Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Made-in-Canada Approach To Opioid Addiction Gets Nod From Prominent Medical Journal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jul, 2016 12:32 PM
  • Made-in-Canada Approach To Opioid Addiction Gets Nod From Prominent Medical Journal
VANCOUVER — A made-in-Canada approach to treating opioid addiction is garnering positive international attention from one of the world's most widely circulated medical publications.
 
The Journal of the American Medical Association has published a review of guidelines developed by a pair of health authorities in British Columbia aimed at educating health-care providers about how best to treat opioid-use disorder.
 
One of the guidelines' authors, Dr. Keith Ahamad, says the protocols are the first to provide an evidence-based, gradual approach for how family doctors can best help someone addicted to opioids.
 
He says they suggest doing away with some traditional strategies that were found to be ineffective or even harmful.
 
The recommendations include discouraging rapid detoxification as a remedy and encouraging the use of overdose-reversing drug naloxone as a first-line treatment, rather than methadone.
 
Dr. Evan Wood chaired the committee responsible for developing the guidelines, and says the medical journal's recognition will hopefully generate interest and focus attention on the need to modernize addictions treatment.
 
"We spend huge money on the consequences of addiction, but we haven't traditionally made the investments in a thoughtful approach to the prevention and effective treatment of addiction," Wood said.
 
 
"Hopefully we're beginning to turn the corner with that."
 
Vancouver Coastal Health and Providence Health released the "Guideline for the Clinical Management of Opioid Addiction" in November 2015, several months before a surge in illicit drug deaths prompted B.C.'s chief doctor to declare a public-health emergency.
 
Ahamad said he hopes attention from the American Medical Association's journal will provide both validation and attention to the B.C. guidelines, which he hopes will contribute to their adoption elsewhere.
 
"Right now the reality is (that) across the country, patients with addiction are bouncing in and out of family doctors' offices," he said.
 
"We need at that moment to give them the treatment that they need that can potentially save their lives, no different than treating blood pressure and diabetes."
 
Data from B.C.'s coroners' service show there were 371 illicit drug overdose deaths in the province in the first half of 2016, a nearly 75-per-cent increase over the same period last year. The deadly opioid fentanyl was detected in more than half of those cases, about a two-fold increase from the previous year.
 
The Journal of the American Medical Association estimates there are about 2.5 million people in the United States with opioid addiction, and that nearly 29,000 died in 2014 as a result of an opioid overdose.

MORE National ARTICLES

Too Hot: Montreal Construction Workers Walk Off The Job

Too Hot: Montreal Construction Workers Walk Off The Job
Several hundred construction workers at Montreal's superhospital downed tools for part of the day Wednesday because of the heat.

Too Hot: Montreal Construction Workers Walk Off The Job

Four Montreal Cops Arrested, With One Facing Charge Of Obtaining Sexual Services

Four Montreal Cops Arrested, With One Facing Charge Of Obtaining Sexual Services
Faycal Djelidi faces nine charges and David Chartrand four, Pichet told a news conference.

Four Montreal Cops Arrested, With One Facing Charge Of Obtaining Sexual Services

Case Of Ex-Nazi Death Squad Member Back In Federal Cabinet's Hands

Case Of Ex-Nazi Death Squad Member Back In Federal Cabinet's Hands
OTTAWA — A long-running legal case about whether former Nazi death squad member Helmut Oberlander will be stripped of his citizenship is back in the hands of the federal government cabinet.

Case Of Ex-Nazi Death Squad Member Back In Federal Cabinet's Hands

Pride Toronto's Way Of Dealing With Black LGBTQ Youth 'Abysmal': Group

Black Lives Matter Toronto says organizers, particularly Pride Toronto's executive director Mathieu Chantelois, need to be held accountable for their actions. 

Pride Toronto's Way Of Dealing With Black LGBTQ Youth 'Abysmal': Group

Canada Post Lockout Deadline Extended Until Monday

OTTAWA — Canada Post is extending its lockout notice to Monday at 12:01 a.m. ET and says it is willing to submit to binding arbitration in an effort to resolve the ongoing labour dispute.

Canada Post Lockout Deadline Extended Until Monday

Justin Trudeau Heads To NATO Summit With Commitments, But Will Face Questions

Justin Trudeau Heads To NATO Summit With Commitments, But Will Face Questions
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau flies to Poland on Thursday for his first NATO leaders' summit armed with a promise to help the alliance in its standoff with Russia.

Justin Trudeau Heads To NATO Summit With Commitments, But Will Face Questions