Addictions support advocates seek help to decrease 'rampant' opioid overdoses
As the opioid crisis in Canada remains dire, advocates for more mental health support and harm-reduction resources are using National Addictions Awareness Week to educate the public on how to help.
According to the Government of Canada, 94 per cent of overdose deaths happen accidentally, and between April 2020 and March 2021 there’s been an 88 per cent increase in accidental overdoses in Alberta.
“Last year we lost 1,334 people and I’m pretty sure we’re going to exceed that number this year,” Angela Welz, with Moms Stop the Harm, said.
“This was already a crisis before the COVID pandemic.”
In 2016, Welz lost her daughter Zoe to a fentanyl overdose at 18 years old.
Since then, she has been using her platform to help other families who have experienced a similar loss.
Welz said Zoe started using in 2014 first with alcohol and cannabis, then moved on to more illicit drugs.
“We as a family did whatever we could to get her help,” Welz said. “As a youth it’s very difficult, the supports are just not there.”
'WE CAN’T SWEEP IT UNDER THE RUG'
According to Welz, there is still a stigma surrounding substance use and a lot of families choose to not talk about it because of the “lack of compassion.”
“We can’t sweep it under the rug anymore,” she said.
“It’s very difficult for families and society seems to think it’s only the really vulnerable homeless people on the streets that are affected by this, and it’s not.”
Welz told CTV News Edmonton they were a “normal” family, upper middle-class, well travelled, with parents who weren’t divorced.
“She had a good future ahead of her.”
However, Zoe’s trauma of her father being diagnosed with a rare form of cancer consumed her and eventually steered her toward self medicating, Welz explained.
“If we don’t address those traumas and offer a lot more mental health supports, addiction is just going to continue to run rampant in our society.”
'GET OUT OF THAT CYCLE'
Naloxone kits are widely available at most pharmacies in Alberta, according to Shivali Sharma, a pharmacist and owner of multiple Shoppers Drug Mart locations.
Sharma said the medication is vital in potentially saving someone's life after an opioid overdose. Once administered, naloxone can temporarily reverse the effects in two to five minutes but 911 should still be called.
“I think more Canadians are starting to realize the impact that the COVID-19 pandemic has had on the worsening of the opioid crisis we’ve experienced across the country,” she added.
“More and more people are becoming aware of naloxone as a rescue medication.”
In addition to naloxone, Welz stressed the importance of incorporating more services so people “can actually get out of that cycle” of addiction.
“Imagine waking up every morning thinking about how you’re going to get your drug, how you’re going to feel better because you’re already withdrawing.”
For anyone who has lost a loved one to substance use there is an online peer bereavement support group, click here.
National Addictions Awareness week runs until Nov. 27.
- Alberta's supervised consumption site identification requirements postponed until 2022
- 'Keeping these people alive': A volunteer team works to reverse overdoses in Edmonton
- Alberta advocacy groups sue province over harm reduction changes
With files from CTV News Edmonton’s Touria Izri
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