won't Eliminate Its Deficit By 2017-18 As Promised

    Budget Watchdog Warns Ontario Won't Eliminate Its Deficit By 2017-18 As Promised
    Financial accountability officer Stephen LeClair says there's been a slowdown in the economy since the 2015 provincial budget projected growth of 4.3 per cent in each of the next three years.

    Budget Watchdog Warns Ontario Won't Eliminate Its Deficit By 2017-18 As Promised

    Raed Jaser, Man Convicted Of Terror Charges In VIA Train Plot, Files Notice Of Appeal

    Raed Jaser, Man Convicted Of Terror Charges In VIA Train  Plot, Files Notice Of Appeal
    Raed Jaser has filed a notice of appeal with the Ontario Court of Appeal in which he indicates he will be asking for a new trial.

    Raed Jaser, Man Convicted Of Terror Charges In VIA Train Plot, Files Notice Of Appeal

    Daughter Of Man Shot By Newfoundland Police Wants Death To Be Election Issue

    Daughter Of Man Shot By Newfoundland Police Wants Death To Be Election Issue
    The lawyer representing the daughter of a man who was shot by a Newfoundland police officer says she wants her father's death to become a provincial election issue.

    Daughter Of Man Shot By Newfoundland Police Wants Death To Be Election Issue

    Militants In Philippines Demand Ransom For Kidnapped Canadians

    Militants In Philippines Demand Ransom For Kidnapped Canadians
    In the video reported by the U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors jihadi websites, the kidnappers and their captives said for the first time that the Abu Sayyaf was behind the Sept. 21 kidnappings 

    Militants In Philippines Demand Ransom For Kidnapped Canadians

    NDP Caucus Prepares To Meet In Person For First Time Since Election Defeat

    New Democrat MPs will meet face to face in Ottawa on Wednesday for the first time since the party went from the orange crush to the orange crushed.

    NDP Caucus Prepares To Meet In Person For First Time Since Election Defeat

    Statistics Canada Says Trade Deficit Narrows To $1.7 Billion For September

    Statistics Canada Says Trade Deficit Narrows To $1.7 Billion For September
    The result compared with a revised deficit of $2.7 billion in August that was first reported to be $2.5 billion.

    Statistics Canada Says Trade Deficit Narrows To $1.7 Billion For September