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Canada now allows prescription heroin in severe opioid addiction cases

Click to play video: 'Heroin usage reaching epidemic proportions in suburban US'
Heroin usage reaching epidemic proportions in suburban US
There is an epidemic hitting many suburban areas of the US that isn't talked about much. Heroin and other opioid based prescription drugs are being used by many in suburban areas now and has reached epidemic proportions. In fact the number of Opioid related deaths has increased a staggering 372% since the year 2000. Jackson Proskow reports – Apr 17, 2016

Health Canada has amended regulations allowing doctors to prescribe heroin to people who are severely addicted to opioids.

The government says the country is facing an opioid overdose crisis and health-care providers need help in treating patients suffering from chronic dependency.

The change to the former Conservative government’s legislation means pharmaceutical-grade heroin can be prescribed under a special-access program in cases where traditional treatment has failed.

However, Health Canada says that while there is scientific evidence to support emergency access to the drug, the treatment is not an option for most people.

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READ MORE: Police intercept deadly opioid carfentanil: ‘50M doses could’ve hit our streets’

Health Minister Jane Philpott has said the government will hold a summit this fall to address the issue of opioid addiction leading to hundreds of overdose deaths across Canada.

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Supervised heroin therapy is used in several countries, including Switzerland, Germany and the Netherlands, and a clinical trial in Canada has concluded injectable heroin was more effective than standard methadone treatment.

British Columbia’s health minister says addicts need every option to help them regain control of their lives.

READ MORE: Ontario to stop paying for high-dose opioids in push to reduce addiction

“It indicates a willingness on behalf of the federal government to look at a health-based kind of an issue rather than a criminal-based issue and that they’re not limiting the range of treatment options that are available because there isn’t one size that fits all in these situations,” he said.

“Given the opioid epidemic that we’re facing, we need every tool that is available.”

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