:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting 115 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Health.
Before we begin, I would like to remind all members and other participants in the room of the following important preventive measures.
To prevent disruptive and potentially harmful audio feedback incidents that can cause injuries, all in-person participants are reminded to keep their earpieces away from the microphone at all times.
As indicated in the communiqué from the Speaker to all members on Monday, April 29, the following measures have been taken to help prevent audio feedback incidents. All earpieces have been replaced by a model that greatly reduces the possibility of audio feedback. The new earpieces are black, whereas the former earpieces were gray. Please only use a black, approved earpiece. By default, all unused earpieces will be unplugged at the start of a meeting.
When you are not using your earpiece, please place it face down on the middle of the sticker for this purpose, which you will find on the table, as indicated. Please consult the cards on the table for guidelines to prevent audio feedback incidents.
The room layout has been adjusted to increase the distance between microphones and reduce the chance of feedback from an ambient earpiece.
These measures are in place so that we can conduct our business without interruption and to protect the health and safety of all participants, including the interpreters.
Thank you all for your co-operation.
In accordance with our routine motion, I am informing the committee that all remote participants have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(2) and the motion adopted on November 8, 2023, the committee is resuming its study of the opioid epidemic and toxic drug crisis in Canada.
I would like to welcome our panel of witnesses.
For your information, this part of the meeting will run from 11:00 until 1:00, and then, from 1:00 until 1:30, we shall have in-camera committee business.
On the topic, appearing as an individual, we have Sarah Lovegrove, registered nurse, by video conference; Eugenia Oviedo-Joekes, professor, school of population and public health, University of British Columbia, by video conference; Martin Pagé, executive director, Dopamine, by video conference; and Elenore Sturko, member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for Surrey South. She is here in person.
Thank you all for being here.
With that, we will start our statements. You will each have five minutes. I'm a bit of a stickler for time. We'll keep on track and have a nice meeting. We look forward to hearing from you all.
With that, Ms. Lovegrove, you have the floor for five minutes.
:
Good morning. Thank you for having me here today.
My name is Sarah Lovegrove. I'm a registered nurse and professor for the Bachelor of Science in nursing program at Vancouver Island University, VIU. I'm grateful to be joining you today from the traditional unceded territory of the Sununeymuxw First Nation, colonially referred to as Nanaimo.
I am also an activist and a member of the Harm Reduction Nurses Association, and I am absolutely infuriated by the federal Ministry of Health's decision to support and enable B.C.'s political move to walk back decriminalization.
Drawing strength from the brave university students using their voice to stand up for justice, including the powerful students at VIU, as well as those at my alma mater, the University of Ottawa, I'll be taking this opportunity today to say what needs to be said.
Much like the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza, this worsening toxic drug crisis, killing 22 Canadians each day, is a result and perpetuation of the ongoing settler colonialism and white supremacy that makes up the fabric of our governments, policies, communities and health care system.
Indigenous people are disproportionately impacted by this crisis, experiencing death and injury related to an unregulated drug supply at a significantly higher rate than the rest of the population. Substances like alcohol were introduced to the indigenous peoples of Turtle Island at the time of colonization, and have since been weaponized as a tool of coercion and control to uphold the settler state.
[English]
Just hold, Ms. Lovegrove. We'll see if we can make it better for you.
I apologize, colleagues. We had some problems with Ms. Lovegrove's sound originally. We thought it was good, but it's not quite where it needs to be. Our suggestion is that we'll halt her statement now. We'll come back and allow her to finish it.
We'll have to move on to Ms. Eugenia Oviedo-Joekes, professor at the University of British Columbia.
Ms. Joekes, you have the floor for five minutes.
:
Thank you very much. I will try to speak slowly as sometimes my accent might not be the best for the translators, so I apologize for that.
Thank you so much for having me. My name is Eugenia Oviedo-Joekes. I am a Latina woman. I am today speaking from the beautiful unceded territory for the Squamish people, people of the water. I am a professor at the school of population and public health. I am a Canada research chair in person-centred care in addictions.
Following up from the statement from Sarah Lovegrove, and as a continuation of what she was bringing up, one of the key things for continuing this statement is that the overdose crisis emphasizes that we need diverse strategies, and action and co-operation are key. The problems continue escalating, and we need thoughtful and intentional actions, because this is not a problem with one face. It's time to hold fast and continue moving forward, not retreat.
We have a few medications in Canada that we can use for opioid use disorder that are shown to be effective— however, they are very few. There are a couple of other injectable medications that have shown to be effective, but they don't seem to be rolled out as we expected.
As such, the way we deliver these very few medications doesn't seem to be enough to attract everybody, particularly if we leave the non-rural epicentres. We need other strategies. We need to co-operate with other geographic areas. We need to be flexible. We need to designate facilities and expand take-home doses. We need mobile, outreach, home-based models. Other methods have been established to be effective to reach people with disabilities, to reach people who have caregiving responsibilities, to reach people who are far from the facilities.
The people we see come with many other issues not related to the medication. However, sustaining the treatment, making people feel safe is the first step that we need. For that, we need more than just a couple of medications that the system feels comfortable with.
Using substances cannot be a criminal act. It's not a criminal act to drink in public. Nobody goes to jail, even if it's not allowed. All the problems that we have right now over decades and generations cannot be fixed in a few years. We need to be patient and compassionate, and revise the evidence to make decisions. We need to continue improving and not give up.
Thank you for listening.
Honourable members, thank you for inviting me to contribute to your work. You have heard testimony from several experts who intervene at various levels to try to stem the crisis we are experiencing. I am pleased to be able to participate directly on the ground, in a very specific, unprecedented social and health crisis context.
I am the father of two young children. I am also someone with experiential and theoretical knowledge, having worked for nearly 30 years now in the harm reduction community. I was a street worker in Toronto and Montreal and I have been called to work at the centre of many crises such as the HIV crisis, the hepatitis C crisis, the housing crisis, the COVID-19 crisis, as well as the contaminated substances crisis that we have been going through for the past decade or more.
I am here today with you as the executive director of Dopamine, a community organization deeply rooted in the Hochelaga‑Maisonneuve neighbourhood of Montreal that has been working with substance users for 30 years. The organization works with a harm reduction approach based on best evidence. In fact, data from several studies have largely shown the many positive effects of this approach on health care for people receiving these services and the community at large.
Today I want to tell you a little-known story: that of the people who founded the organization that I have the privilege of directing and representing to you today.
The year was 1991. The HIV/AIDS epidemic hit Montreal hard. In Hochelaga‑Maisonneuve, health care institutions were struggling to reach injection drug users. The head of public health launched a pilot project to prevent infection among injection drug users. The purpose of the project was to equip community actors, directly in the substance-use environments, to distribute free needles and condoms, but especially to change the fatalist attitudes and perceptions that were driven by the stigma of HIV/AIDS.
I do not need to tell you that the initiative was met with strong resistance at first. Supported by health care bodies and political bodies, it was the stakeholders, peers and people concerned who contributed to stemming the HIV/AIDS crisis. Countless lives were saved. They contributed to making the neighbourhood safer for everyone. Their courage changed the course of history.
Since then, every member of the Dopamine team continues to develop adapted, effective solutions that are focused on the real needs of people who use drugs. They continue to fight to defend and improve the quality of life, the right to health, but especially the right to dignity.
In light of this new crisis, I am speaking to you in favour of recognizing the evidence and the science and I stand by the many experts working in the four corners of the country in order to contribute positively to solutions that are courageous to be sure, but necessary. It is high time that we come back to a pragmatic and humanist approach, instead of fuelling a polarizing debate on Canada's situation based on moralist, anecdotal and sometimes false approaches that only maintain the status quo. It is high time that we have courageous conversations and get to work on the ground, where human lives are lost every day.
We are asking for a number of measures to be taken in that regard.
First, we are calling for the overdose epidemic to be declared a public health emergency across the country.
Then, we must also pursue and guarantee a safer, pharmaceutical-grade supply based on the substance chosen by each individual.
It would also be important to provide increased support to the organizations to facilitate the implementation of supervised consumption services across the country.
We are also asking to ensure that naloxone is broadly available and easy to access for all communities.
What is more, the leadership of people who use drugs needs to be substantially included in all the work that concerns them.
Finally, we must advocate in favour of decriminalization, even the full legalization of drugs.
I would add that we need to look at, even rectify the way the war on drugs has been used to disproportionately criminalize groups such as racialized individuals, first nations communities, people living in extreme poverty, as well as queer and trans individuals, who are bearing a lot of the consequences of this war right now.
I invite you to come sit down with us. I invite you to come talk with those who are grieving. I invite you to come see all the efforts being made to reduce the number of deaths and to save lives in our communities. We need pragmatic and humanist policies for our communities to live.
Thank you from the bottom of my heart for listening.
:
Good morning, everyone.
As the B.C. official opposition shadow minister for mental health and addictions and recovery, I'm here today to address the profound failure of British Columbia's illicit drug decriminalization pilot and its dangerously labelled “safe supply” program. These initiatives, while presumably rooted in good intentions, have, unfortunately, yielded alarming consequences due to what many forewarned as a lack of preparedness and vigorous oversight.
In February 2023, at the outset of this pilot's implementation, I warned against the B.C. NDP government's lack of preparation and failure to meet several criterial prerequisites outlined in the federal government's letter of requirements. These included expanding treatment capacity, engaging key stakeholders, and developing monitoring and evaluation frameworks. Here we are, 15 months later, witnessing the ramifications of not meeting those requirements. My worst fears, that British Columbia was entering into an experimental policy without the necessary infrastructure safeguards, have materialized. The results have been nothing short of a disaster.
Former federal minister Carolyn Bennett promised British Columbians, “a robust set of indicators as well on both the public health and the public safety that we then will monitor in real time”. However, these commitments and transparency for real-time data have not been met. The absence of comprehensive data collection has directly compromised public safety, leaving our communities vulnerable, and it's British Columbians who are suffering the consequences. Commuters are being exposed to toxic drug smoke on public transit; children find discarded drug paraphernalia in playgrounds; and nurses, who should be safe in their workplaces, suffer assaults and exposure to toxic drug smoke within hospital walls. All of this is occurring while the B.C. NDP government fails to provide equitable and timely access to health and social services to people suffering with addiction.
Despite early warnings from law enforcement, critical safety and enforcement issues were overlooked, and the pilot program was allowed to commence without mechanisms in place to respond to problematic drug use and without the ability to deter behaviours that put others at risk. Moreover, the diversion of hydromorphone from the so-called safer supply program has persisted unabated since 2020. It took three years and substantial pressure from the medical community before a review was conducted in 2023. This review confirmed what many warned about: widespread diversion and limited evidence supporting the program's efficacy. Despite these findings, the B.C. NDP government continues to misleadingly promote this as “safer supply”.
Tuesday's announcement from the federal government, which modifies B.C.'s section 56 exemption to prohibit public drug use, is a stark admission of the failure of government at both levels—the failure to properly consider public safety, and confirmation of the danger and disorder that's been unleashed by this experiment. The modifications shift this crisis back onto the shoulders of police, who are being asked to move people along but with no services to move them along to. It's merely a band-aid on a gaping wound, addressing public drug use while doing nothing to address addiction itself. This policy U-turn does not address the core issues but instead serves as political damage control, an attempt by government to mask the catastrophic outcomes and divert attention from the harms of their policies.
This was an experiment that was doomed from the outset by a failure to provide social services, access to life-saving treatment, housing and health care. Over the past 15 months it's become painfully clear that the decriminalization policy has not saved lives and reduced drug overdoses, and instead has propagated harm and disorder throughout our communities. As we discuss these developments, we have to recognize that this isn't just a policy failure: It's a humanitarian crisis that continues to claim six lives a day in B.C., and we cannot continue on this path. The decriminalization and safer supply experiments have proven ineffective and dangerous, and it is time for us to reject these policies. It's unacceptable to launch into population-level experiments, ignoring obvious harms and being selective in the collection of evidence.
We need strategies that focus on comprehensive treatment options, social supports and robust public safety measures that genuinely protect our communities. We must develop policies rooted in evidence, prioritize public health and provide real solutions to the drug crisis affecting our province and our country. We must prioritize recovery, uphold safety and secure a safer and healthier future for everyone.
Thank you.
:
Thank you very much for that, Mr. Julian.
I think we've attempted many of those things, but we'll continue to do that. If we're able to resolve the issue, then we will. We have checked the Internet connection. We have checked its speed. We've done the headset check, etc. For reasons unknown, it doesn't appear to be working.
Given that, we will halt that at this point. Again, I extend apologies to the witness and to the committee on behalf of all of us.
That being said, we will continue to work on that in the background, colleagues, and hopefully resolve that as the time goes on.
If it's the will of the committee if we do resolve it, then I think it only fair that we allow Ms. Lovegrove to finish her statement, if that works. It will be a bit unusual, perhaps a bit clunky, but we will do it anyway.
We will start a round of questioning now.
Mrs. Goodridge, you have the floor for six minutes.
:
Okay. I appreciate that.
[Translation]
My next question is for Mr. Pagé.
Among the 49 neighbourhood police stations in Montreal that were assessed by the City of Montreal police force in 2021, the Hochelaga‑Maisonneuve neighbourhood, where the Dopamine organization is located, ranked fourth in terms of crime rate. We are talking about 57.8 crimes per 1,000 residents.
Given the significant presence of parks, playgrounds for children, schools and the Edmond‑Hamelin park located across the street from the organization, I would like to know what measures you have taken to ensure that supervised injection centres for hard drugs such as fentanyl, crack and heroin do not exacerbate the crime situation, which is already disastrous in that area.
:
Thank you so much and I'm very sorry for the circumstances in your area.
The first thing, as I was saying, is collaboration is key. There is nothing that will come from the top that can work unless we work with the community, unless we understand the values of the community and not just come in and say, take this, do this, without knowing if this community is ready and is going to accept. We have to work from there, trying to offer all the options that we can.
As I said, each group of people has particular priorities, they have defined issues that we need to work with. For some of them, if the medications are not available, people cannot travel. That will be a very key problem that has to be resolved.
Restrictions in policy will be a barrier that we are hoping we can solve with the provincial or the federal government so we can reach all the people in the community, people with disabilities who are not able to come in daily. There are all those other intersections we might have.
Sometimes women will not want to be in a place when people who have been violent to them are in the same place.
That's kind of the idea of where to go, to start working together and understand the issues in the community and see how we can build together that side.
I'm not sure if I answered your question.
:
When we work with the prescribers and they want to do person-centred care, they know that certain clients require an opiate medication that they cannot prescribe because it's not indicated for opioid use. In downtown Vancouver you are going to be an advocacy group and you are going to be able to prescribe off-label, but in other places, you don't have that support. You are alone, so you can prescribe only a few things. You don't have prescribers.
The idea is to have the flexibility that we can have all these medications, that we know are evidence-based, available. Then when you have a client coming to you, you can have a conversation with them and say, don't leave, I have something for you. This is the medication that is going to be the best fit for you.
Maybe that person is not ready for take-home medications, but work with them. Maybe that person is ready for somebody going with them or a family member helping. There are so many ways to work with people who are not supervised or just left on their own.
Did that answer your question?
:
The first thing is there is evidence that the so-called “experiment” did save lives. The BCCDC published in the British Medical Journal that it saved lives. If we are going to dissent, let's dissent with the truth. It is totally fair to dissent, but let's dissent with the truth so we can build, not going backwards. Let's build because we are always short on services.
We have decriminalization that works in every country. People going to jail because they use substances doesn't work, maybe in China.... Let's build and do it better, not worse.
There are little things that we achieve; we need to do it better. What can we do better? What can we add to this? That's kind of the idea. If you disagree with that measure, build something on top of that. Let's not destroy the little things that we are building together.
At the end of the day, we are in this together. When people die, they don't have a party patch here. They just die. Most of the people who die are poor people.
I left my profession altogether with severe post-traumatic stress disorder in 2018, having worked through the first peak of fentanyl poisoning deaths and at the time of Nanaimo's largest homeless encampment, Discontent City.
The devastating psychological impacts of participating in countless failed resuscitation attempts, witnessing discriminatory and stigmatizing treatment of people who use drugs, having sick patients leave before receiving treatment due to fear of criminalization, and not having the necessary resources to care for people in the way I was trained to do nearly killed me. It left me hopeless, thinking that I would never have the capacity to return to this profession that I love so dearly.
Due to the increasingly toxic and unpredictable nature of the unregulated supply, people who use drugs are being injured and are dying at escalating rates in ways that we have never seen before, and, frankly, in ways that Canadian health care workers are not prepared to deal with. This is happening because of decades of bad drug policy that reduces people who use drugs to less than human.
Now, as a teacher, I'm obligated to armour my compassionate young nursing students in preparation for a career that will most likely injure them as well. I will reiterate that this is a public health crisis, not a political opportunity to garner votes during an election cycle. The politicization of this crisis is killing people, and the reactionary implementation of policy is only feeding stigma and contributing to the fearmongering spread of dangerous misinformation.
In the past few months, B.C. has seen a marked decrease in toxic drug deaths, but after this week's decision to recriminalize substance use, it breaks my heart and spirit to know that even more people will die.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank all the witnesses who are here with us today. They are helping us to understand the scope of this crisis and the importance of working seriously by taking a science-based approach and not politicizing this file.
I would like to begin with a personal anecdote. As a teenager, I had the opportunity to spend time with the people from CACTUS Montréal. I can tell you that their stories likely contributed to developing my interest in community work, which I then pursued.
Mr. Pagé, I would like you to tell us a bit more about your organization. In response to my colleague's question, you said that there was no school near your organization. She also asked you a question about police services. We know full well that your approach must truly be considered from a continuum of services perspective.
In what type of physical environment is your organization located? What is in the surrounding area?
What is more, what connection do you have with the police?
:
That is a complex question that I probably will not have enough time to answer.
Dopamine has two facilities in the neighbourhood. Earlier, there was mention of a park across from our organization. That is our primary facility in the Hochelaga‑Maisonneuve neighbourhood and it is our day centre. Dopamine has been in that house since 2013. Across from that facility, there is a park and affordable housing. There is an ongoing coexistence with the community. We want to ensure that no syringes are left lying around and that there is harmonious coexistence.
Dopamine's supervised injection service is located somewhere else, on Ontario Street. In Quebec, we have CLSCs, community health centres that provide health care services. Our organization has space at a CLSC that is open in the evening. There is a secondary school nearby. However, since Dopamine's activities at that location are held in the evening, there is no coexistence or friction. There is always honest communication between us, school stakeholders, people in the area and people in the community, whether about the Dopamine facility on Ontario Street or the facility on Sainte‑Catherine.
I will try to answer the other part of your question quickly.
As far as the relationship with the local police forces is concerned, Dopamine has always had a communication relationship that is at the very least administrative with the local police force. The goal is to ensure that the officers understand our mission and what we are trying to do in the community, and to prevent incidents.
Communication is key on many levels. As I said in my presentation, Dopamine has been integrated in the community for more than 30 years now. Its presence is welcome in the community. Dopamine existed and was involved in the community long before it started offering supervised consumption services. We have always maintained communication with the public and with officials, whether about health care, police services or security.
:
Yes, thank you very much.
As things currently stand, we need services and space to welcome people from the community both day and night. Our two facilities have complementary opening hours. For now, we do not provide injection and inhalation services during the day, but it is something we are trying to do. We have the green light from public health authorities, but we are still at the early stages of this initiative. First we need to assess the feasibility of the project in our building, from a technical standpoint.
That is why I was asking that the government facilitate projects like this, ones that will only improve the quality of life of communities, since people go indoors to consume, under supervision.
Finally, we are trying to complete this project to extend our hours of operation and provide services day and night. However, we have only just begun.
That being said, thank you for asking that question.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to each of our witnesses.
Your testimony is indicative of how important it is for us to ensure that we are bringing down the death rates across the country. Every single death is important.
Ms. Lovegrove, as you alluded to in your presentation, every victim represents the end of a beating heart and a family and a community in mourning. We have to take action.
I want to start off by asking Ms. Oviedo-Joekes and Ms. Lovegrove the following questions: What should the federal government be doing more? Should it be declaring a national health emergency as we see numbers climb in Alberta and Saskatchewan? Should it be putting into place funding for safe consumption sites so that we can bring the death toll down, particularly on the Prairies where it is staggeringly high and increasing daily?
Ms. Oviedo-Joekes, you talked about dissenting with the truth. How much harm are people doing, are politicians doing, when they say things that are simply not true when it comes to dealing with this public health care emergency?
:
Following on what you're saying, we need to have all of the options open for people. If I was a person struggling with drugs, we don't know where I would be today or in 10 years. It's not a death sentence, but it has been demonstrated that treatments based on not using any substance—so-called “abstinence-based” treatments—have a success rate of only 5%.
Just holding the bandera—sorry for the Spanglish—of “that's what we have to do” is not good for people because there is no one treatment that we need to proclaim. We need to proclaim all of them because people are going to be in different places at different times.
We need to proclaim a young person maybe wanting to be on that path. Another person might be ready to start out with others. For another person, the only thing they might want is injectables. For another person, it has to be evidence-based.
If you lie and say that it is proven that this didn't work and you have authority and the floor and you just said that because you saw it in the news, you create panic and fear for the people who have children, for the people who don't read. You then get an entire community saying that this doesn't work. Abuse of power is not a good thing.
I thank all of the witnesses who are here today. It's greatly appreciated.
I'll start with Mr. Pagé.
I apologize.
[Translation]
I speak a little bit of French, but I speak more slowly in French.
[English]
So, I will speak in English.
I found it quite interesting that your organization is called Dopamine. I find that interesting because 80% of the catecholamine content of the brain is basically what dopamine is. It deals with pleasures, satisfactions and motivation. It also deals with concentration and movement. I found it interesting how you used that as the name for your organization.
You also mentioned naloxone. The impression I got from that conversation is that it isn't readily available to a great extent in your area. Over the years, and in my discussions with paramedics, etc., that has been a big concern for paramedics: actually being able to utilize naloxone.
The concern, in some cases, when they are utilizing naloxone is that they have to step back because of the fear that the moment they give that naloxone to the patient.... When it brings that person out of the state that they're in, they often come out in a violent manner. I'm just wondering if you would mind commenting on that aspect of naloxone.
:
I hope I understood the question properly.
I was saying that it was important for naloxone to be accessible and easily distributed in the communities because there are still places where it is harder to access, unfortunately. It remains an effective antidote to opioid overdoses.
As for the fear of first responders, I would say that it is not so much a violent reaction. That is often the reaction that is perceived, but it is more that naloxone often puts a person in a state of withdrawal. I would add that despite their sometimes rather dry reaction after receiving a dose of naloxone, people are happy to know that they are still alive.
That type of rhetoric needs to be balanced out. Naloxone saves lives. Harm reduction saves lives.
That is the effect of the antidote: People sometimes end up in withdrawal. I have never heard any stories or anecdotes where a person had a violent awakening or something like that. They end up more agitated or surprised. It is about having the right intervention techniques. You have to know not only how to administer naloxone, but also how to work with the people who use drugs. That knowledge is also necessary for working in our field.
Ms. Sturko, thank you very much for coming. I appreciate your being here in person.
You touched a little bit on treatment and rehabilitation. Canadians are watching this debate that we're having here, and a lot of them are concerned. Where are the steps that are being taken to rehabilitate? That prioritization of recovery, I think, is a very important thing.
We look at the fact that more than 23,800 people, due to drug addiction, are having hypoxic brain injuries. That's going to have a huge impact on provinces on how to deal with those individuals in caring for them. I'm wondering if you would mind commenting on that.
:
What I'm referring to is what was promised by the minister and then what was delivered. I can share with you a little bit about what was promised by the minister at the time. It was that we would be getting baseline indicators and that we would have a robust set of indicators on health and public safety. The minister, who was at the time, in May 2022, said that we would be able to ascertain not only how many lives were saved but how many emergency department visits and hospitalizations there were, and what we were hearing at the time from urban mayors about petty crime. She said that they were all the things that we know are indicators of whether we're really stemming the tide of this crisis.
I just want to go eight months later. There was another press conference in British Columbia, and that was at the outset of the pilot project. At that time, said, “I would say that we need at least three months to be able to get this sorted out...also, I think as we let people know what indicators have been chosen”. Eight months later, they didn't have the indicators chosen, it seems. “if people have ideas or they have other indicators that they would like, whether it's a small business or whether people are saying, you know.... What would be other things that we could be measuring that would help determine the efficacy?” One thing that was in the letter of requirements was that the amount of treatment and health care would be scaled up.
There was a study that was released by the Journal of Community Safety and Well-Being, and it stated that, just prior to decriminalization coming into effect, 64% of the communities served by the RCMP in B.C. did not have any access to any drug rehabilitation or treatment. That means that the majority of British Columbian cities did not have any access to these services. While that is not the only service that should be provided, it was one of the requirements to scale up these to make sure that we were ready. As stigma would be driven down and people could be connected to services, they would exist. Unfortunately, they just haven't existed.
:
It is important to have harm reduction services for the simple reason that these projects have been in operation for many years. We are talking here about safe injection sites, but we could also be talking about prevention for infectious diseases such as hepatitis C.
When drug users in a community are in contact with workers in the community services sector or the health care sector, we can do prevention work that will have long-term positive effects. What is more, it improves coexistence since the people are no longer hiding in an alley or a park to consume their substances. Instead they are going to safe, clean sites that are free from stigma, both day and night. That is why we want to increase these services.
We also need to have good communication. I talked about that earlier. Community organizations need to have enough funding not only to keep the services going, but also to have workers who are in communication with the people in the community. I am thinking here about the street workers, the community workers, or even people working with the schools. We need other intermediaries to ensure healthy coexistence in a community.
We must not create tension within the community with respect to harm reduction projects, whose purpose, I repeat, is to save lives and maintain a quality of life during periods of consumption.
Let's not mix up these two concepts, even though they go hand in hand. We have to establish good communication with the community, but especially provide services that save lives. So—
:
Okay. I'll tell you. It was 46.2 in 2023 and it was 40.3 in 2024. That difference means the saving of hundreds and hundreds of lives in British Columbia.
Now, as Ms. Brière asked you, you have been on record...and I know in conversations with you before, you've said things like, “We're not backtracking on the need for harm reduction”; “With our whole hearts, we want to save people”; and that you support decriminalization and harm reduction.
You weren't clear in your answer to Ms. Brière. Have you changed your position on decriminalization? Given these figures, why would you not be supportive? Though we need to tweak and improve the program, why would you not be supportive when lives are being saved?
:
My concern with the diversion of safe supply is twofold.
The first concern, and probably the one that has hit me the hardest, really, is the impact it has had on young people. I've met with physicians, but I've also met with the parents of young kids who have succumbed to overdose.
One of the first dads I met with was named Dave. His daughter died of a fentanyl overdose. At the time of her death, she had several bottles of safe-supply hydromorphone in her bedroom that were not prescribed to her. In talking to him, he said his daughter had started with cannabis and then moved on to experimentation with other drugs.
That was alarming to me. I think that, given the fact that there hasn't been any study, really, in British Columbia about the impacts of diversion of hydromorphone on the overdose crisis, it's needs more attention.
The second concern I have is we are seeing now, in British Columbia, that diverted hydromorphone is being discovered by police in their drug investigations. Police have even testified, I think, to this committee, that there is a nexus between some of these investigations and organized crime.
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One of the most impactful and devastating stories I heard first-hand from a father named Greg. His young daughter started using drugs at age 14. She died at age 15. The widespread impact was that her group of friends was using drugs together. One of the kids in the friend group is still living. She said that they did start off by getting Dillies, which is the street name for Dilaudid, for hydromorphone. They did think it was safe.
They started to become sick. At first they started off by taking it once in a while, then they started feeling the need to take it more. Then it came to the point where if they stopped taking it, they would feel sick. When the withdrawals were no longer being managed, even just by taking the Dillies, the one girl who actually survived started taking fentanyl. Even though she had access then to OAT, she still continues to use drugs now. I know her mother very well. It is an absolutely awful journey that they're on.
There are not enough supports and services, but this is widespread. Especially when we're talking about kids or even young adults or adults, it's affecting their friend groups.
I think one of the biggest things that's really concerning to me.... If I can just read this into the record, this is actually from Purdue Pharma. This is their patient medication information. It says:
Never give anyone your DILAUDID. They could die from taking it. If a person has not been prescribed DILAUDID, taking even one dose can cause a fatal overdose. This is especially true for children.
It also says:
Even if you take DILAUDID as prescribed you are at a risk for opioid addiction, abuse and misuse. This can lead to overdose and death. To understand your risk of opioid addiction, abuse, and misuse you should speak to your prescriber
My concern is the lack of research on this—
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We've heard both sides on the issue of safe supply. We've certainly heard people say that there's plenty of evidence for the beneficial effects of safe supply, and by that, they meant the Canadian version of safe supply, which is getting a whole bunch of Dilaudid and going home with it.
We've also heard the opposite from members of Health Canada, who generally seem to be supportive of the idea. However, they admitted that there wasn't a lot of evidence for a safe supply in the Canadian context.
We also heard the same thing from the Stanford-Lancet Commission, which was very much against safe supply. I would note that the B.C. Provincial Health Officer, in her review of safer supply, also said that there wasn't a lot of good evidence for safe supply.
What there is a lot of good evidence for is iOAT, injectable opioid agonist treatment. NAOMI and SALOME, as Mrs. Goodridge pointed out, offered directly observed treatment. A lot of the evidence from Switzerland and the studies that are again cited as evidence for safe supply also offered observed treatment with injectable drugs—heroin, at the time.
The concerns about diversion, I think, are totally legitimate. The Swiss have this approach because of the concerns around diversion. A lot of people in B.C. continue to die because of fentanyl. That's what's killing them. Even though they get Dilaudid, it's not enough for them. They use fentanyl.
What do you think about intravenous observed treatment in this kind of Swiss model, where people can come into a treatment facility and get observed injectable doses of fentanyl?
Would you be in favour of that or at least willing to contemplate this?
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I wrote a letter to , which I also carbon-copied to Premier David Eby, to the effect that I actually support a call from doctors across Canada, addiction specialists, including 72 in British Columbia, who are calling for witnessed prescribed alternatives that are recovery oriented.
My purpose in coming here today isn't to stop people from getting life-saving medications, if this is what is important. I want to make sure that we understand the scope of the risk to the population. There is a population-level risk that is even identified by Dr. Henry, for example, in her report that you referred to, which was released on February 1.
If we're going to be providing treatments, which, as you stated, in Dr. Henry's report, have not enough evidence at this point to be described as fully evidence-based, we need to make sure that we're not causing unintentional harms.
Thank you, witnesses, for your testimony.
Mr. Chair, before I proceed to my question to the witnesses, I have one matter I want to address. Hopefully it won't take much time.
Given the comments of last week in which he suggested he would use the notwithstanding clause if given the chance, the petition tabled by Arnold Viersen on Tuesday to restrict abortion access in Canada and the anti-choice March for Life in front of Parliament Hill today, I feel it is relevant to move the following motion, of which I had given verbal notice on February 15.
I think it's incredibly troubling. We have some amazing witnesses here today who have been presenting some very powerful testimony. I know I have a series of further questions that I was hoping to get on the record. Unfortunately, the government is using this as an opportunity to play partisan politics when it comes to women's health. Frankly, I think it is unfortunate.
I appreciate the fact that members opposite do want to study women's health, and this is precisely why I brought forward my motion on breast cancer screening.
It was interesting. This morning, the Canadian Cancer Society actually changed its guidelines. It deviated from what the federal government and the health task force put forward when it comes to women's health. Its official recommendation is to lower breast cancer screening to 40 years old from 50. It shows how behind the times this government is when it comes to women's health and how lacking the task force has been on health screening here in Canada. The fact that the Canadian Cancer Society had to come out and change its recommendation ahead of what the government has done because they've been sitting on their hands doing nothing, allowing more women to unnecessarily suffer with breast cancer.....
I say this because, as members of this committee know, this is something that is deeply troubling to me. I lost my mom to breast cancer. I was 21; she was 49. It is something that, as my kids get older, as I get older, I think about every single day. What would it mean if my children had to grow up without a mom like I had to grow up without a mom? My brothers had to grow up without a mom.
Every single day, I talk to people from right across the country who tell me their stories and the impact that breast cancer has had when it comes to their lives.
I think it is very troubling that this government has not acted on this. I passed a motion back in April during Cancer Awareness Month. It should be prioritized for study in the health committee.
We've had a tradition in this committee of having these very broad studies and not actually getting to the crux of any one particular issue. When it comes to having these broad studies, one of the biggest challenges is that we can't actually find these solutions.
I wasn't trying to play any politics when I moved forward—
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Thank you very much, Madame Brière.
I think all members of committees know that we allow a lot of latitude for people who wish to speak in committee. I understand that you've not been at our committee previously, but in the spirit of —who, unfortunately, is not here—we allow members significant latitude. Certainly, those committee members who have been here previously would recognize that. I realize that I don't sit in this chair all the time, but I will continue to operate in the same spirit that Mr. Casey has for the last two and a half years.
With that, I will return the floor to you, Mrs. Goodridge.
I think it is actually extremely relevant to be talking about breast cancer screening, because the breasts are, in fact, a sexual organ, and they play a major role in women's health and women's health rights. This motion, which was deposited, is exactly in this space. I think this is part of the overall issue. We should be having conversations here in this committee about the tragic overdose crisis that is gripping our nation. The fact that, in nine years of this NDP-Liberal government, we've had more than 42,000 people—